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Joshua Gilpin

Joshua Gilpin (November 8, 1765 – August 22, 1841) was an American paper manufacturer from Philadelphia. Along with his brother, Thomas Gilpin, Jr. and his uncle Miers Fisher, he established the first paper manufacturing business in Delaware in 1787 at the Brandywine Village. In 1804, he introduced the technique of chemically bleaching paper-stuff from England to the United States.

Joshua Gilpin
Born(1765-11-08)November 8, 1765
DiedAugust 22, 1841(1841-08-22) (aged 75)
Resting placeLaurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Occupation(s)Paper manufacturer, writer

Gilpin traveled to England in 1811 and collected information on the latest techniques in paper manufacturing including the Fourdrinier and Dickinson machines. Gilpin provided the information he collected to his brother Thomas and also hired an employee away from the Dickinson paper manufacturing factory with knowledge of the Dickinson machine. Thomas used this information to build and patent the first papermaking machine in the United States at their mill in 1817. The brothers became renowned for their fine paper and the invention of the "endless paper making machine" revolutionized the paper making industry.

Gilpin took copious notes during his travels on many topics including political and social conditions, wages, standards of living and his impressions of towns and countrysides. He published several books based on his travel observations and other topics such as poetry.

Early life and education edit

Gilpin was born in Philadelphia on November 8, 1765, the oldest son to Thomas Gilpin, a prosperous merchant, and Lydia Fisher. Both his parents were Quakers. The family had extensive business in Philadelphia and owned flour mills in Maryland and Delaware.[1]

The family originated in England and migrated to the United States at the end of the seventeenth century. They came from Kentmere in Westmorland, and maintained links with their English cousins, including William Gilpin, the artist. Gilpin's father, Thomas, was a correspondent of Benjamin Franklin, but was suspected of disloyalty during the American Revolution and was exiled to Winchester, Virginia, where he died in 1778.[2][3][4]

Gilpin was educated by tutors and at the grammar school at Wilmington.[1]

Career edit

 
"Gilpin's Mill on the Brandywine" attributed to Thomas Doughty circa 1827

In 1787, Joshua, his brother Thomas, and their uncle, Miers Fisher, began making paper at a mill in the Brandywine Village along the Brandywine Creek in Delaware. The mill was originally built by their maternal grandfather, Joshua Fisher in 1765.[5] The first batches of paper were created in June 1787. The entrepreneurs had help from Benjamin Franklin, who, in 1788, lent Miers Fisher some French books on papermaking.[6] In time the mills prospered, specialising in banknote paper. The Gilpins supplied many States' banks as well as the United States Treasury.[7]

The company was initially named Gilpin & Fisher but also operated under the names Joshua Gilpin and Company, Thomas Gilpin and Company and Gilpin and Company. It was known locally as the Brandywine Paper Mill.[7]

On June 6, 1795, Joshua Gilpin traveled to England from Philadelphia on the William Penn.[8] He spent the next six years touring the continent including the factories and mills of the Industrial Revolution. His travels took him throughout Great Britain and Ireland as well as the Low Countries, France and Switzerland. Gilpin wanted to learn all he could about modern methods of paper-making, and visited many other industries as well. He kept a diary of his travels with voluminous notes about the people he met, the industrial processes he inspected and his impressions of the towns and countryside.[9]

During his time in England he gathered information about the application of chlorine to the bleaching of paper-stuff and applied that knowledge to his mill in Delaware. At that time paper was made from ground-up linen rags, which after fermenting and disintegrating needed to be bleached to make white paper. He witnessed the process first October 1795 in William Simpson's Polton Bank mill at Lasswade in Scotland, and later, in March 1796, in James Smith's mill at Maidstone, Kent. The process had been discovered by the French chemist Berthollet and introduced into Scotland by 1791 and England the following year.[10] Gilpin and his family returned to America on October 15, 1801.[11]

In 1811, Gilpin and his family returned to England, where they became trapped by the War of 1812 and had to remain until it was over. They lived in Yealand Conyers, and Gilpin was able to gather more information about new paper manufacturing methods, this time the cylinder-mould paper-making machine, developed by John Dickinson. The Gilpins returned to America in 1815.[12]

Thomas Gilpin built the first paper machine in America, based on the information Joshua obtained during his travels about the Fourdrinier and Dickinson machines. The machine invented by Thomas closely resembled the Dickinson machine that Joshua had seen in England during his travels.[13] Gilpin was able to lure the factory manager, Laurence Greatrake, away from Dickinson's factory by offering him a large salary. Greatrake brought one of the brass cylinders needed to run the machine with him.[14] Dickinson severely criticized the Gilpin's for luring his employee away in order to steal his invention.[15]

