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Textile industry

The textile industry is primarily concerned with the design, production and distribution of textiles: yarn, cloth and clothing. The raw material may be natural, or synthetic using products of the chemical industry.

An old textile factory ("Cvernovka") in Bratislava, Slovakia (1901-2004).
Textile factory (Germany, c. 1975).

Industry process

Cotton manufacturing

Cotton manufacturing processes
 
Bale breaker Blowing room
     
Willowing  
   
Breaker scutcher Batting
   
Finishing scutcher Lapping Teasing
     
Carding Carding room
     
Sliver lap  
   
Combing  
     
Drawing
 
Slubbing
 
Intermediate
 
Roving   Fine roving
     
Mule spinning Ring spinning Spinning
     
         
  Reeling   Doubling
     
Winding Bundling Bleaching
       
Weaving shed   Winding
     
Beaming   Cabling
     
Warping   Gassing
     
Sizing/slashing/dressing   Spooling
     
Weaving    
     
Cloth Yarn (cheese) Bundle Sewing thread

Cotton is the world's most important natural fibre. In the year 2007, the global yield was 25 million tons from 35 million hectares cultivated in more than 50 countries.[1] There are five stages of cotton manufacturing:[2]

  • Cultivating and Harvesting
  • Preparatory Processes
  • Spinning — giving yarn
  • Weaving — giving fabrics[a]
  • Finishing — giving textiles

Synthetic fibres

Artificial fibres can be made by extruding a polymer, through a spinneret (polymers) into a medium where it hardens. Wet spinning (rayon) uses a coagulating medium. In dry spinning (acetate and triacetate), the polymer is contained in a solvent that evaporates in the heated exit chamber. In melt spinning (nylons and polyesters) the extruded polymer is cooled in gas or air and then sets.[3] Some examples of synthetic fibers are; polyester, rayon, acrylic fibers and microfibers. All these fibres will be of great length, often kilometres long. Synthetic fibers are more durable than most natural fibers and will readily pick-up different dyes .

Artificial fibres can be processed as long fibres or batched and cut so they can be processed like a natural fibre.

Natural fibres

Sheep, goats, rabbits, silkworms, and other animals, as well as minerals like asbestos, are sources of natural fibers (cotton, flax, sisal). These vegetable fibers can originate from the seed (cotton), the stem (bast fibres: flax, hemp, jute), or the leaf (sisal). All of these sources require a number of steps, each of which has a distinct name, before a clean, even staple is produced. All of these fibers, with the exception of silk, are short, only a few centimeters long, and have a rough surface that allows them to adhere to other like staples .

History

Cottage stage

There are some indications that weaving was already known in the Palaeolithic. An indistinct textile impression has been found at Pavlov, Moravia. Neolithic textiles were found in pile dwellings excavations in Switzerland and at El Fayum, Egypt at a site which dates to about 5000 BC.

In Roman times, wool, linen and leather clothed the European population, and silk, imported along the Silk Road from China, was an extravagant luxury. The use of flax fiber in the manufacturing of cloth in Northern Europe dates back to Neolithic times.

During the late medieval period, cotton began to be imported into Northern Europe. Without any knowledge of what it came from, other than that it was a plant, noting its similarities to wool, people in the region could only imagine that cotton must be produced by plant-borne sheep. John Mandeville, writing in 1350, stated as fact the now-preposterous belief: "There grew in India a wonderful tree which bore tiny lambs on the edges of its branches. These branches were so pliable that they bent down to allow the lambs to feed when they are hungry." This aspect is retained in the name for cotton in many European languages, such as German Baumwolle, which translates as "tree wool". By the end of the 16th century, cotton was cultivated throughout the warmer regions of Asia and the Americas.

The main steps in the production of cloth are producing the fibre, preparing it, converting it to yarn, converting yarn to cloth, and then finishing the cloth. The cloth is then taken to the manufacturer of garments. The preparation of the fibres differs the most, depending on the fibre used. Flax requires retting and dressing, while wool requires carding and washing. The spinning and weaving processes are very similar between fibers, however.

