ARKWRIGHT, Richard - b. 1732 Preston, d. 1792 Cromford - WGA

ARKWRIGHT, Richard

(b. 1732 Preston, d. 1792 Cromford)

English textile industrialist and inventor whose use of power-driven machinery and employment of a factory system of production were perhaps more important than his inventions.

He became interested in spinning and carding machinery that turned raw cotton into thread. In 1769 Arkwright patented the spinning frame, which became known as the water-frame, a machine that produced a strong twist for warps, substituting wooden and metal cylinders for human fingers. This made possible inexpensive cotton-spinning. From 1771, he constructed in Cromford his first factories powered by steam engines, invented by James Watt in 1764.

Arkwright was knighted in 1786 and by the time of his death on 3 August 1792, Arkwright had established factories in Derbyshire, Staffordshire, Lancashire and Scotland, and was a wealthy man.

Cotton mill
Cotton mill by

Cotton mill

From 1771, Arkwright constructed in Cromford his first factories powered by steam engines, invented by James Watt in 1764. They are simple structures with numerous windows, having blind walls at ground level as a protection against anti-machinery riots.

Cotton mill
Cotton mill by

Cotton mill

From 1771, Arkwright constructed in Cromford his first factories powered by steam engines, invented by James Watt in 1764. They are simple structures with numerous windows, having blind walls at ground level as a protection against anti-machinery riots.

Cotton mill
Cotton mill by

Cotton mill

From 1771, Arkwright constructed in Cromford his first factories powered by steam engines, invented by James Watt in 1764. They are simple structures with numerous windows, having blind walls at ground level as a protection against anti-machinery riots.

The photo shows the street front of the cotton mill.

Cotton mill
Cotton mill by

Cotton mill

From 1771, Arkwright constructed in Cromford his first factories powered by steam engines, invented by James Watt in 1764. They are simple structures with numerous windows, having blind walls at ground level as a protection against anti-machinery riots.

The photo shows the mill manager’s house.

Cotton mill
Cotton mill by

Cotton mill

From 1771, Arkwright constructed in Cromford his first factories powered by steam engines, invented by James Watt in 1764. They are simple structures with numerous windows, having blind walls at ground level as a protection against anti-machinery riots.

Arkwright derived his enormous fortune mainly from the unscrupulous exploitation of cheap labour, nonetheless he did have some sense of conscience as an employer, and between 1771 and 1776 he built a whole street (North Street) of three-storey terrace houses for his workers - the beginning of specially constructed industrial housing. The attic floors of the houses in Cromford had larger windows so that families of employees could make garments on looms at home.

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