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Ditherington Mill and the Industrial Revolution

Author/EditorGiles C & Williams M (Author)
Williams, Mike (Author)
Publisher: Historic England
ISBN: 9781848021181
Pub Date15/10/2015
BindingHardback
Pages172
EditionUK ed.
Dimensions (mm)276(h) * 219(w)
A detailed examination of the world's first iron framed building which illuminates many critical aspects of economic, social and technological history during the Industrial Revolution.
¥489.94
excluding shipping
Availability: Available to order but dispatch within 7-10 days
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Ditherington Mill is rightly celebrated as having the first iron-framed building in the world. Its highly innovative structure provided a fireproof environment for industrial processes and is a predecessor of the technologies that today pepper our cities with skyscrapers. Around the Spinning Mill other early buildings have also survived, which together make the complex a remarkable example of a textile mill from the new generation of steam-powered factories that were changing the face of Britain at the close of the 18th century. The conversion to a maltings in 1897 gave the mill a new lease of life and added further significant buildings to the Shrewsbury skyline. When malting ceased in 1987 the future of the site became an issue of great concern, not only to students of industrial architecture but also to local people who had worked in the maltings or for whom the site had become a familiar landmark in their everyday lives.
Historic England believes that a detailed understanding of Ditherington Mill's past should be a cornerstone of its future conservation and adaptation. Since its closure archaeologists and historians have examined every aspect of this internationally significant industrial site. This research has investigated the innovative technologies employed to create the factory's buildings and has cast light on the people - some of national renown, others now all but forgotten - responsible for the mill's construction and operation. The story which has emerged is a rich one and is summarised in this book, the publication of which is a further demonstration of a collective commitment to securing the site's future.

Ditherington Mill is rightly celebrated as having the first iron-framed building in the world. Its highly innovative structure provided a fireproof environment for industrial processes and is a predecessor of the technologies that today pepper our cities with skyscrapers. Around the Spinning Mill other early buildings have also survived, which together make the complex a remarkable example of a textile mill from the new generation of steam-powered factories that were changing the face of Britain at the close of the 18th century. The conversion to a maltings in 1897 gave the mill a new lease of life and added further significant buildings to the Shrewsbury skyline. When malting ceased in 1987 the future of the site became an issue of great concern, not only to students of industrial architecture but also to local people who had worked in the maltings or for whom the site had become a familiar landmark in their everyday lives.
Historic England believes that a detailed understanding of Ditherington Mill's past should be a cornerstone of its future conservation and adaptation. Since its closure archaeologists and historians have examined every aspect of this internationally significant industrial site. This research has investigated the innovative technologies employed to create the factory's buildings and has cast light on the people - some of national renown, others now all but forgotten - responsible for the mill's construction and operation. The story which has emerged is a rich one and is summarised in this book, the publication of which is a further demonstration of a collective commitment to securing the site's future.

Author and architectural historian, Yorkshire. Author and Investigator at Historic England.

1. Ditherington Mill: an introduction - Colum Giles 2. The Linen Industry in Great Britain: history, products, processes and location - Barrie Trinder and Mike Williams 3. Shrewsbury in the 18th and 19th Centuries: industry and culture - Barrie Trinder 4. Building the Mill - Barrie Trinder and Mike Williams 5. Innovation and Experimentation: Ditherington and the development of the iron-framed mill - Tom Swailes, Paul Murray Thompson and Mike Williams 6. Steam Power at Ditherington Mill - Ron Fitzgerald, Paul Murray Thompson and Mike Williams 7. Ditherington Mill at Work - Mike Williams and Barrie Trinder 8. The Gasworks and Gas Lighting at Ditherington Mill - Ian West 9. The Workforce in the 19th Century - Paul Belford and Barrie Trinder 10. Mill into Maltings - Barrie Trinder 11. Ditherington Rescued - John Yates

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