Spinning evolved from twisting the fibers by hand, to using a drop spindle, to using a spinning wheel. Spindles or parts of them have been found in archaeological sites and may represent one of the first pieces of technology available.[4] The spinning wheel was most likely invented in the Islamic world by the 11th century.[5]

India

 
Textile workers in Tiruppur, South India

The textile industry in India traditionally, after agriculture, is the only industry that has generated huge employment for both skilled and unskilled labour in textiles. The textile industry continues to be the second-largest employment generating sector in India. It offers direct employment to over 35 million in the country.[6] According to the Ministry of Textiles, the share of textiles in total exports during April–July 2010 was 11.04%. During 2009–2010, the Indian textile industry was pegged at US$55 billion, 64% of which services domestic demand.[6] In 2010, there were 2,500 textile weaving factories and 4,135 textile finishing factories in all of India.[7] According to AT Kearney’s ‘Retail Apparel Index’, India was ranked as the fourth most promising market for apparel retailers in 2009.[8]

India is first in global jute production and shares 63% of the global textile and garment market. India is second in global textile manufacturing and also second in silk and cotton production. 100% FDI is allowed via automatic route in textile sector. Rieter, Trutzschler, Saurer, Soktas, Zambiati, Bilsar, Monti, CMT, E-land, Nisshinbo, Marks & Spencer, Zara, Promod, Benetton, and Levi’s are some of the foreign textile companies invested or working in India.[9]

Britain

The key British industry at the beginning of the 18th century was the production of textiles made with wool from the large sheep-farming areas in the Midlands and across the country (created as a result of land-clearance and enclosure). This was a labour-intensive activity providing employment throughout Britain, with major centres being the West Country; Norwich and environs; and the West Riding of Yorkshire. The export trade in woolen goods accounted for more than a quarter of British exports during most of the 18th century, doubling between 1701 and 1770.[10] The British textile industry drove the Industrial revolution, triggering advancements in technology, stimulating the coal and iron industries, boosting raw material imports, and improving transportation, which made Britain the global leader of industrialization, trade, and scientific innovation.[11]

Exports by the cotton industry – centered in Lancashire – had grown tenfold during this time, but still accounted for only a tenth of the value of the woolen trade. Before the 17th century, the manufacture of goods was performed on a limited scale by individual workers, usually on their own premises (such as weavers' cottages). Goods were transported around the country by clothiers who visited the village with their trains of packhorses. Some of the cloth was made into clothes for people living in the same area, and a large amount of cloth was exported. River navigations were constructed, and some contour-following canals. In the early 18th century, artisans were inventing ways to become more productive. Silk, wool, fustian, and linen were being eclipsed by cotton, which was becoming the most important textile. This set the foundations for the changes.[12]

Catalonia

The cotton industry in Catalonia was the first industry in Spain to industrialise and led, by the mid 19th century, to Catalonia becoming the main industrial region of Spain, a position it maintained until well into the 20th century. Catalonia is the one Mediterranean exception to the tendency of early industrialisation to be concentrated in northern Europe.[13]

The industry began in the early 18th century in Barcelona, when printed cloth chintz (Catalan: indianes) was produced as an import substitution. The market quickly expanded to the American colonies from where dyes and (later) cotton raw materials could be sourced. Spinning was a late addition to the industry and took off after English spinning technology was introduced at the turn of the 19th century. Industrialisation of the industry occurred in the 1830s after adoption of the factory system, and the removal of restrictions by Britain on the emigration of expert labour (1825) and of machinery (1842). Steam power was introduced but the cost of imported coal and steam engines, led to the extensive use of hydraulic power from the late 1860s.

Industrial revolution

The woven fabric portion of the textile industry grew out of the industrial revolution in the 18th century as mass production of yarn and cloth became a mainstream industry.[14]

In 1734 in Bury, Lancashire John Kay invented the flying shuttle — one of the first of a series of inventions associated with the cotton woven fabric industry. The flying shuttle increased the width of cotton cloth and speed of production of a single weaver at a loom.[15] Resistance by workers to the perceived threat to jobs delayed the widespread introduction of this technology, even though the higher rate of production generated an increased demand for spun cotton.

 
Shuttles

In 1761, the Duke of Bridgewater's canal connected Manchester to the coal fields of Worsley and in 1762, Matthew Boulton opened the Soho Foundry engineering works in Handsworth, Birmingham. His partnership with Scottish engineer James Watt resulted, in 1775, in the commercial production of the more efficient Watt steam engine which used a separate condenser.[citation needed]

In 1764, James Hargreaves is credited as inventor of the spinning jenny which multiplied the spun thread production capacity of a single worker — initially eightfold and subsequently much further. Others[16] credit the invention to Thomas Highs. Industrial unrest and a failure to patent the invention until 1770 forced Hargreaves from Blackburn, but his lack of protection of the idea allowed the concept to be exploited by others. As a result, there were over 20,000 spinning jennies in use by the time of his death. Also in 1764, Thorp Mill, the first water-powered cotton mill in the world was constructed at Royton, Lancashire, and was used for carding cotton. With the spinning and weaving process now mechanized, cotton mills cropped up all over the North West of England.

