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​​Liabilities

​​Assets

​Share Capital
​£54,458
​Outlay on Building, Machines, Cottages
​£75,650

​Debenture Bonds
​£15,000
​Inventory
​£10,339
​Mortgage
​£14,434
​3 Month Profit
​£291
​Loan holders
​£2,388
​​
​Toatal Capital
​​£86,280
​£86,280

The output was newsprint, printing papers and long elephants, i.e. a base paper used for the manufacture of wallpaper. The two 120 inch paper machines were supplemented in 1882 by the installation of the underused 112 inch machine previously installed at the Withnell Paper Company Ltd. This came about in June 1881 when another extraordinary general meeting made provision for payment on an outstanding mortgage and bonds, plus raising ‘£10,000 for purchase money of Withnell Paper Mill land, machinery and premises’ at a bargain the price of £3,000, plus the cost of removal of paper machine at Withnell to Feniscowles. Once the equipment had been removed the nine acre Withnell mill site became a reservoir, storing additional water required for the Star’s extended operation associated with the installation of the Withnell paper machine.8

The later history of the Star mill lies outside the scope of this article, but is comprehensively covered by the book written by Abverainen and the booklet ‘A century of Papermaking in the Roddlesworth Valley’.9

The Feniscowles Paper Mill Company Ltd and its successor the Sun Paper Company Ltd occupied the most northerly site just before the River Roddlesworth joins the River Darwen, it was sited only a matter of a few hundred meters from the Star company.

Feniscowles Paper Mill Company Ltd
Incorporated 13 Sept 1873, £30,000 share capital
The directors at foundation were:

​Josiah Gregson
​Lower Darwen
​Cotton Manufacturer
​*John Tomlinson
​Over Darwen
​Coal Merchant
​Jacob Cooper
​Over Darwen
​​Coal Merchant
​John Harwood
​Over Darwen
​Paper Maker
​James Carter
​Blackburn
​Coal Merchant
​Edmund Monk
​Padium
​Farmer
​*William Tomlinson
​Over Darwen
​Coal Merchant

In March 1875 a healthy 2,390 of the 3,000 shares were taken-up.  Full production was achieved by February 1875, a creditable 18 months build. Its 76 inch and 90 inch machines were producing News, Printing and Long Elephant. For a few short months the company appeared to be doing well as its paid-up £10 shares were changing hands at £15. However, suggesting the first two years were far from successful on 6 July 1877 the directors gave a personal guarantee to the bankers of the company to secure an overdraft and a second mortgage totalling £5,000. Unable to stem the losses in 1877 its principle lender, the Blackburn Building Society, being owed £26,201 took possession, the mill having closed in August that year. The true scale of the problems were laid bare when John Carlisle noted that the working accounts for the year of 1877 showed a loss on sales of £3,506, without allowance for depreciation and interest. He suggested the actual loss was over £6,000.

At a time so many paper mills in the area were up for sale the Blackburn Building Society was unsuccessful in selling it as a going concern and it was stopped for several years. Costing £47,000 to erect it was sold in September 1882 for £8,050 to become the Sun Paper Company.10

Sun Paper Company Ltd 
Incorporated 13 October 1882, £50,000 share capital in £100 divisions
The directors and shareholding at foundation were:

​James Lightbown
​Salford
​Paper Manufacturer
​60
​J. T. Jackson
​Rochdale
​Cotton Spinner
​10
Henry Lightbown
​Weaste-lane, near Manchester
​Paper Stainer
​20
J. Gregson
​Birkdale. Southport
​Retired Cotton Spinner
​40
​J. Fitton
​Clifton Junction, near Manchester
​Retired Grocer
​30
​J. Brown
​Bamber Bridge
​Agent
​20
​T. Lightbown
​Dorneen
​Cotton Manufacturer
​40

The new company stated it ‘proposes to purchase the Feniscowles Paper Mill, situate Feniscowles, near Blackburn, recently put up for sale by auction and bought by James Lightbown, of Salford, on behalf of this (the Sun) company, for £8,050’.  It was registered in October 1882 with a capital of £50,000 in £100 shares and 220 shares were taken at incorporation. 

The Sun Company closed in the 1980’s. 

This article is a shortened version of ‘Five Paper Company Foundations on the River Roddlesworth’, Darwen. 1873 to 1882. Which will be published shortly by The British Association of Paper Historians, in its Quarterly Magazine.

In Part 3 and final section of this series of articles, I shall review the events detailed previously and identify a fascinating back-story connecting the five companies to one of the most important wallpaper manufacturers in Great Britain.

 1Abvenainen J, The History of Star Paper 1875-1960, (1976) Private Published, p.12.
 2BLNL. Paper Makers Circular, March 15 1875
 3BLNL. Paper Makers Circular, June 15 1875
 4The London Gazette, September 10 1875 Issue:24244, p 4469
 5Oldham Library, Oldham Standard, 2 December 1876
 6Preston Herald, 6 January 1877, p.7
 7Lancashire Record Office (hereafter LRO). DDX 54/96
 8LRO. DDFD/11/291, The Star Archives are not yet fully catalogued
 9James Stevens, John Downham, Michael Harrington, David Bateson and Mark Taylorson, A century of Papermaking in the Roddlesworth Valley, privately published, 2008 
 10Blackburn Standard, 28 October 1882, p.5
 11Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 23 October 1882,  p.7




Part 3: The Lightbown Family and Darwen's Spirit of Intelligent Enterprise​

In the first two articles I narrated the foundation of the Withnell, Roddlesworth, Star, Feniscowles and Sun Paper limited paper companies, all five of whom were sited on the River Roddlesworth. In this section I shall review the content of both articles and identify a back-story connecting the five mills to one of the most important wallpaper manufacturers in Great Britain.