The Gilpin machine first produced paper in February 1817 and was used in the printing the edition of Poulson's Daily Advertiser published in that month.[1] They also produced and sold the paper making machine to other manufacturers.[16] The introduction of the paper making machine by the Gilpins revolutionized the manufacture of paper throughout the world.[17] The Gilpins strove to keep their machine a secret, but rivals were eventually able to copy the technology.[13]

For a time the Gilpin mill prospered as a result of the new methods, but an economic depression in 1819, coupled with Joshua's expenditure on a new house, Kentmere, (named after their Westmorland origins), as well as the cost of improvements to the mill caused a decline in fortune.[18] The Gilpins also established the Brandywine Woolen Mill in 1812, but it flooded in 1822 and was sold in 1825.[19] The paper mill was damaged by a fire and flood in the 1820s. The Gilpin brothers tried to sell the concern without success until 1837, when a group of Philadelphia businessmen purchased it. The last paper made by the Gilpins was in June 1837, 50 years after the enterprise began.[12] The site of their mill was used later by the Bancroft Mills, one of the largest textile mills in the world.[20]

The Gilpin family were promoters of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal. Joshua was elected in 1803 as a member of the board of directors to the newly formed canal company and was involved in making a new survey.[21] Gilpin was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1804.[22]

Gilpin died on August 22, 1841, at his Kentmere residence in Wilmington, Delaware[23] and was buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia.[12]

Writings edit

Gilpin wrote and published several books including:

  • Verses Written at the Fountain of Vaucluse (1799)
  • Memoir of a Canal from the Chesapeake to the Delaware (1821)
  • Farm of Virgil and other poems (1839)

His Journey to Bethlehem, comprising an account of a trip to Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in 1802, and Journal of Western Travels, detailing a journey through Western Pennsylvania to Pittsburgh and back, in 1809, were published in the Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography in 1922 and 1926–27 respectively. The latter was published in an edited edition in 1975.[24]

Gilpin's travel diaries for his first trip to Europe are in the Pennsylvania State Archives.[25] They now comprise over 60 numbered notebooks, but a number are now missing, and it is not possible to establish an exact record of his itineraries. Several main European tours can be established:

  • A journey up the east coast of England to Scotland and returning to London via Liverpool. September 20 – December 14, 1795. He saw a paper mill at Polton Bank.[26]
  • Two brief trips in the spring of 1796 examining paper mills in Kent[27] and Hertfordshire.[28] March 8–12 and 24–25, 1796.
  • A journey along the south coast of England from London as far as Plymouth, returning by Taunton and Bath. April 22 – May 15, 1796.
  • A brief journey to East Anglia. May 29 – June 11, 1796.
  • A journey to Ireland[29][30] via Gloucestershire[31] and South Wales. His return to London from Ireland was by way of the Black Country and the industrial Midlands. July 11 – December 1, 1796
  • The diaries are fragmented from here but there are an incomplete accounts of:
A journey including Bristol.[32] February 12–17, 1797
A journey from Bath to Windsor. February 27 – March 3, 1797
A journey from Kingston on Thames to Westminster. July 10–19, 1797
  • A major journey to Continental Europe taking in Holland, France and Switzerland. August 25, 1797 – [no date] April 1798 There is also a volume summarising his impressions of the entire journey.
  • The diaries are again fragmented from here but there are an incomplete accounts of:
A journey from London to Matlock, Derbyshire via Birmíngham, August 21–29, 1799
A journey lasting a week and half in and around Manchester, September 1799
A journey from Lancaster to Liverpool, April 1–17, 1800
A journey from Broadway (Glos) to Blenheim Park (Oxfordshire), August 18–19, 1800
A journey from London to Lincolnshire via Cambridge. March 23–25, 1801

There is also a volume of observations on the Lancaster Canal.

On his return to America he made several journeys in Pennsylvania and Delaware, and these have been published in the twentieth century. See section 2 above These diaries are in the library of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.[33]

For his second trip to England, between 1811 and 1815, a number of notebooks survive, including one describing paper-making machinery,[34] and another, textile mills in Lancashire and Yorkshire.