The stocking frame invented in 1589 for silk became viable when in 1759, Jedediah Strutt introduced an attachment for the frame which produced what became known as the Derby Rib,[17] that produced a knit and purl stitch. This allowed stockings to be manufactured in silk and later in cotton. In 1768, Hammond modified the stocking frame to weave weft-knitted openworks or nets by crossing over the loops, using a mobile tickler bar- this led in 1781 to Thomas Frost's square net. Cotton had been too coarse for lace, but by 1805 Houldsworths of Manchester were producing reliable 300 count cotton thread.[18]

19th-century developments

With the Cartwright Loom, the Spinning Mule and the Boulton & Watt steam engine, the pieces were in place to build a mechanised woven fabric textile industry. From this point there were no new inventions, but a continuous improvement in technology as the mill-owner strove to reduce cost and improve quality. Developments in the transport infrastructure; that is the canals and after 1831 the railways facilitated the import of raw materials and export of finished cloth.

Firstly, the use of water power to drive mills was supplemented by steam driven water pumps, and then superseded completely by the steam engines. For example, Samuel Greg joined his uncle's firm of textile merchants, and, on taking over the company in 1782, he sought out a site to establish a mill.Quarry Bank Mill was built on the River Bollin at Styal in Cheshire. It was initially powered by a water wheel, but installed steam engines in 1810. Quarry Bank Mill in Cheshire still exists as a well-preserved museum, having been in use from its construction in 1784 until 1959. It also illustrates how the mill owners exploited child labour, taking orphans from nearby Manchester to work the cotton. It shows that these children were housed, clothed, fed and provided with some education. In 1830, the average power of a mill engine was 48 hp, but Quarry Bank mill installed a new 100 hp water wheel.[19] William Fairbairn addressed the problem of line-shafting and was responsible for improving the efficiency of the mill. In 1815 he replaced the wooden turning shafts that drove the machines at 50rpm, to wrought iron shafting working at 250 rpm, these were a third of the weight of the previous ones and absorbed less power.[19]

 
A Roberts loom in a weaving shed in 1835. Note the wrought iron shafting, fixed to the cast iron columns

Secondly, in 1830, using an 1822 patent, Richard Roberts manufactured the first loom with a cast iron frame, the Roberts Loom.[15] In 1842 James Bullough and William Kenworthy, made the Lancashire Loom, a semiautomatic power loom: although it is self-acting, it has to be stopped to recharge empty shuttles. It was the mainstay of the Lancashire cotton industry for a century, until the Northrop Loom (invented in 1894, with an automatic weft replenishment function) gained ascendancy.

 
Roberts self-acting mule with quadrant gearing

Thirdly, also in 1830, Richard Roberts patented the first self-acting mule. Stalybridge mule spinners strike was in 1824; this stimulated research into the problem of applying power to the winding stroke of the mule.[20] The draw while spinning had been assisted by power, but the push of the wind had been done manually by the spinner, the mule could be operated by semiskilled labor. Before 1830, the spinner would operate a partially powered mule with a maximum of 400 spindles; after, self-acting mules with up to 1300 spindles could be built.[21]

Number of looms in the UK[22]
Year 1803 1820 1829 1833 1857
Looms 2400 14650 55500 100000 250000

The industrial revolution changed the nature of work and society The three key drivers in these changes were textile manufacturing, iron founding and steam power.[23][24][25][26] The geographical focus of textile manufacture in Britain was Manchester and the small towns of the Pennines and southern Lancashire.

Textile production in England peaked in 1926, and as mills were decommissioned, many of the scrapped mules and looms were bought up and reinstated in India.

20th century

 
Textile factory workers in Poland, 1950s
 
Textile workers at Finlayson factory in Tampere, Finland in 1951
 
Manila hemp warp yarns being prepared for weaving in a modern textile factory

Major changes came to the textile industry during the 20th century, with continuing technological innovations in machinery, synthetic fibre, logistics, and globalization of the business. The business model that had dominated the industry for centuries was to change radically. Cotton and wool producers were not the only source for fibres, as chemical companies created new synthetic fibres that had superior qualities for many uses, such as rayon, invented in 1910, and DuPont's nylon, invented in 1935 as in inexpensive silk substitute, and used for products ranging from women's stockings to tooth brushes and military parachutes.

The variety of synthetic fibres used in manufacturing fibre grew steadily throughout the 20th century. In the 1920s, the computer was invented; in the 1940s, acetate, modacrylic, metal fibres, and saran were developed; acrylic, polyester, and spandex were introduced in the 1950s. Polyester became hugely popular in the apparel market, and by the late 1970s, more polyester was sold in the United States than cotton.[27]

By the late 1980s, the apparel segment was no longer the largest market for fibre products, with industrial and home furnishings together representing a larger proportion of the fibre market.[28] Industry integration and global manufacturing led to many small firms closing for good during the 1970s and 1980s in the United States; during those decades, 95 percent of the looms in North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia shut down, and Alabama and Virginia also saw many factories close.[28]

The largest exporters of textiles in 2013 were China ($274 billion), India ($40 billion), Italy ($36 billion), Germany ($35 billion), Bangladesh ($28 billion) and Pakistan ($27 Billion).[29]

Pakistan

The textile sector accounts for 70% of Pakistan's exports. The industry's contribution in the nation's exports account for 8.5% of the total GDP. Textile exports stood at $4.4 billion in 2017-2018. The industry employs a large section of the labour force in the country.