Some of the themes from my article The Illusive Silver Lining, carry through to the story of these five mills, such as a rapid failure of around half of all paper companies, the  large losses made by shareholders, banking institutions, directors, equipment suppliers and the like (1).  The mania was undoubtedly driven by the actions of its directors, most of whom were Lancashire’s Industrialists and businesspeople and in particular those from Darwen, a town renowned for innovation and dynamism from its self-made men. Unfortunately for all, a trade downturn, known as the Great Depression took hold in the second half of the 1870’s which did not fully lift until well into the twentieth century and it was then regret and introspection that then took precedence over dynamism. Phoenix like, some paper mills were raised from the ashes, some failed again while others such as the Star and the Sun were eventually successful.  

Looking at the losses made at the Feniscowles, Roddlesworth and Withnell companies the accumulated deficits that fell upon shareholders, mortgage and loan holders were around £50,000 to £55,000, equivalent to about £6M today.  Being major shareholder the directors would bear the brunt of share losses, unless they had the forethought of the likes of Withnell directors Job and Thomas Kay or William and John Tomlinson who were serial share sellers, because selling early could make them a profit. The Co-operative bank had sufficient reserves to stand the losses they made at Withnell, but interest rates to savers did suffer. Unfortunately, due to the losses made at Feniscowles and two other paper mills, together with other limited companies the Blackburn Building Society was forced to close and some of its investors were only repaid 1 shilling per pound of money invested (2).
 
It is easy to identify why the two of the Roddlesworth mills failed, Withnell got embroiled in expensive legal action with the Star mill because of the inept design of its effluent plant, which led to environmental issues and the company could not raise additional capital when an economic depression took hold and investors had lost confidence. This mill did not produce any meaningful quantity of paper, was a complete failure costing its investors dear.  Feniscowles did operate, but only for two years and without profits, racking up substantial debts and like Withnell it was unable to secure additional funds and was closed for five years before its sale in 1882. Less easy to understand is why the Roddlesworth paper company was liquidated before its build was completed. It is true that its share capital was small, but at the time loans were readily available and the directors were savvy and solvent businessmen, more of which shortly. 

Another theme of the Silver Lining was the role played by promoters, that is the dynamic individuals whose actions resulted in the new company being founded. In Silver Lining I cited William Taylor and Joseph Kay as persons who were prolific and often calamitous promoters and Job Kay noted as director and later secretary at Withnell paper mill is that very same person, so it is of no surprise this mill followed a disastrous path. What is more surprising is that Timothy Lightbown was a shareholder  at Withnell whilst simultaneously a director at Roddlesworth, but perhaps it was further evidence of the share mania gripping Darwen’s industrialists (3).  Directorships in more than one limited paper companies, some of whom would have been in competition was also a common theme. I have noted this was because some directors, such as Kay and Taylor were involved primarily to make profits from share sales, so the more directorships they had the more profits they made. Although it would require detail examination of the share lists held at the Public Record Office, I would suggest this was not the case with Timothy, Henry, Roger and James Lightbown. In a close relationship with Josiah Gregson they held directorships at Roddlesworth, Star and Sun paper mills, they were unlikely to have been habitual share sellers, but evidence suggests they were legitimate businessmen with a clear aim. 

Josiah and his brother Lawrence Gregson were cotton manufacturers at Carr’s Mill, Darwen, while the Lightbown’s were both cotton manufacturers at Dove and Heyfold Mill’s, Darwen and innovative wallpaper manufacturers in Pendleton, Manchester and later Bredbury, Stockport. The leading light being Henry Lightbown, he was born in Darwen in 1819 and as an intelligent youth learned his trade at C.H. and E. Potter of Darwen from around 1840. Potters were paper manufacturer and wallpaper printers (or stainers) who ran power loom weaving and wallpaper printing at Belgrav​e Mills and producing base wallpaper paper at Hollins mill, both in Darwen. By the 1870’s they had four paper making machines and the company trained numerous individuals who later established their own businesses in the trade for which Darwen and Blackburn was to become world famous.

Henry Lightbown left Potters to set up his own paper merchanting business in Manchester in 1847 with brother-in- law William Aspinall and Doctor Graham, the latter a partner in Potters and in 1851 started their own business in a small hand block wallpaper printing shop at Pendleton. Three years later Henry, his brother James and William Aspinall set up a new factory at Hayfield Mills, Bredbury, later to become one of the largest producers of cheap machine-printed wallpapers in Britain. They were quick to install wallpaper print machines and good sales meant day and night working. An observer noted that ‘Developments were rapid, the repeal of the paper duty (in 1861) having contributed to the demand for wallpaper, and within the next 30 years the whole site was gradually covered with buildings and many contained print machines (4).   

Henry kept up a firm friendship with his former employer and would have been well aware of the success they enjoyed, in particular Potters notoriety from exhibiting in the Paper-Hanging section of the Great International Exhibition in London of 1851. Attracting over six million visitors, the exhibition was a great success and it was around then that the machine printing of wallpaper took-off. Previously done by skilled artisans, the wallpaper printing machine was at the very early stage of its introduction, but even then its benefits were clear when it was noted in Great Britain that mean prices for hand printing were two shillings and  seven pence and by machine only seven pence. Although the exact meaning of ‘Mean per Piece’ is not clear, just using it as a comparison it’s a substantial reduction. In comparison its main competitor, the USA, its mean price was nine and a half pence.