Personal life edit

He married on August 5, 1800, Mary Dilworth, at the Quaker meeting house in Yealand Conyers, Lancashire. She was a daughter of John Dilworth, [35] a Lancaster merchant and banker. Together they had eight children:

  • Henry Dilworth Gilpin (1801-1860), 14th Attorney General of the United States[36]
  • Sarah Lydia Gilpin (1802-1894)
  • Elizabeth Gilpin (1804-1892), wife of merchant Matthew Maury
  • Jane Gilpin (1806-1806)
  • Thomas William Gilpin (1806-1848)
  • Mary Sophia Gilpin (1810-1890)
  • Richard Arthington Gilpin (1812-1887)
  • William Gilpin (1815-1894), 1st Governor of the Territory of Colorado[37]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Hancock, Harold B.; Wilkinson, Norman B. (1957). "The Gilpins and Their Endless Papermaking Machine". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 81 (4): 391–405. JSTOR 20089015.
  2. ^ Gilpin, Thomas, Exiles in Virginia - account of the exile of 22 Philadelphia Quakers to Winchester, Virginia, (1848). pp 210-12
  3. ^ Oaks, Robert F. (1972). "Philadelphians in Exile: The Problem of Loyalty during the American Revolution". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 96 (3): 298–325. JSTOR 20090650.
  4. ^ "Account of the death of Joshua Gilpin's father, 1 March 1778". Retrieved October 26, 2016.
  5. ^ Bidwell, John (2013). American Paper Mills, 1690-1832. Hanover, New Hampshire: Dartmouth College Press. p. 263. ISBN 978-1-58465-964-8. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
  6. ^ These may well have included the text by Duhamal du Monceau on papermaking in Vol IV the Descriptions des Arts et Métiers.
  7. ^ a b Hancock, Harold B. "Delaware Papermakers and Papermaking". www.digital.hagley.org. Hagley Library. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
  8. ^ Historical Society of Pennsylvania archives: Thomas Gilpin, "Memoirs of the Gilpin Family" p 149
  9. ^ Simpson, Henry (1859). The Lives of Eminent Philadelphians, Now Deceased. Philadelphia: William Brotherhead. pp. 405–407. ISBN 9780608400976. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
  10. ^ Archibald and Nan Clow, The Chemical Revolution, 1952, pp 265-266.
  11. ^ Historical Society of Pennsylvania archives: Thomas Gilpin, "Memoirs of the Gilpin Family" p 149
  12. ^ a b c "Joshua Gilpin journals and notebooks". www.findingaids.hagley.org. Hagley Museum and Library. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  13. ^ a b Clapperton, R.H. (1967). The Paper-making Machine: Its Invention, Evolution, and Development. Oxford, London, Edinburgh, New York, Toronto, Sydney: Pergamon Press. pp. 345–346. ISBN 9781483279602. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  14. ^ Maynard, W. Barksdale (2015). The Brandywine: An Intimate Portrait. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-8122-4677-3. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  15. ^ Valente, AJ (2010). Rag Paper Manufacture in the United States, 1801-1900 - A History, With Directories of Mills and Owners. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-7864-5863-9. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  16. ^ Lazendorfer, Tim (December 31, 2021). The Routledge Companion to the British and North American Magazine. Routledge. p. 177. ISBN 9781000513134. Retrieved December 24, 2021.
  17. ^ Hunter, Dard (1952). Papermaking in Pioneer America. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 82–86. ISBN 9781512817058. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  18. ^ "The Winterthur Library". www.findingaid.winterthur.org. The Joseph Downs Collection of Manuscripts and Printed Ephemera Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
  19. ^ "T&J Gilpin". www.hagley.org. September 27, 2017. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
  20. ^ Delaware Federal Writers' Project (1991) [1938]. Delaware: A Guide to the First State. Scholarly Press. p. 562. ISBN 978-0-403-02160-4.
  21. ^ Joshua Gilpin, Memoir of a Canal from the Chesapeake to the Delaware(1821)
  22. ^ "Joshua Gilpin to Thomas Jefferson, 12 February 1810". www.founders.archives.gov. National Archives. Retrieved December 17, 2021.
  23. ^ Stern, Cyrus (1885). Our Kindred: The McFarlan and Stern Families of Chester County, PA. and New Castle, Del. West Chester, PA: F.S. Hickman. pp. 128–129. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
  24. ^ Joseph E. Walker, ed Pleasure and Business in Western Pennsylvania: The Journal of Joshua Gilpin. 1809, Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1975.
  25. ^ "Pennsylvania State Archives Gilpin MSS". Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  26. ^ A. P. Woolrich, "Scottish Mills as seen by Foreign Observers: The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin, 1795, and Eric Svendenstierna, 1803", The Quarterly No. 19 - July 1996
  27. ^ A. P. Woolrich, "The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin: Some Paper Mills in Kent, 1796", The Quarterly, No. 20 - October 1996
  28. ^ A. P. Woolrich, "The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin: Some Paper Mills in Hertfordshire, 1796", The Quarterly, No. 21 - January 1997
  29. ^ Hancock, Harold B.; Wilkinson, Norman B. (1962). "An American Manufacturer in Ireland, 1796". The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. 92 (2): 125–137. JSTOR 25509475.
  30. ^ A. P. Woolrich, "The Travel diaries of Joshua Gilpin: Some Paper Mills in Ireland, 1796", The Quarterly, No. 22 - April 1997
  31. ^ "Gilpin's travels in Bristol and Gloucetershire" (PDF). Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  32. ^ Woolrich, A. P. (1973). "An American in Bristol and Gloucestershire". Transactions of the Bristol & Gloucestershire Archaeological Society. 92: 169–189.
  33. ^ "Gilpin family papers in the library of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania". Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  34. ^ "Paper Making Machinery — 1816. Property of Richard Gilpin" This comprises letters and memoranda by Thomas and Joshua Gilpin and Laurence Greatrake, their manager.
  35. ^ He was a partner in the bank Dilworth & Co., founded in 1794. He was one of the promoters of the Lancaster Canal, 1791. Edward H Milligan, Biographical Dictionary of British Quakers on Commerce and Industry, 1775-1920, 2007, p149.
  36. ^ Ritter, Abraham (1860). Philadelphia and Her Merchants. Philadelphia. p. 181. Retrieved December 23, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  37. ^ Jordan, John Woolf (1911). Colonial Families of Philadelphia. New York, Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company. pp. 430–431. ISBN 9785880233557. Retrieved December 18, 2021.