Pakistan is the 4th largest producer of cotton with the third largest spinning capacity in Asia. It contributes 5% to the global spinning capacity. At present, there are 1,221 ginning units, 442 spinning units and 124 large spinning units in addition to 425 small units which produce textiles. Pakistan is the third largest consumer of cotton. Exports of $3.5 billion were recorded in 2017- 2018(6.5% of the total exported cotton on the world)

In 1950, textile manufacturing emerged as the central of Pakistan industrialisation. Between 1947 and 2000, the number of textile Mills increased from 3 to 600. In the same time, spindles increased in number from 177,000 to 805 million. The textile industry provides 45% of the bank redit in Pakistan.


Bangladesh

Many Western multinationals use labor in Bangladesh, which is one of the cheapest in the world: 30 euros per month compared to 150 or 200 in China. Four days is enough for the CEO of one of the top five global textile brands to earn what a Bangladeshi garment worker will earn in her lifetime. In April 2013, at least 1,135 textile workers died in the collapse of their factory. Other fatal accidents due to unsanitary factories have affected Bangladesh: in 2005 a factory collapsed and caused the death of 64 people. In 2006, a series of fires killed 85 people and injured 207 others. In 2010, some 30 people died of asphyxiation and burns in two serious fires.

In 2006, tens of thousands of workers mobilized in one of the country's largest strike movements, affecting almost all of the 4,000 factories. The Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) uses police forces to crack down. Three workers were killed, and hundreds more were wounded by bullets, or imprisoned. In 2010, after a new strike movement, nearly 1,000 people were injured among workers as a result of the repression.[30]

Ethiopia

Employees of Ethiopian garment factories, who work for brands such as Guess, H&M or Calvin Klein, receive a monthly salary of 26 dollars per month. These very low wages have led to low productivity, frequent strikes and high turnover. Some factories have replaced all their employees on average every 12 months, according to the 2019 report of the Stern Centre for Business and Human Rights at New York University.

The report states:" Rather than the docile and cheap labour force promoted in Ethiopia, foreign-based suppliers have met employees who are unhappy with their pay and living conditions and who want to protest more and more by stopping work or even quitting. In their eagerness to create a "made in Ethiopia" brand, the government, global brands and foreign manufacturers did not anticipate that the base salary was simply too low for workers to make a living from. »[31]

Commerce and regulation

The Multi Fibre Arrangement (MFA) governed the world trade in textiles and garments from 1974 through 2004, imposing quotas on the amount developing countries could export to developed countries. It expired on 1 January 2005.

The MFA was introduced in 1974 as a short-term measure intended to allow developed countries to adjust to imports from the developing world. Developing countries have a natural advantage in textile production because it is labor-intensive and they have low labor costs. According to a World Bank/International Monetary Fund (IMF) study, the system has cost the developing world 27 million jobs and $40 billion a year in lost exports.[32]

However, the Arrangement was not negative for all developing countries. For example, the European Union (EU) imposed no restrictions or duties on imports from the very poor countries, such as Bangladesh, leading to a massive expansion of the industry there.

At the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) Uruguay Round, it was decided to bring the textile trade under the jurisdiction of the World Trade Organization (WTO). The WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing provided for the gradual dismantling of the quotas that existed under the MFA. This process was completed on 1 January 2005. However, large tariffs remain in place on many textile products.

 
Women work in a textile factory outside Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Bangladesh was expected to suffer the most from the ending of the MFA, as it was expected to face more competition, particularly from China. However, this was not the case. It turns out that even in the face of other economic giants, Bangladesh's labor is “cheaper than anywhere else in the world.” While some smaller factories were documented making pay cuts and layoffs, most downsizing was essentially speculative – the orders for goods kept coming even after the MFA expired. In fact, Bangladesh's exports increased in value by about $500 million in 2006.[33]

Regulatory standards

For textiles, like for many other products, there are certain national and international standards and regulations that need to be complied with to ensure quality, safety and sustainability.

