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Report - - Anglesey Tweed Mill (Sept, 2019) | Industrial Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Anglesey Tweed Mill (Sept, 2019)

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urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
This started life as a water-powered corn mill and was converted and extended into a wool processing factory in the early 1900s.
It was apparently the last woollen mill to operate in Anglesey
https://coflein.gov.uk/en/site/9622...sey-tweed-millmelin-llywenan-factory-llewenan.
The maps below show the mill in 1901 (top) with a water wheel on the north gable, and extended in 1969 (below).
The tail race went to power another mill to the south-west, which now seems to be an outbuilding of someone’s house.

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I’d looked at the mill during the summer without success - I probably got in this time courtesy of local kids judging by the drinks bottles.
Pictures are a mixture of phone and camera.

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All that’s left of the water wheel is a bit of the axle.

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There are only two things inside - a textile machine in the process of falling into the basement….

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…and a big steam-punk carding engine, which occupies most of one side of the place.

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Views of the left end and looking down on the rollers from above.

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A maker’s plate on the left of the big machine, and another one tied to a rafter half way along.
Both of these Huddersfield manufacturers made wool-processing stuff - I’ve read it was quite common in Wales to get machinery second-hand from the larger northern mills.

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dweeb

28DL Regular User
Regular User
A maker’s plate on the left of the big machine, and another one tied to a rafter

Don't forget that area was the hub of wool
spinning for the world, so it made sense to have your loom / spinning machinery factory there.

Platts in Oldham made cotton spinning machinery, and were one of the biggest engineering firms in the world at the time of the cotton boom.

Fox bros in Devon was packed full of Huddersfield and Colne valley machines, I guess they were exporting all over the world too. Sadly it was this desire to export as many machines as possible that led to the industries decline, and with it the death of the machine makers themselves as the foreign competition just copied the machines and the orders dried up. With the mass closure of UK textile firms the home orders dried up too and they all closed.

I don't think there is a single UK manufacturer left now.
 

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