Sources edit

  • Gilpin, Thomas (1913). "Fairmount Dam and Water Works, Philadelphia". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 37 (4): 471–479. JSTOR 20086141.
  • Joshua Gilpin, "Journey to Bethlehem", The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 46. No. 1, (1922), pp 15–38.
  • Joshua Gilpin, "Journey to Bethlehem (continued)", The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 46. No. 2, (1922), pp 122–153.
  • Gilpin, Thomas (1925). "Memoir of Thomas Gilpin". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 49 (4): 289–328. JSTOR 20086581.
  • Gilpin, Joshua (1926). "Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October, 1809". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 50 (1): 64–78. JSTOR 20086594.
  • Gilpin, Joshua (1926). "Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October, 1809 (continued)". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 50 (2): 163–178. JSTOR 20086605.
  • Gilpin, Joshua (1926). "Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Countries of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October, 1809 (continued)". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 50 (4): 380–382. JSTOR 20086622.
  • Gilpin, Joshua (1927). "Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October, 1809 (continued)". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 51 (2): 172–190. JSTOR 20086637.
  • Gilpin, Joshua (1927). "Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October, 1809 (continued)". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 51 (4): 351–375. JSTOR 20086650.
  • Gilpin, Joshua (1928). "Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October, 1809 (continued)". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 52 (1): 29–58. JSTOR 20086657.
  • Hancock, Harold B.; Wilkinson, Norman B. (1958). "Thomas and Joshua Gilpin, papermakers". The Paper Maker. 27 (2).
  • Hancock, Harold B.; Wilkinson, Norman B. (1957). "The Gilpins and Their Endless Papermaking Machine". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 81 (4): 391–405. JSTOR 20089015.
  • Sidney M. Edelstein, "An American Industry First: Rare document proves papermakers first to use chlorine for bleaching in the United States", Tappi Vol. XLIII, (April 1960) 40Aff.
  • Hancock, Harold B.; Wilkinson, Norman B. (January 1960). "Joshua Gilpin: an American manufacturer in England and Wales, 1795-1801-Part II". Transactions of the Newcomen Society. 33 (1): 57–66. doi:10.1179/tns.1960.004.
  • Hancock, Harold B.; Wilkinson, Norman B. (1962). "An American Manufacturer in Ireland, 1796". The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. 92 (2): 125–137. JSTOR 25509475.
  • Oaks, Robert F. (1972). "Philadelphians in Exile: The Problem of Loyalty during the American Revolution". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 96 (3): 298–325. JSTOR 20090650.
  • Woolrich, A. P. (1973). "An American in Bristol and Gloucestershire". Transactions of the Bristol & Gloucestershire Archaeological Society. 92: 169–189.
  • Joseph E. Walker, ed Pleasure and Business in Western Pennsylvania: The Journal of Joshua Gilpin. 1809, Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1975
  • Bidwell, John (June 1982). "Joshua Gilpin and Lord Stanhope's Improvements in Printing". The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. 76 (2): 143–158. doi:10.1086/pbsa.76.2.24302712. JSTOR 24302712. S2CID 192954582. ProQuest 1301162526.
  • G. E. Bentley, Jr "The Way of a Papermaker with a Poet: Joshua Gilpin, William Blake, and the Arts in 1796" Notes and Queries 1986, 33 (1), pp 80–84
  • A series of articles published in The Quarterly, issued by the British Association of Paper Historians.
  • A. P. Woolrich, "Scottish Mills as seen by Foreign Observers: The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin, 1795, and Eric Svendenstierna, 1803", The Quarterly No. 19 - July 1996
  • A. P. Woolrich, "The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin: Some Paper Mills in Kent, 1796", The Quarterly, No. 20 - October 1996
  • A. P. Woolrich, "The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin: Some Paper Mills in Hertfordshire, 1796", The Quarterly, No. 21 - January 1997
  • A. P. Woolrich, "The Travel diaries of Joshua Gilpin: Some Paper Mills in Ireland, 1796", The Quarterly, No. 22 - April 1997