The following standards amongst others apply to textiles:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ includes Knitting processes

References

Citations

  1. ^ Majeed, A (January 19, 2009), Cotton and textiles — the challenges ahead, Dawn-the Internet edition, from the original on January 23, 2009, retrieved 2009-02-12
  2. ^ "Machin processes", Spinning the Web, Manchester City Council: Libraries, from the original on 2008-10-23, retrieved 2009-01-29
  3. ^ Collier 1970, p. 33
  4. ^ Cotton: Origin, History, Technology, and Production By C. Wayne Smith, Joe Tom Cotton. Page viii. Published 1999. John Wiley and Sons. Technology & Industrial Arts. 864 pages. ISBN 0-471-18045-9
  5. ^ Pacey, Arnold (1991) [1990]. Technology in World Civilization: A Thousand-Year History (First MIT Press paperback ed.). Cambridge MA: The MIT Press. pp. 23–24.
  6. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 May 2012.
  7. ^ "Wearing Apparel Manufacturing Report". AnythingResearch India.
  8. ^ "Emerging Markets Offer Growth Opportunities for Apparel Retailers Battling Declines in Domestic Consumer Spending".
  9. ^ SECTORS - Make In India
  10. ^ Toynbee, Arnold (1884). . London: Rivington's. ISBN 978-1-4191-2952-0. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03.
  11. ^ "Textile Manufacturing | Boundless World History". courses.lumenlearning.com. Retrieved 2021-10-29.
  12. ^ Industrial Revolution and the Standard of Living: The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics 2008-02-21 at the Wayback Machine, Library of Economics and Liberty
  13. ^ Thomson, J.K.J. (1992). A distinctive industrialisation. Cotton in Barcelona 1728-1832. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-39482-1. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  14. ^ Hammond, J.L.; Hammond, Barbara (1919), The Skilled Labourer 1760-1832 (pdf), London: Longmans, Green and co., p. 51
  15. ^ a b Williams & Farnie 1992, p. 11
  16. ^ Great Industries of Great Britain, Volume I, published by Cassell Petter and Galpin, (London, Paris, New York, c1880).
  17. ^ Earnshaw 1986, p. 17.
  18. ^ Earnshaw 1986, pp. 24–26.
  19. ^ a b Hills 1993, p. 113
  20. ^ Hills 1993, p. 118
  21. ^ Williams & Farnie 1992, p. 9
  22. ^ Hills 1993, p. 117
  23. ^ Eric Hobsbawm, The Age of Revolution: Europe 1789–1848, Weidenfeld & Nicolson Ltd. ISBN 0-349-10484-0
  24. ^ Joseph E Inikori. Africans and the Industrial Revolution in England, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-01079-9 Read it
  25. ^ Berg, Maxine (1992). "Rehabilitating the Industrial Revolution" (PDF). The Economic History Review. 45 (1): 24–50. doi:10.2307/2598327. JSTOR 2598327.
  26. ^ Rehabilitating the Industrial Revolution 2006-11-09 at the Wayback Machine by Julie Lorenzen, Central Michigan University. Retrieved November 2006.
  27. ^ The U.S. textile and apparel industry : a revolution in progress : special report. United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment. 1987. p. 39. ISBN 9781428922945.
  28. ^ a b The U.S. textile and apparel industry : a revolution in progress : special report. United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment. 1987. pp. 31–2. ISBN 9781428922945.
  29. ^ TNN (3 June 2014). . Times of India. Archived from the original on 30 June 2016. Retrieved 2 September 2016.
  30. ^ "Au Bangladesh, une ouvrière du textile meurt tous les deux jours".
  31. ^ "En Ethiopie, les petites mains de H&M ou Calvin Klein gagnent 23 euros par mois". Le Monde.fr. 8 May 2019.
  32. ^ Presentation by H.E. K.M. Chandrasekhar, Chairman ITCB, EC Conference on the Future of Textiles and Clothing after 2004, Brussels, 5 – 6 May 2003. "後遺症が残りそうな交通事故で気をつけるポイント" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2008-12-21. Retrieved 2011-10-05.
  33. ^ Haider, Mahtab. “Defying predictions, Bangladesh’s garment factories thrive.” The Christian Science Monitor. 7 Feb 2006. 11 Feb 2007. "Defying predictions, Bangladesh's garment factories thrive". Christian Science Monitor. 2006-02-07. from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-02-11.
  34. ^ "Standard for the Flammability of Clothing Textiles" (PDF). cpsc.gov. (PDF) from the original on 8 January 2013. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  35. ^ "Textile Standards". www.astm.org. from the original on 30 April 2018. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  36. ^ "REACH Regulations - How they apply to Textile and Leather articles (hktdc.com)". info.hktdc.com. from the original on 30 April 2018. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  37. ^ "GB Standards - China Certification – CCC mark certificate (3C) for China – Your expert for China Compulsory Certification". china-certification.com. from the original on 13 January 2018. Retrieved 30 April 2018.