TablesMachinesWorkersNo. of PiecesValue (£)Mean Per Piece
600 1,9002.3M0.3M2s 7d
 201003.2M0.1M7d​


Although the compiler acknowledged to having reservations about his figures, if in Great Britain 100 workers on 20 machines could produce 40% more than 1,900 workers by hand, then the writing was on the wall (5)
Early adopters of the machine included Potters, Lightbown and Aspinall plus Walkden and Dixon of Blackburn, making the area a centre for wallpaper manufacture, which continued for many years afterwards.

Breaking away from the limitations of the traditional method of wallpaper printing using individual sheets of hand formed paper, it was the endless web of machine made paper which opened the opportunity to mechanise the wallpaper printing process. Being akin to printing fabrics using engraved rollers that carried ink to the cloth, it was a logical step to do the same to machine made paper. With a thriving fabric printing industry around Darwen, a quick take-up of the new more productive process could be guaranteed and with the town’s ‘spirit of intelligent enterprise’, it is no surprise that Potters were quick adopters and Lightbown’s were  by their side. In the early days Lightbown and Aspinall printed cheap goods by machine and hand, but later in 1879 the company won awards for improved designs at exhibitions in Brussels and Sydney. In 1880 and 1881 they introduced a new medium-grade in the ‘Early English’ style and with other developments forthcoming the company’s success was assured and with triumph came a need for a guaranteed source of paper which needed sating (6).   

The close business relationship seen between Josiah Gregson and the Lightbown’s at the Roddlesworth, Star and Sun mills suggests a close affiliation, particularly between Josiah Gregson and Timothy Lightbown, but it was not a paper mill that was their first business relationship. A year after Josiah became a founding director of Feniscowles in 1873, he and his brother Lawrence opted to incorporate their family’s Carr’s Mill, becoming the Darwen Cotton Manufacturing Co. Ltd. It was also in 1874 that Josiah was for the first time joined by Timothy Lightbown, but it was in a cotton manufacturing venture, when they both became directors at the Cotton Hall Mill, Darwen, built for the Spinning and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. No doubt buoyed up with the initial success of these ventures and knowledge of some of the earlier mania paper mills, in 1874 Henry, Roger and James Lightbown joined them in the Roddlesworth venture, surely a company formed to satisfy the wallpaper company‘s need for base wallpaper. 

The Roddlesworth company’s aim at incorporation was for the ‘acquisition of land to erect works for manufacture of paper or the purchase of works and building already erected for the purpose’ and the trade press identifies it was to be at Roddlesworth and nowhere else (7).   I would suggest it was the purchase of an existing mill that was their priority and that the incomplete Feniscowles mill was their only target. As Josiah was a director of both Roddlesworth and Feniscowles, he would have been central in the negotiations, but an agreement was not possible. As second best the Roddlesworth company purchased a new site a few hundred yards upstream, but the mill was incomplete when it was liquidated. 

Formed with a small share capital the Roddlesworth company could easily have issue more shares and borrowed money to complete the mill, but it appears that someone on the board got cold feet. As a way forward it was probably Gregson who came up with the idea of setting up the new Star company with an increased share capital, with free reign to borrow to complete the mill and the new venture would eventually reimburse the former Roddlesworth directors for work already completed. Josiah Gregson and Timothy Lightbown became directors at the Star and James and Henry Lightbrown large shareholders, at this stage Josiah was a director at both Feniscowles and Star and the opportunity for conflicts would have resurfaced. Yet this was to be only a short time as it was no more than ten months between the Star’s inauguration in autumn 1876 and the demise of Feniscowles in August 1877. From then onwards the Star mill would probably have taken over supplying Lightbown’s paper requirements from Feniscowles.

In 1881, when the Star mill was manufacturing printing papers and long elephants, things were about to change yet again, because in 1882 the defunct Feniscowles mill was sold via the Lightbown’s company to the new Sun company (8).    With Josiah Gregson, James, Henry and Timothy Lightbown being directors at the Sun company and Josiah and Timothy still directors of the Star, the opportunity for conflicts of interest reoccurred. Perhaps, initially the two companies may have agreed not to compete, but by 1886 things were coming to a head. The Star’s company biographer Jorma Ahvenainen, noted that conflicts of interest did occur with the Sun, ‘which was largely in the hands of the Lightbown’s’ , and in particular with Sun directors James Lightbown and John Jackson whose interests were ‘antagonistic’ to those of the Star company (9).   This may well relate to an earlier incident in 1886 when Roger Lightbown was involved in yet another foundation, this time the London and Lancashire Paper Mills Company Limited at Stalybridge (10).  In an unusually frank prospectus the profit on one ton of newsprint was identified as being £250, made up of £650 costs and a selling price of £900. This would have been seen as a breach of confidentiality and likely to be the cause of the antagonism at the Star. It may well have been family solidarity that caused director and long term chairman Timothy Lightbown to leave the Star company around the same time as James Lightbown and John Jackson were ostracised (11).  
The comment made in the 1886 Stalybridge company prospectus that, ‘There is perhaps no industry in this country which is in so flourishing a condition that of paper making, the demand, being practically unlimited’, echo’s many of the exaggerated claims made at the foundation of the mania paper mills ten years earlier. But at least for the Lightbown’s, their business was flourishing, their wallpapers were in demand and they were heavily involved in paper mill management and in the process they were training many who went on to make a name for themselves in the wallpaper industry for years to come.