External links edit

  • Joshua Gilpin at Find a Grave
  • Joshua Gilpin journal and notebooks - Hagley museum

joshua, gilpin, november, 1765, august, 1841, american, paper, manufacturer, from, philadelphia, along, with, brother, thomas, gilpin, uncle, miers, fisher, established, first, paper, manufacturing, business, delaware, 1787, brandywine, village, 1804, introduc. Joshua Gilpin November 8 1765 August 22 1841 was an American paper manufacturer from Philadelphia Along with his brother Thomas Gilpin Jr and his uncle Miers Fisher he established the first paper manufacturing business in Delaware in 1787 at the Brandywine Village In 1804 he introduced the technique of chemically bleaching paper stuff from England to the United States Joshua GilpinBorn 1765 11 08 November 8 1765Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S DiedAugust 22 1841 1841 08 22 aged 75 Wilmington Delaware U S Resting placeLaurel Hill Cemetery Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S Occupation s Paper manufacturer writer Gilpin traveled to England in 1811 and collected information on the latest techniques in paper manufacturing including the Fourdrinier and Dickinson machines Gilpin provided the information he collected to his brother Thomas and also hired an employee away from the Dickinson paper manufacturing factory with knowledge of the Dickinson machine Thomas used this information to build and patent the first papermaking machine in the United States at their mill in 1817 The brothers became renowned for their fine paper and the invention of the endless paper making machine revolutionized the paper making industry Gilpin took copious notes during his travels on many topics including political and social conditions wages standards of living and his impressions of towns and countrysides He published several books based on his travel observations and other topics such as poetry Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Writings 4 Personal life 5 Citations 6 Sources 7 External linksEarly life and education editGilpin was born in Philadelphia on November 8 1765 the oldest son to Thomas Gilpin a prosperous merchant and Lydia Fisher Both his parents were Quakers The family had extensive business in Philadelphia and owned flour mills in Maryland and Delaware 1 The family originated in England and migrated to the United States at the end of the seventeenth century They came from Kentmere in Westmorland and maintained links with their English cousins including William Gilpin the artist Gilpin s father Thomas was a correspondent of Benjamin Franklin but was suspected of disloyalty during the American Revolution and was exiled to Winchester Virginia where he died in 1778 2 3 4 Gilpin was educated by tutors and at the grammar school at Wilmington 1 Career edit nbsp Gilpin s Mill on the Brandywine attributed to Thomas Doughty circa 1827 In 1787 Joshua his brother Thomas and their uncle Miers Fisher began making paper at a mill in the Brandywine Village along the Brandywine Creek in Delaware The mill was originally built by their maternal grandfather Joshua Fisher in 1765 5 The first batches of paper were created in June 1787 The entrepreneurs had help from Benjamin Franklin who in 1788 lent Miers Fisher some French books on papermaking 6 In time the mills prospered specialising in banknote paper The Gilpins supplied many States banks as well as the United States Treasury 7 The company was initially named Gilpin amp Fisher but also operated under the names Joshua Gilpin and Company Thomas Gilpin and Company and Gilpin and Company It was known locally as the Brandywine Paper Mill 7 On June 6 1795 Joshua Gilpin traveled to England from Philadelphia on the William Penn 8 He spent the next six years touring the continent including the factories and mills of the Industrial Revolution His travels took him throughout Great Britain and Ireland as well as the Low Countries France and Switzerland Gilpin wanted to learn all he could about modern methods of paper making and visited many other industries as well He kept a diary of his travels with voluminous notes about the people he met the industrial processes he inspected and his impressions of the towns and countryside 9 During his time in England he gathered information about the application of chlorine to the bleaching of paper stuff and applied that knowledge to his mill in Delaware At that time paper was made from ground up linen rags which after fermenting and disintegrating needed to be bleached to make white paper He witnessed the process first October 1795 in William Simpson s Polton Bank mill at Lasswade in Scotland and later in March 1796 in James Smith s mill at Maidstone Kent The process had been discovered by the French chemist Berthollet and introduced into Scotland by 1791 and England the following year 10 Gilpin and his family returned to America on October 15 1801 11 In 1811 Gilpin and his family returned to England where they became trapped by the War of 1812 and had to remain until it was over They lived in Yealand Conyers and Gilpin was able to gather more information about