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F.steiner & co, turkey red dyeworks.
:dflam:Can anyone recall the 250 foot octagonal brick chimney serving Steiner's dyehouse being dropped circa 1955/56?
This chimney was evidentally monumental in size, the huge octagonal shaft rising up from a massively constructed stone plinth of square dimensions. Any information and particularly a photograph would be of immense interest. |
Re: F.steiner & co, turkey red dyeworks.
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Retlaw. |
Re: F.steiner & co, turkey red dyeworks.
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Lancashire Lantern | Word Search | Gallery Steiner's works, Church, 1925. |
Re: F.steiner & co, turkey red dyeworks.
Retlaw & Garinda---thanks for the info. Yes, I have seen the images on "Lantern ". I would like to acquire both information and pictures of the demolition of the tall stack, carried out by ? circa 1955/56. |
Re: F.steiner & co, turkey red dyeworks.
Just off Rochdale Road in Harpurhey, Manchester is Turkey Lane where until the 1980s a huge old Dyehouse was sited.
In the early 19th century the firm produced the " turkey red " dyed cloth used by the British Army " redcoats ". I wonder if F. Steiner's Turkey Red Dyehouse at Church also produced red-dyed cloth for the Army. |
Re: F.steiner & co, turkey red dyeworks.
A little smattering of info on F. Steiner here:In 1835 the Church Bank Printworks was bought by F Steiner
(Hogg 1971, 83), and by the 1840s it had been divided into three portions; a printworks leased back to the Peels, a chemical works run by James Haworth & Sons, and a Turkey Red dyeworks operated by Steiner himself (Rothwell 1993, 10). In 1851 it employed 450 people (Rothwell 1980a, 4). Steiner had taken the whole of the Church Bank works back into his hands by 1860, and major extensions were made in the 1870s and 1880s. By this time they were covering the whole range of Turkey Red dying, bleaching and calico printing and in 1896 they took over the Foxhill Bank Printworks which also now contained a dyeworks and a bleachworks. The firm remained successful until the 1920s but went into voluntary liquidation in the 1950s (Rothwell 1993,10). Church Bank works was demolished in the 1950s and redeveloped (Rothwell 1980a, 4), Foxhill Bank was still in use as a bleachworks until 1958 but was cleared in the late 1970s (Rothwell 1980b, 3). |
Re: F.steiner & co, turkey red dyeworks.
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