This article is a shortened version of ‘Five Paper Company Foundations on the River Roddlesworth’, Darwen. 1873 to 1882. Which will be published shortly by The British Association of Paper Historians, in its Quarterly Magazine.

​Bibliography

[1] Malley M, The Illusive Silver Lining: The Rise and Fall of the Lancashire Limited Paper Companies, Volume 11 of The British Association of Paper Historians Monograph, 2017. Copies available at Blackburn with Darwen Libraries

[2] LRO. PPLC 3/3/4

[3] Abvenainen, p.10

[4] Alan Victor Sugden and John Ludlam Edmondson, A History of English Wallpaper 1509-1914 , (1925), London p.216

[5] Sugden, p.156

[6] Sugden, plate 126,  p.292

[7] BLNL. The Paper Makers Circular, April 27 1874

[8] Stevens, p.11

[9] Abvenainen, p.17

[10] Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 13 April 1886

[11] Paper Maker and British Paper Trade Journal,Vol XXXIV, 1907 p23 and https://jepnet.co.uk/genealogy/Star%20mill/star%20mill.pdf

Mike Malley, published on Cotton Town, December 2021
​Mike is a member of the British Association of Paper Historians


Potters of Darwen: Their Development and Commercialisation of Wallpaper Manufacture: 1832 to 1875​

Introduction

The company started by the Potter family of Darwen in 1840 was one of the largest suppliers of machine made wallpaper for over a century. Their experience of calico printing was put to good use when they successfully adapted one of their machines and applied for a patent to protect their innovation. Their technical lead was short lived as a number of competitors quickly moved into a growing market that produced cheaper wallpaper in volume for the first time. The scene was now set for a rapid expansion of both styles and production levels that made both Potters and Darwen the centre for machine wallpaper printing.

The extensive details provided in Sugden and Entwisle's definitive book, Potters of Darwen 1839 to 1939, provides a year by year account of Potters progress up to 1939, its findings has been used extensively in this article. Rather than examine the minutia of its content, I shall confine my narrative to the main developments up to about 1875.[1] In particular to identify, the mills connected to Potters business, working conditions, the excise authority's treatment of the industry and the employees of Potters who went on to play a pivotal role in the development of the wallpaper  industry.

Wallpaper Printing by Machine and the Growth of Potters up to 1875

Both the Potter and Greenway families were involved in calico printing in Darwen, one of the earliest was Livesey Fold Mill established by James Greenway in 1776. His son James leased Dob Meadow Print Works in 1808, taking into partnership his two sons-in-law, John Potter and William Maude. Later John's son Charles Potter joined the business and by 1832 Charles and William Ross were leasing Dob Meadow from the Greenway's.  Using an adapted calico printing machine they began wallpaper printing trials in 1832. Later Charles and his brother Harold, together with calico machine foreman printer Walmsley Preston, continued developments and in 1839 Harold Potter, applied for the patent, as follows:

Patent Number 8302, Printing Calicoes and other Fabrics. Potter stated the nature of his invention to consist 'in printing calico, muslins or paper for paper-hangings, by means of what is known among calico printers as a surface machine… taking two or more distinct colours… further consists in the application and the use of engraved or cut or figured copper, or other metal rollers, for printing paper –hangings'.

In 1840 Charles Potter's brothers Harold and Edwin, trading as C H & E Potter took over Belgrave mill, Darwen for their embryonic wallpaper printing business. The mill was already shared by Edwin Potter and Edward Gregson, both having existing cotton weaving concerns. Initially the base paper for the wallpaper was supplied by Hilton's paper mill, also in Darwen. In 1844 coinciding with problems at Hilton's, the Hollins Bleach works in Darwen was converted to manufacture paper, with former Hilton's employee John Carlisle, its manager.

The Potters now structured their business around wallpaper manufacture. Family run businesses such as Potters were not duty bound to release its financial affairs, but the company did well and constantly adapted to maintain its success. John Gerald, son of Charles Potter entered the firm as partner in 1849 and on the retirement of Harold Potter four years later, the company's name was altered to C E and J G Potter. In 1857 founder Edwin Potter retired, with Walmsley Preston, Doctor Graham, an outside representative for the company and latterly in charge of the commercial department, together with the Hollins paper mill manager John Carlisle, were taken into partnership, the company was then known as C and J G Potter. 

1864 was an important year for Potters with the acquisition of William Snape's Livesey print works. Earlier in the same year Snape had induced master wallpaper designer James Huntington, to join him. Charles Potter, John Carlisle and Walmsley Preston all retired, meaning that the business was left in the hands of John Gerald Potter, William Snape and James Huntington. By 1875 Charles Philip Huntington and William Balle Huntington joined their brother James, in the management of Potters.  Charles and William had previously worked in a Paris distributorship used by Potters and it was the latter who the author has discovered was trapped in The Siege of Paris (see Postscript).

The improvement made in wallpaper printing machines in the period lies outside the scope of this article, but there were some interesting statistics about the growth in production at Potters. For example what cost 1s before 1839 was in 1865 produced for less than 1d. In 1851 it was estimated 5.5 million pieces were processed in Great Britain, but by 1865, when the company employed six hundred persons, the production from Potters alone was 7 million pieces. Not that Potters had forgotten traditional wallcovering was still in vogue, because in the mid 1860's they operated sixty five hand block printing tables.