Sources

  • Collier, Ann M. (1970), A Handbook of Textiles, Pergamon Press, p. 258, ISBN 978-0-08-018057-1
  • Copeland, Melvin Thomas. The cotton manufacturing industry of the United States (Harvard University Press, 1912) online
  • Cameron, Edward H. Samuel Slater, Father of American Manufactures (1960) scholarly biography
  • Conrad Jr., James L. "'Drive That Branch': Samuel Slater, the Power Loom, and the Writing of America's Textile History," Technology and Culture, Vol. 36, No. 1 (January 1995), pp. 1–28 in JSTOR
  • Earnshaw, Pat (1986). Lace Machines and Machine Laces. Batsford. ISBN 978-0713446845.
  • Griffiths, T., Hunt, P.A., and O’Brien, P. K. "Inventive activity in the British textile industry", Journal of Economic History, 52 (1992), pp. 881–906.
  • Griffiths, Trevor; Hunt, Philip; O’Brien, Patrick. "Scottish, Irish, and imperial connections: Parliament, the three kingdoms, and the mechanization of cotton spinning in eighteenth-century Britain," Economic History Review, Aug 2008, Vol. 61 Issue 3, pp 625–650
  • Hills, Richard Leslie (1993), Power from Steam: A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press, p. 244, ISBN 9780521458344
  • Smelser; Neil J. Social Change in the Industrial Revolution: An Application of Theory to the British Cotton Industry (1959)
  • Tucker, Barbara M. "The Merchant, the Manufacturer, and the Factory Manager: The Case of Samuel Slater," Business History Review, Vol. 55, No. 3 (Autumn, 1981), pp. 297–313 in JSTOR
  • Tucker, Barbara M. Samuel Slater and the Origins of the American Textile Industry, 1790-1860 (1984)
  • Williams, Mike; Farnie (1992), Cotton Mills of Greater Manchester, Carnegie Publishing, ISBN 978-0-948789-89-2
  • Woytinsky, W. S., and E. S. Woytinsky. World Population and Production Trends and Outlooks (1953) pp. 1051–98; with many tables and maps on the worldwide textile industry in 19508