new paper manufacturing methods this time the cylinder mould paper making machine developed by John Dickinson The Gilpins returned to America in 1815 12 Thomas Gilpin built the first paper machine in America based on the information Joshua obtained during his travels about the Fourdrinier and Dickinson machines The machine invented by Thomas closely resembled the Dickinson machine that Joshua had seen in England during his travels 13 Gilpin was able to lure the factory manager Laurence Greatrake away from Dickinson s factory by offering him a large salary Greatrake brought one of the brass cylinders needed to run the machine with him 14 Dickinson severely criticized the Gilpin s for luring his employee away in order to steal his invention 15 The Gilpin machine first produced paper in February 1817 and was used in the printing the edition of Poulson s Daily Advertiser published in that month 1 They also produced and sold the paper making machine to other manufacturers 16 The introduction of the paper making machine by the Gilpins revolutionized the manufacture of paper throughout the world 17 The Gilpins strove to keep their machine a secret but rivals were eventually able to copy the technology 13 For a time the Gilpin mill prospered as a result of the new methods but an economic depression in 1819 coupled with Joshua s expenditure on a new house Kentmere named after their Westmorland origins as well as the cost of improvements to the mill caused a decline in fortune 18 The Gilpins also established the Brandywine Woolen Mill in 1812 but it flooded in 1822 and was sold in 1825 19 The paper mill was damaged by a fire and flood in the 1820s The Gilpin brothers tried to sell the concern without success until 1837 when a group of Philadelphia businessmen purchased it The last paper made by the Gilpins was in June 1837 50 years after the enterprise began 12 The site of their mill was used later by the Bancroft Mills one of the largest textile mills in the world 20 The Gilpin family were promoters of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal Joshua was elected in 1803 as a member of the board of directors to the newly formed canal company and was involved in making a new survey 21 Gilpin was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1804 22 Gilpin died on August 22 1841 at his Kentmere residence in Wilmington Delaware 23 and was buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia 12 Writings editGilpin wrote and published several books including Verses Written at the Fountain of Vaucluse 1799 Memoir of a Canal from the Chesapeake to the Delaware 1821 Farm of Virgil and other poems 1839 His Journey to Bethlehem comprising an account of a trip to Bethlehem Pennsylvania in 1802 and Journal of Western Travels detailing a journey through Western Pennsylvania to Pittsburgh and back in 1809 were published in the Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography in 1922 and 1926 27 respectively The latter was published in an edited edition in 1975 24 Gilpin s travel diaries for his first trip to Europe are in the Pennsylvania State Archives 25 They now comprise over 60 numbered notebooks but a number are now missing and it is not possible to establish an exact record of his itineraries Several main European tours can be established A journey up the east coast of England to Scotland and returning to London via Liverpool September 20 December 14 1795 He saw a paper mill at Polton Bank 26 Two brief trips in the spring of 1796 examining paper mills in Kent 27 and Hertfordshire 28 March 8 12 and 24 25 1796 A journey along the south coast of England from London as far as Plymouth returning by Taunton and Bath April 22 May 15 1796 A brief journey to East Anglia May 29 June 11 1796 A journey to Ireland 29 30 via Gloucestershire 31 and South Wales His return to London from Ireland was by way of the Black Country and the industrial Midlands July 11 December 1 1796 The diaries are fragmented from here but there are an incomplete accounts of A journey including Bristol 32 February 12 17 1797 A journey from Bath to Windsor February 27 March 3 1797 A journey from Kingston on Thames to Westminster July 10 19 1797 dd A major journey to Continental Europe taking in Holland France and Switzerland August 25 1797 no date April 1798 There is also a volume summarising his impressions of the entire journey The diaries are again fragmented from here but there are an incomplete accounts of A journey from London to Matlock Derbyshire via Birmingham August 21 29 1799 A journey lasting a week and half in and around Manchester September 1799 A journey from Lancaster to Liverpool April 1 17 1800 A journey from Broadway Glos to Blenheim Park Oxfordshire August 18 19 1800 A journey from London to Lincolnshire via Cambridge March 23 25 1801 dd There is also a volume of observations on the Lancaster Canal On his return to America he made several journeys in Pennsylvania and Delaware and these have been published in the twentieth century See section 2 above These diaries are in the library of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania 33 For his second trip to England between 1811 and 1815 a number of notebooks survive including one describing paper making machinery 34 and another textile mills in Lancashire and Yorkshire Personal life editHe married on August 5 1800 Mary Dilworth at the Quaker meeting house in Yealand Conyers Lancashire She was a daughter of John Dilworth 35 a Lancaster merchant and banker Together they had eight children Henry Dilworth Gilpin 1801 1860 14th Attorney General of the United States 36 Sarah Lydia Gilpin 1802 1894 Elizabeth Gilpin 1804 1892 wife of merchant Matthew Maury Jane Gilpin 1806 1806 Thomas William Gilpin 1806 1848 Mary Sophia Gilpin 1810 1890 Richard Arthington Gilpin 1812 1887 William Gilpin 1815 1894 1st Governor of the Territory of Colorado 37 Citations edit a b c Hancock Harold B Wilkinson Norman B 1957 The Gilpins and Their Endless Papermaking Machine The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 81 4 391 405 JSTOR 20089015 Gilpin Thomas Exiles in Virginia account of the exile of 22 Philadelphia Quakers to Winchester Virginia 1848 pp 210 12 Oaks Robert F 1972 Philadelphians in Exile The Problem of Loyalty during the American Revolution The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 96 3 298 325 JSTOR 20090650 Account of the death of Joshua Gilpin s father 1 March 1778 Retrieved October 26 2016 Bidwell John 2013 American Paper Mills 1690 1832 Hanover New Hampshire Dartmouth College Press p 263 ISBN 978 1 58465 964 8 Retrieved December 18 2021 These may well have included the text by Duhamal du Monceau on papermaking in Vol IV the Descriptions des Arts et Metiers a b Hancock Harold B Delaware Papermakers and Papermaking www digital hagley org Hagley Library Retrieved December 18 2021 Historical Society of Pennsylvania archives Thomas Gilpin Memoirs of the Gilpin Family p 149 Simpson Henry 1859 The Lives of Eminent Philadelphians Now Deceased Philadelphia William Brotherhead pp 405 407 ISBN 9780608400976 Retrieved December 18 2021 Archibald and Nan Clow The Chemical Revolution 1952 pp 265 266 Historical Society of Pennsylvania archives Thomas Gilpin Memoirs of the Gilpin Family p 149 a b c Joshua Gilpin journals and notebooks www findingaids hagley org Hagley Museum and Library Retrieved December 16 2021 a b Clapperton R H 1967 The Paper making Machine Its Invention Evolution and Development Oxford London Edinburgh New York Toronto Sydney Pergamon Press pp 345 346 ISBN 9781483279602 Retrieved December 19 2021 Maynard W Barksdale 2015 The Brandywine An Intimate Portrait Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 81 ISBN 978 0 8122 4677 3 Retrieved December 21 2021 Valente AJ 2010 Rag Paper Manufacture in the United States 1801 1900 A History With Directories of Mills and Owners Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company Inc p 19 ISBN 978 0 7864 5863 9 Retrieved December 21 2021 Lazendorfer Tim December 31 2021 The Routledge Companion to the British and North American Magazine Routledge p 177 ISBN 9781000513134 Retrieved December 24 2021 Hunter Dard 1952 Papermaking in Pioneer America Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press pp 82 86 ISBN 9781512817058 Retrieved December 20 2021 The Winterthur Library www findingaid winterthur org The Joseph Downs Collection of Manuscripts and Printed Ephemera Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum Retrieved December 18 2021 T amp J Gilpin www hagley org September 27 2017 Retrieved December 18 2021 Delaware Federal Writers Project 1991 1938 Delaware A Guide to the First State Scholarly Press p 562 ISBN 978 0 403 02160 4 Joshua Gilpin Memoir of a Canal from the Chesapeake to the Delaware 1821 Joshua Gilpin to Thomas Jefferson 12 February 1810 www founders archives gov National Archives Retrieved December 17 2021 Stern Cyrus 1885 Our Kindred The McFarlan and Stern Families of Chester County PA and New Castle Del West Chester PA F S Hickman pp 128 129 Retrieved December 18 2021 Joseph E Walker ed Pleasure and Business in Western Pennsylvania The Journal of Joshua Gilpin 1809 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission 1975 Pennsylvania State Archives Gilpin MSS Retrieved November 1 2016 A P Woolrich Scottish Mills as seen by Foreign Observers The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin 1795 and Eric Svendenstierna 1803 The Quarterly No 19 July 1996 A P Woolrich The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin Some Paper Mills in Kent 1796 The Quarterly No 20 October 1996 A P Woolrich The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin Some Paper Mills in Hertfordshire 1796 The Quarterly No 21 January 1997 Hancock Harold B Wilkinson Norman B 1962 An American Manufacturer in Ireland 1796 The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 92 2 125 137 JSTOR 25509475 A P Woolrich The Travel diaries of Joshua Gilpin Some Paper Mills in Ireland 1796 The Quarterly No 22 April 1997 Gilpin s travels in Bristol and Gloucetershire PDF Retrieved November 9 2016 Woolrich A P 1973 An American in Bristol and Gloucestershire Transactions of the Bristol amp Gloucestershire