Duty on paper

In many spheres it's the action of the government that can encourage or discourage innovation, it certainly was the case in the move from traditional hand crafted skills of hand block printing to machine printing of wallpaper. It is significant that Potters experimentation of wallpaper printing by machine followed the governmental excise authority's abolition of a punishing taxation on the stainers and their agreement to using rolls of machine made paper rather than sheets in the mid 1830's.

Others besides Potters were experimenting with wallpaper printing by machine, but it was only when the excise allowed continuous rolls of paper to be used that mechanisation could transform the industry. Prior to the introduction of machine made paper, wallpaper was manufactured by pasting together large paper sheets. At what stage rolls of wallpapers became standardised lengths is not known, but by the 19th century, wallpaper was being produced in 12 yard lengths, 22, 22½ or 30 inches wide, except in the colonies where it was eight yards.[2] According to Sugden, twelve sheets were used and the individual sheets were either 'Double demy' or 'Elephant'. In his authoritative work, The Taxation of Paper in Great Britain 1643-1861, Dagnall identifies 'elephant' was 23" by 28", but this would need more than 12 sheets.[3] However, 'double elephant', sized at 26" by 38½" and 'double demy', at 26¾“ by 40" would be suitable.  The latter gives more overlap, but as paper was priced per pound weight, the larger sheet would cost more. The stainers termed a completed 12 yard length of stained paper as a 'piece' and paper manufacturers generally used the term 'Long Elephant', to describe the base paper for wallpaper. A rule of thumb was that a 12 yard piece weighed 1lb.

The stainers were subject to two duties by the excise authorities. The first to be abolished around 1836 was known as 'stainers duty', it was rated at a punitive 1¾d per square yard, roughly equivalent to 12d per piece. The second was depended upon the uses or 'Class' of the paper concerned, it was charged by the paper weight and changed over time, it was repealed in 1861. Even though rolls of machine made paper were available from the 1820's, the excise dictated single sheets of paper to be used and had to be stamped and duty paid before pasting started, wasted paper also paid duty. This meant that rolls of machine made paper had to be cut into sheets to be sold to the stainers, only for them to join them back together. The stainers complained 'pasting very unsightly and causing great expense and trouble', eventually the authorities had a change of heart, the stainers explaining it 'had been refused until the French introduced them'.

A substantial reduction in duty brought about by abolition of the stainers duty would have been welcomed, but for Potters it was the allowance of paper to be used in rolls, that with hindsight can be seen as the major step allowing mechanisation to progress.

The Mills Connected to Potters

There were numerous cotton spinning, weaving, bleaching, dying and printing works sited on the River Darwen and its tributaries and it was at the Belgrave mill in Darwen, that Potters chose to set up their wallpaper manufacturing works.

Belgrave Mill
Potters took over Belgrave mill in 1840, it was already occupied by Edwin Potter and Edward Gregson, both of whom were involved in power loom weaving. Edwin's brothers Charles and Harold, trading as C H & E, set up as wallpaper printers in an unoccupied part of the mill. This was to be the base of the Potters wallpaper printing business for over a century. Securing a good source of paper would have been paramount for a wallpaper business and Hilton's large paper mill was located nearby.

In March 1861 Potters maximum weekly output was 150,000 pieces per week and averaged 110,000 pieces. Assuming each piece weighed 1lb, and 5% wasted paper this equates to an average of about 52 tons of paper was used per week and by 1865 Potters were producing over 20% more.

Hilton's, Darwen Old Paper Mills
Founded in the 1820's by Richard Hilton, a decade later it was producing tissues and hat lining paper. Noted as being 'the most extensive in Great Britain employing upwards of four hundred and fifty hands', at its peak it produced over thirty tons of paper per week.[4] Probably for trials of the new printing processes, in 1840 Potters bought Long Elephant in small quantities at 7d and 8½d per lb. In the early 1840's Hilton's got into financial difficulties, was resurrected, but in 1844 its owners Henry Hilton and Nathaniel Walsh, were in the bankruptcy court.[5] In 1847 the 'Darwen Paper Mills' and its equipment was up for sale.[6] It was then operated by Charles Edmondstone, but his tenure was short lived and by December 1848 he was also in the bankruptcy court and parts, if not the whole, became a cotton mill. [7]

Hollins Mill
By 1844 the Hollins Bleach works had been converted by Potters to make paper. It might seem that a better option may have been to combine a new paper mill with the paper staining works at Belgrave mill, but it may have been quicker to converting an existing mill with its own guaranteed water supply to manufacture paper. Former Hilton employee John Carlisle, became its first manager. By 1851 it was a substantial concern with twenty two beating engines at work.[8] By 1870 it had four paper making machines and a diversified output of wallpaper base, long elephants, newsprint, cartridges, enamel and surfaced coloured papers.[9] Besides the paper makers staple raw material of rags, it also used the relatively recently introduced esparto, with a workforce of 250.

In 1867 there were four paper mills operating in Darwen, they were 'employing 440 workmen and producing paper to the value of £170,000'.[10] Besides Hollins they were, Collins, founded 1861, South Belgrave, founded 1857 and Knott Mill, founded in the early 1840's it also had connections to Potters.