textile, industry, trade, redirects, here, racehorse, trade, horse, television, series, trade, this, article, about, production, fibres, fabric, production, apparel, clothing, garments, clothing, industry, textile, industry, primarily, concerned, with, design,. Rag trade redirects here For the racehorse see Rag Trade horse For the television series see The Rag Trade This article is about the production of fibres and fabric For the production of apparel clothing and garments see Clothing industry The textile industry is primarily concerned with the design production and distribution of textiles yarn cloth and clothing The raw material may be natural or synthetic using products of the chemical industry An old textile factory Cvernovka in Bratislava Slovakia 1901 2004 Textile factory Germany c 1975 Contents 1 Industry process 1 1 Cotton manufacturing 1 2 Synthetic fibres 1 3 Natural fibres 2 History 2 1 Cottage stage 2 2 India 2 3 Britain 2 4 Catalonia 2 5 Industrial revolution 2 6 19th century developments 2 7 20th century 2 8 Pakistan 2 9 Bangladesh 2 10 Ethiopia 3 Commerce and regulation 4 Regulatory standards 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 SourcesIndustry process EditMain article Textile manufacturing Cotton manufacturing Edit Cotton manufacturing processes Bale breaker Blowing room Willowing Breaker scutcher Batting Finishing scutcher Lapping Teasing Carding Carding room Sliver lap Combing Drawing Slubbing Intermediate Roving Fine roving Mule spinning Ring spinning Spinning Reeling Doubling Winding Bundling Bleaching Weaving shed Winding Beaming Cabling Warping Gassing Sizing slashing dressing Spooling Weaving Cloth Yarn cheese Bundle Sewing threadCotton is the world s most important natural fibre In the year 2007 the global yield was 25 million tons from 35 million hectares cultivated in more than 50 countries 1 There are five stages of cotton manufacturing 2 Cultivating and Harvesting Preparatory Processes Spinning giving yarn Weaving giving fabrics a Finishing giving textilesSynthetic fibres Edit Artificial fibres can be made by extruding a polymer through a spinneret polymers into a medium where it hardens Wet spinning rayon uses a coagulating medium In dry spinning acetate and triacetate the polymer is contained in a solvent that evaporates in the heated exit chamber In melt spinning nylons and polyesters the extruded polymer is cooled in gas or air and then sets 3 Some examples of synthetic fibers are polyester rayon acrylic fibers and microfibers All these fibres will be of great length often kilometres long Synthetic fibers are more durable than most natural fibers and will readily pick up different dyes Artificial fibres can be processed as long fibres or batched and cut so they can be processed like a natural fibre Natural fibres Edit Sheep goats rabbits silkworms and other animals as well as minerals like asbestos are sources of natural fibers cotton flax sisal These vegetable fibers can originate from the seed cotton the stem bast fibres flax hemp jute or the leaf sisal All of these sources require a number of steps each of which has a distinct name before a clean even staple is produced All of these fibers with the exception of silk are short only a few centimeters long and have a rough surface that allows them to adhere to other like staples History EditCottage stage Edit Main article Textile manufacturing by pre industrial methodsThere are some indications that weaving was already known in the Palaeolithic An indistinct textile impression has been found at Pavlov Moravia Neolithic textiles were found in pile dwellings excavations in Switzerland and at El Fayum Egypt at a site which dates to about 5000 BC In Roman times wool linen and leather clothed the European population and silk imported along the Silk Road from China was an extravagant luxury The use of flax fiber in the manufacturing of cloth in Northern Europe dates back to Neolithic times During the late medieval period cotton began to be imported into Northern Europe Without any knowledge of what it came from other than that it was a plant noting its similarities to wool people in the region could only imagine that cotton must be produced by plant borne sheep John Mandeville writing in 1350 stated as fact the now preposterous belief There grew in India a wonderful tree which bore tiny lambs on the edges of its branches These branches were so pliable that they bent down to allow the lambs to feed when they are hungry This aspect is retained in the name for cotton in many European languages such as German Baumwolle which translates as tree wool By the end of the 16th century cotton was cultivated throughout the warmer regions of Asia and the Americas The main steps in the production of cloth are producing the fibre preparing it converting it to yarn converting yarn to cloth and then finishing the cloth The cloth is then taken to the manufacturer of garments The preparation of the fibres differs the most depending on the fibre used Flax requires retting and dressing while wool requires carding and washing The spinning and weaving processes are very similar between fibers however Spinning evolved from twisting the fibers by hand to using a drop spindle to using a spinning wheel Spindles or parts of them have been found in archaeological sites and may represent one of the first pieces of technology available 4 The spinning wheel was most likely invented in the Islamic world by the 11th century 5 India Edit Textile workers in Tiruppur South India Main article Textile industry in India Further information Economic history of India The textile industry in India traditionally after agriculture is the only industry that has generated huge employment for both skilled and unskilled labour in textiles The textile industry continues to be the second largest employment generating sector in India It offers direct employment to over 35 million in the country 6 According to the Ministry of Textiles the share of textiles in total exports during April July 2010 was 11 04 During 2009 2010 the Indian textile industry was pegged at US 55 billion 64 of which services domestic demand 6 In 2010 there were 2 500 textile weaving factories and 4 135 textile finishing factories in all of India 7 According to AT Kearney s Retail Apparel Index India was ranked as the fourth most promising market for apparel retailers in 2009 8 India is first in global jute production and shares 63 of the global textile and garment market India is second in global textile manufacturing and also second in silk and cotton production 100 FDI is allowed via automatic route in textile sector Rieter Trutzschler Saurer Soktas Zambiati Bilsar Monti CMT E land Nisshinbo Marks amp Spencer Zara Promod Benetton and Levi s are some of the foreign textile companies invested or working in India 9 Britain Edit Main articles Calico Acts and Textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution The key British industry at the beginning of the 18th century was the production of textiles made with wool from the large sheep farming areas in the Midlands and across the country created as a result of land clearance and enclosure This was a labour intensive activity providing employment throughout Britain with major centres being the West Country Norwich and environs and the West Riding of Yorkshire The export trade in woolen goods accounted for more than a quarter of British