Archaeological Society 92 169 189 Gilpin family papers in the library of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania Retrieved November 1 2016 Paper Making Machinery 1816 Property of Richard Gilpin This comprises letters and memoranda by Thomas and Joshua Gilpin and Laurence Greatrake their manager He was a partner in the bank Dilworth amp Co founded in 1794 He was one of the promoters of the Lancaster Canal 1791 Edward H Milligan Biographical Dictionary of British Quakers on Commerce and Industry 1775 1920 2007 p149 Ritter Abraham 1860 Philadelphia and Her Merchants Philadelphia p 181 Retrieved December 23 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Jordan John Woolf 1911 Colonial Families of Philadelphia New York Chicago The Lewis Publishing Company pp 430 431 ISBN 9785880233557 Retrieved December 18 2021 Sources editGilpin Thomas 1913 Fairmount Dam and Water Works Philadelphia The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 37 4 471 479 JSTOR 20086141 Joshua Gilpin Journey to Bethlehem The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography Vol 46 No 1 1922 pp 15 38 Joshua Gilpin Journey to Bethlehem continued The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography Vol 46 No 2 1922 pp 122 153 Gilpin Thomas 1925 Memoir of Thomas Gilpin The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 49 4 289 328 JSTOR 20086581 Gilpin Joshua 1926 Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October 1809 The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 50 1 64 78 JSTOR 20086594 Gilpin Joshua 1926 Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October 1809 continued The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 50 2 163 178 JSTOR 20086605 Gilpin Joshua 1926 Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Countries of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October 1809 continued The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 50 4 380 382 JSTOR 20086622 Gilpin Joshua 1927 Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October 1809 continued The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 51 2 172 190 JSTOR 20086637 Gilpin Joshua 1927 Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October 1809 continued The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 51 4 351 375 JSTOR 20086650 Gilpin Joshua 1928 Journal of a Tour from Philadelphia Thro the Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Months of September and October 1809 continued The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 52 1 29 58 JSTOR 20086657 Hancock Harold B Wilkinson Norman B 1958 Thomas and Joshua Gilpin papermakers The Paper Maker 27 2 Hancock Harold B Wilkinson Norman B 1957 The Gilpins and Their Endless Papermaking Machine The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 81 4 391 405 JSTOR 20089015 Sidney M Edelstein An American Industry First Rare document proves papermakers first to use chlorine for bleaching in the United States Tappi Vol XLIII April 1960 40Aff Hancock Harold B Wilkinson Norman B January 1960 Joshua Gilpin an American manufacturer in England and Wales 1795 1801 Part II Transactions of the Newcomen Society 33 1 57 66 doi 10 1179 tns 1960 004 Hancock Harold B Wilkinson Norman B 1962 An American Manufacturer in Ireland 1796 The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 92 2 125 137 JSTOR 25509475 Oaks Robert F 1972 Philadelphians in Exile The Problem of Loyalty during the American Revolution The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 96 3 298 325 JSTOR 20090650 Woolrich A P 1973 An American in Bristol and Gloucestershire Transactions of the Bristol amp Gloucestershire Archaeological Society 92 169 189 Joseph E Walker ed Pleasure and Business in Western Pennsylvania The Journal of Joshua Gilpin 1809 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission 1975 Bidwell John June 1982 Joshua Gilpin and Lord Stanhope s Improvements in Printing The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 76 2 143 158 doi 10 1086 pbsa 76 2 24302712 JSTOR 24302712 S2CID 192954582 ProQuest 1301162526 G E Bentley Jr The Way of a Papermaker with a Poet Joshua Gilpin William Blake and the Arts in 1796 Notes and Queries 1986 33 1 pp 80 84 A series of articles published in The Quarterly issued by the British Association of Paper Historians A P Woolrich Scottish Mills as seen by Foreign Observers The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin 1795 and Eric Svendenstierna 1803 The Quarterly No 19 July 1996 A P Woolrich The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin Some Paper Mills in Kent 1796 The Quarterly No 20 October 1996 A P Woolrich The Travel Diaries of Joshua Gilpin Some Paper Mills in Hertfordshire 1796 The Quarterly No 21 January 1997 A P Woolrich The Travel diaries of Joshua Gilpin Some Paper Mills in Ireland 1796 The Quarterly No 22 April 1997External links editJoshua Gilpin at Find a Grave Joshua Gilpin journal and notebooks Hagley museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joshua Gilpin amp 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