Knott Mill
During the 1830's Knott Mill was run by Edward Gregson for cotton weaving, probably the same man noted above as operating at Belgrave mill and it was in the early 1840's that Charles Potter and Co began making paper there.[11]  In 1845 it was leased to Manchester 'paper hanging' manufacturers T H Ibbotson and A F Langford.[12] In 1865 Thomas Grime, who having worked for Potters as cashier at Hollins Paper Mill for twelve years, 'took leave of the firm and conducted the business as a paper maker at Knott Mill'.[13] [14]

A possible timeline for the events noted above suggests that Potters bought their paper for their wallpaper printing business from Hilton's until its closure in 1843, when understandably they made a decision to open their own paper mill. Following, or just preceding Hilton's closure they engaged former employee of Hilton's, John Carlisle as their Hollins paper mill first manager. Assuming it would take eighteen month to two years to commission the new Hollins paper mill and that Knott Mill was already operating as a paper mill, Knott mill could have been used from 1843 to 1845 to supply paper to Potters, by which time Hollins was up and running. At that stage Knott mill was leased to T H Ibbotson and A F Langford in 1845 to produce base paper for its wallpaper business.[15]  

In the eight years following 1867 paper making was booming in Darwen, by 1875 nine privately owned paper mills and another four limited companies in the neighbourhood were at the planning stage.[16]  Experience in papermaking was easily transferred, for example John Carlisle's experience gained at Hilton's was transferred to Hollins and later to his own mill at Lower Primrose, Clitheroe. Likewise former Potters cashier, Thomas Grime's, move into paper mill ownership at Knott mill. There were also a good number of examples of Potters employees setting up their own successful wallpaper printing businesses.

Competitors and Former Employees

By 1875 four of the country's major suppliers of machine made wallpapers had been founded by former employees of Potters. The first developed an enviable network of dealer's warehouses, which may well have set a blueprint that Potters followed with amicable separation of another three former employees.

​Heywood, Higginbottom Smith and Co, Manchester

Heywood, Higginbottom Smith and Co, commenced paper staining around 1844, almost certainly by machine from the outset. It was partner Robert Smith, was said to have had practical experience of wallpaper manufacture, having 'been trained in Darwen'.[17] As this was early in the development of machine printing, he almost certainly was trained at Potters.

In 1859 it manufactured a substantial 3 million pieces, with a third more employees than Potters in the early 1860's, it could be argued that it was the county's largest wallpaper supplier. Insiders in the industry noted that the competition had a positive effect, suggesting 'a race of emulation between this house and Messrs. Potter, which had the result of greatly developing the trade and improving the character of the machine productions'. In 1865 besides its works in Hyde Road, Ardwick, Manchester, it had warehouses in London, Glasgow, Dublin and Huddersfield, plus a paper mill at Arden Mill, Bredbury, Cheshire. The company had its heydays in the 1860's and 1870's, but it did not have the longevity of Potters and in 1892 the company was wound-up.

Lightbown and Aspinall, Manchester

Working as cashier, Henry Lightbown joined Potters around 1840, having mathematical skills he became involved in their early development of the wallpaper printing machine. He later set up his own paper merchanting business in Manchester in 1847 in partnership with brother-in- law William Aspinall and Doctor Graham. The latter was a partner in Potters and showing a paternal attitude, he lent Lightbown money for the venture. Initially they confined their business to distributing Potters machine made papers, but in 1851 they started a hand block wallpaper printing shop at Pendleton. Harold Potter was a regular visitor to the works and the friendly relationships confirms Potters cooperation rather than competition.

In 1854 Henry Lightbown, his brother James and William Aspinall, set up a new factory at Hayfield Mills, Bredbury. They were quick to install wallpaper print machines and were soon working around the clock. Over the next thirty years the whole site was gradually covered with buildings, many containing print machines, later becoming one of the largest producers of cheap machine-printed wallpapers in Britain. From the early 1870's Henry Lightbown and his three brothers became directors and major shareholders in a number of local paper manufacturing limited companies, but not without a measure of controversy. [18]

Carlisle and Clegg, London

In 1848 Potters opened a warehouse in Islington run by employees Henry Carlisle, traveller, son of former partner in Potters John Carlisle, together with William Clegg, warehouseman. Following a very similar path to Lightbown their business also dealt with Lightbown and Aspinall, and London based Allen and Company, the partners by then having left Potters to become agents. By May 1862 they were manufacturers, noted as being 'all block-printing and piece work', but with expansion in mind in June they were moving premises 'where we shall have machinery'. This was to be the start of their successful venture into machine printing. They exhibited in the London based International Exhibition of 1862, they also won medals in exhibitions in Australia in the 1880's, becoming one of the 'big four' wallpaper suppliers of the later nineteenth century.

William Snape, Darwen

Former chief designer at Potters William Snape set up as strainer at Livesey Fold, Darwen in 1854. As noted above, in 1864 Potters bought William Snape's print works shortly after Snape had taken wallpaper designer James Huntington, as partner. Later that year John Gerald Potter, James Huntington and William Snape became partners in Potters. Livesey works was retained as a separate concern, known as the Darwen Paper Staining, continued under the general management of Potters.

Working conditions

The success of Potters was also in measure due to its employees, but in those less enlightened times the treatment by the stainers of its younger workers was nothing short of abhorrent. This was highlighted in 1862 when the Children's Employment Commission visited hand and machine paper stainers in the North West of England and London.[19] In the published report many details are given about the harsh Dickensian life of boys and girls as young of seven, working up to fourteen hours per day and ninety hours per week. First to be interviewed was J G Potter, who argued to curtail the excessive hours of employment worked by children, he had even drafted his own bill on the subject. His company was not against the idea of child labour, noting  'much of the work connected with paper staining being light and suited for those of tender years', but  Potter himself was adamant it should only be a maximum of six hours per day, provided the child dined before or after work.

