Vivien Teasdale's concise and informative guide to the textile industry
will be absorbing reading for anyone who wants to learn about its
history or to research the career of an ancestor who was a textile
worker.
In a clear and accessible way she takes readers through the technical,
economic and social aspects of the story. She gives a graphic account of
the extraordinary growth of the industry in the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries and of its decline in the twentieth. In the process
she covers the themes and issues that family and local historians will
need to understand in order to pursue their research.
She describes the inventions that transformed the manufacture of cloth -
the flying shuttle, the spinning jenny, the power loom - but she also
gives a keen insight into working life in the factories and into the
close-knit communities that grew up around them. And she introduces the
reader to the variety of national and local records that are available
for genealogical research - from census returns, websites and
publications to company records and registers, regional archives and
museums and the many other resources that can yield fascinating
information about the industry and those who worked in it.