Heywood, Higginbottom and Smith, were Potters major competitors and one of its partner's confirmed that 'ours and Potters are, I should say, the largest concerns in the trade', he also suggested 'children do work a great deal too long', but was happy to employ over seventy children acknowledging 'the men and boys are all healthy'. John Gerald Potter, his partner Walmsley Preston, and a number of his senior employees were even more forthcoming, noting that their youngest boy was seven years of age and no employee was over fifty. Preston acknowledged that children often worked fourteen hours a day, some worked full time, which could be of the order of ninety hours per week, while others were employed half time. A full time week was '57½ normal' hours, the remainder was overtime.

Those employed half-time were supposed to split their time between work, which could be morning or afternoon, and school. Preston stated 'We make it a condition of taking them for half-time that they should go to school in their spare time; they may go to any school they like and we pay for the schooling'. Yet the offer of schooling was not widely accepted because 'the lot of parents don't give a screw about education, they are all for the money'. He was overtly critical of the children's parents suggesting 'it is the young marriages that bring the children here so young. Parents marry when they are children themselves and send their children to work as soon as ever they can'. While the children were at work a foreman noted, 'I have to bawl at them to keep them awake, when we are at long overtime. Sometimes a flattering word, and sometimes a cross one, but not often beyond words', presumably the latter few words meant some physical violence also occurred. With such long hours its little surprise that managers noted they could not get children to go to Sunday school even when 'they are overworked in the week, for they lie abed all day to rest'.

Yet it was not always Potters who hired the children, Preston confirming it was the foremen who was responsible for employing the children, saying he was paid 'so much per 1,000 pieces and he hired the children'. Interestingly, the author's father who as a young teenager worked at a cotton weaving company in the early 1920's, was employed on similar conditions. Besides the long hours, the working conditions servicing the machine printers were horrific, particularly associated with the hot exhausts from the fire chambers used to dry the newly printed paper. They made comments such as, 'the room is very hot… above 110 degrees (or 43C). The flues for drying are terribly hot, but the boys only go in there when the paper breaks, to pull it through. This takes 3 or 4 minutes perhaps, and may happen several times a day',  while other parts are 'nearly as hot as the flues, and the boy has to be up in them a score of times and more a day to feed the fires'.  Servicing the machines was relentless throughout the day, some jobs allowed meal breaks to be taken outside the mill, but not if working on the machines, where everyone had to have food and drink alongside the machine. This was not the case for hand block printers, who were in comparative luxury being allowed breaks of up to 1½ hours.

The commission took place during the cotton famine associated with the American Civil War, which somewhat strangely impacted positively on the stainers, as it was noted they found it easier to source younger boys for employment. They acknowledged that cotton factories previously paid better  'If factories were busy now we should scarcely have a boy ', weaving on two looms paid boys of fourteen 12/- per week, Potters paid less at 11/6d. Girls who were employed as winders to hand roll the finished paper were paid much less at 5s to 7s, while number stampers only 3/-. At hand printers Scott, Cuthbertson and Whitelands, Chelsea, boys earned 4/9d.

At Lightbowns and Aspinall's they had unspecified concerns about employing girls and women, 'We have no females here; if we don't have any their morals can't be corrupted. I don't know how they manage at other houses but we thought it safer without them'. Whilst at their hand-printing supplier Ropers, the owner noted his men were 'very irregular. One I had, worked a week and drank a week alternatively for 10 weeks and then I sent him off'.  It is a regular thing with them to take the Monday as a holiday, but I don't let them work overtime to make up'.

The London trade was predominantly hand block printing, while the North West was mainly machine printing, the latter never worked beyond 2pm on Saturday, but this was not always the case in London. The larger machine printers in the North West all commented on the seasonal nature of their work, with a peak around Christmas. For block-printer and machine printer, Allan and Co, of London the peak was January and February, for Potters November to April, while Lightbown stated for four months of the year, workers 'when not employed …will just go adrift'.

A number of health related issues were identified by London's hand block printers James Toleman, they noted 'we do suffer from weak sight. Every printer over 40, I would say, does', but despite this 'the men don't wear spectacles for fear that it should be thought they were unfit for their work and so be discharged'. This view was contradicted at Holmes and Aubert, who said that 'my father is 70-odd … there's Phelps too, he is 80' and at Erwood's they suggested the eye strain was less arduous, 'not like fine needlework, or small print, where you look continuously' while 'an average worker will put his block on to the print perhaps 40 times in 8 minutes, and each time he has to fit the pin to the gauge'.  They also suggested a more likely cause 'if a block-printer's eyes suffered, it was from drink not work' and drunkenness was mentioned on nearly every one of the twenty five or so visit to stainers in London.

Another health issue related to the use of emerald green colour made from aprocos of arsenic (an arsenic derivative), and other problems were from red and white lead, turpentine and flocking materials.  A book carried by the commissioners identified the symptoms of poisoning in this industry, it noted stainers suffered loss of appetite and headaches due to the arsenic and white lead, sickness from Prussian blue colour and arsenic, made worse when mixed the turpentine. Also a fine dust while making flock borders affected respiration. It also identified eyesight was an issue, particularly as the stainers approached 50 years of age. The combination of these factors meant longevity was an issue, the commission stated 'there are a few cases of aged paper stainers. We heard of a solitary case of a man now living at the age of 55, but he has not been able to follow the employ for the last five years'

Conclusion

Potters development of machine printing of wallpaper occurred at a time of change, not only was machine printing of paper advancing apace, but the removal of stainers duty and the allowance by excise authorities of the use of continuous rolls of paper provided a huge fillip. Cheaper machine made paper and the vast increase in production levels opened a new market and prices dropped dramatically. The patent that protected machine printing allowed Potters a lead, but competition was closely behind them and for a while arguably overtook them.

The history of the styles and nature of the patterns used lie outside the scope of this article, but sufficient to say up to 1875 the closely knit Potters family continued to provide the public with new designs at affordable prices, such that by 1865 something like 2,000 new patterns per year were issued from Belgrave from a total of 6,000 patterns. So perhaps the most appropriate concluding sentence relates to the importance of the consumer.

Taken from an article in the Manchester City News and Salford Hundred Advertiser, of 3rd June, 1865, its titled Lancashire Workshops, C and J G Potters and Co. and coincided with J G Potter's standing for Parliament the following July.[20] It states:
'It is not necessary here to remind a good housewife, whatever station she may occupy, how much more of the feeling of comfort and pleasure she enjoys when she has the several apartments under her care decorated with a clean, a cheerful and a tastefully designed paperhanging', and Potters wallpaper designs fulfilled that aim in spades.[21]


Bibliography

[1] Sugden A V and Entwisle E A, Potters of Darwen 1839 to 1939 - A Century of Wallpaper Printing By Machinery, 1939

[2] The information regarding wallpaper widths kindly provided by Peter Bower

[3] Dagnall H, The Taxation of Paper in Great Britain 1643-1861, 1998, pp.26-27

[4] Bradshaw's Journal, Volume 3, 1842, p.35

[5] The London Gazette, 27 August 1844, Issue 20377, p.3001

[6] Blackburn Standard, 2 June 1847, p.1

[7] The London Gazette, 23 November 1852, Issue 21383, p.3287

[8] Accounts and Papers of the House of Commons, Volume 51, p.3

[9] Rothwell M, Industrial Heritage of Darwen, 1992, p.55

[10] Abram W A, A History of Blackburn, Town and Parish, 1877, p.492

[11] Rothwell, p.55

[12] Directory of Manchester & Salford, 1853, p.446

[13]  Preston Herald, 11 December 1886, p.11

[14] Malley M, Thomas Grime and the Knott Mill (Darwen) Paper Company Limited, Darwen. 1873 to 1882, The Quarterly, The Journal of the British Association of Paper Historians (BAPH), Forthcoming

[15] Rothwell M, p.55

[16] Manchester Evening News, 8 January 1873, p.3

[17] A V Sugden and J L Edmondson, A history of English wallpaper, 1509-1914, p.204 

[18] Malley M, Five Paper Company Foundations on the River Roddlesworth, Darwen. 1873 to 1882, The Quarterly, Forthcoming

[19]  Sugden and Entwisle, p.107

[20] Sugden and Entwisle, p.106

[21] For full article see: Malley M, Potters of Darwen, Quarterly, BAPH , Vol 118, April 2012, p.11

Mike Malley, published on Cotton Town, October 2022
Mike is a member of the British Association of Paper Historians

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​​​​Thomas Grime and The Kn​ott Mill (Darwen) Paper Company Limited​

Introduction
Thomas Grime led an eventful life.
Born at Darwen in 1826 he lived until May 1895, when a newspaper report précises his life as follows (1).  His first job, possibly aged ten or younger, was in a cotton mill working from 5.30am to 8 and 9pm.  Next he worked as a clerk on the railways and around his twenty first birthday he was promoted to a station manager. In 1852 his career took a change when he joined papermakers and eminent paper stainers, C J and G Potter at Hollins Paper Mill as cashier (2).  He impressed sufficiently to be promoted and after twelve years in 1865 he ‘took leave of the firm and conducted the business as a paper maker at Knott Mill’. Knott Mill was said to have been previously operated by Potters and Co whose paper staining business was going from strength to strength. It is likely that Knott paper mill was supplying Potters with paper before their more modern Belgrave paper mill was commissioned and accounts for Grime’s business partner being Potters director Doctor Aspinall (3)
 
Yet as interesting as Grime’s business life it is his kinship links which identifies how Darreners not only took advantage of change in the paper and wallpaper industry, but demonstrates a compassion whose story is worthy of telling.

Darwen’s Spirit of Intelligent Enterprise
Grime took the leading role at the paper mill, but after ten years and aged only about fifty he had ‘a wish to retire’, which proved to be a somewhat tongue-in-cheek comment, more of which later. During this decade the business became known as Thomas Grime and Nephew but to fulfil his desire it was incorporated in January 1875 to become the Knott Mill (Darwen) Paper Company Limited. It had £30,000 share capital in £5 divisions and the first company directors and their shareholding were as follows.


Jan-75Apr-76Mar-80​
Thomas Grime​Paper Maker​Darwen​​100
500​150​
John Tomlinson​​Coal Merchant
Darwen​100​​160
80​
William Tomlinson​​Coal Merchant
​Darwen
100​​200
​200
James Carter​​Lime Burner
Blackburn​100​​160
James Bromley​​Printer
Bolton​100​​100
100​
William Isherwood​​Paper Stainer 
Darwen​100​100​
Richard Dickinson​Coal Agent​Bolton​100​