exports during most of the 18th century doubling between 1701 and 1770 10 The British textile industry drove the Industrial revolution triggering advancements in technology stimulating the coal and iron industries boosting raw material imports and improving transportation which made Britain the global leader of industrialization trade and scientific innovation 11 Exports by the cotton industry centered in Lancashire had grown tenfold during this time but still accounted for only a tenth of the value of the woolen trade Before the 17th century the manufacture of goods was performed on a limited scale by individual workers usually on their own premises such as weavers cottages Goods were transported around the country by clothiers who visited the village with their trains of packhorses Some of the cloth was made into clothes for people living in the same area and a large amount of cloth was exported River navigations were constructed and some contour following canals In the early 18th century artisans were inventing ways to become more productive Silk wool fustian and linen were being eclipsed by cotton which was becoming the most important textile This set the foundations for the changes 12 Catalonia Edit Main article History of the cotton industry in Catalonia The cotton industry in Catalonia was the first industry in Spain to industrialise and led by the mid 19th century to Catalonia becoming the main industrial region of Spain a position it maintained until well into the 20th century Catalonia is the one Mediterranean exception to the tendency of early industrialisation to be concentrated in northern Europe 13 The industry began in the early 18th century in Barcelona when printed cloth chintz Catalan indianes was produced as an import substitution The market quickly expanded to the American colonies from where dyes and later cotton raw materials could be sourced Spinning was a late addition to the industry and took off after English spinning technology was introduced at the turn of the 19th century Industrialisation of the industry occurred in the 1830s after adoption of the factory system and the removal of restrictions by Britain on the emigration of expert labour 1825 and of machinery 1842 Steam power was introduced but the cost of imported coal and steam engines led to the extensive use of hydraulic power from the late 1860s Industrial revolution Edit Main article Textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution The woven fabric portion of the textile industry grew out of the industrial revolution in the 18th century as mass production of yarn and cloth became a mainstream industry 14 In 1734 in Bury Lancashire John Kay invented the flying shuttle one of the first of a series of inventions associated with the cotton woven fabric industry The flying shuttle increased the width of cotton cloth and speed of production of a single weaver at a loom 15 Resistance by workers to the perceived threat to jobs delayed the widespread introduction of this technology even though the higher rate of production generated an increased demand for spun cotton Shuttles In 1761 the Duke of Bridgewater s canal connected Manchester to the coal fields of Worsley and in 1762 Matthew Boulton opened the Soho Foundry engineering works in Handsworth Birmingham His partnership with Scottish engineer James Watt resulted in 1775 in the commercial production of the more efficient Watt steam engine which used a separate condenser citation needed In 1764 James Hargreaves is credited as inventor of the spinning jenny which multiplied the spun thread production capacity of a single worker initially eightfold and subsequently much further Others 16 credit the invention to Thomas Highs Industrial unrest and a failure to patent the invention until 1770 forced Hargreaves from Blackburn but his lack of protection of the idea allowed the concept to be exploited by others As a result there were over 20 000 spinning jennies in use by the time of his death Also in 1764 Thorp Mill the first water powered cotton mill in the world was constructed at Royton Lancashire and was used for carding cotton With the spinning and weaving process now mechanized cotton mills cropped up all over the North West of England The stocking frame invented in 1589 for silk became viable when in 1759 Jedediah Strutt introduced an attachment for the frame which produced what became known as the Derby Rib 17 that produced a knit and purl stitch This allowed stockings to be manufactured in silk and later in cotton In 1768 Hammond modified the stocking frame to weave weft knitted openworks or nets by crossing over the loops using a mobile tickler bar this led in 1781 to Thomas Frost s square net Cotton had been too coarse for lace but by 1805 Houldsworths of Manchester were producing reliable 300 count cotton thread 18 19th century developments Edit For further details of the operation and history of looms see Power loom For further details of the operation and history of spinning mules see Spinning mule With the Cartwright Loom the Spinning Mule and the Boulton amp Watt steam engine the pieces were in place to build a mechanised woven fabric textile industry From this point there were no new inventions but a continuous improvement in technology as the mill owner strove to reduce cost and improve quality Developments in the transport infrastructure that is the canals and after 1831 the railways facilitated the import of raw materials and export of finished cloth Firstly the use of water power to drive mills was supplemented by steam driven water pumps and then superseded completely by the steam engines For example Samuel Greg joined his uncle s firm of textile merchants and on taking over the company in 1782 he sought out a site to establish a mill Quarry Bank Mill was built on the River Bollin at Styal in Cheshire It was initially powered by a water wheel but installed steam engines in 1810 Quarry Bank Mill in Cheshire still exists as a well preserved museum having been in use from its construction in 1784 until 1959 It also illustrates how the mill owners exploited child labour taking orphans from nearby Manchester to work the cotton It shows that these children were housed clothed fed and provided with some education In 1830 the average power of a mill engine was 48 hp but Quarry Bank mill installed a new 100 hp water wheel 19 William Fairbairn addressed the problem of line shafting and was responsible for improving the efficiency of the mill In 1815 he replaced the wooden turning shafts that drove the machines at 50rpm to wrought iron shafting working at 250 rpm these were a third of the weight of the previous ones and absorbed less power 19 A Roberts loom in a weaving shed in 1835 Note the wrought iron shafting fixed to the cast iron columns Secondly in 1830 using an 1822 patent Richard Roberts manufactured the first loom with a cast iron frame the Roberts Loom 15 In 1842 James Bullough and William Kenworthy made the Lancashire Loom a semiautomatic power loom although it is self acting it has to be stopped to recharge empty shuttles It was the mainstay of the Lancashire cotton industry for a century until the Northrop Loom invented in 1894 with an automatic weft replenishment function gained ascendancy Roberts self acting mule with quadrant gearing Thirdly also in 1830 Richard Roberts patented the first self acting mule Stalybridge mule spinners strike was in 1824 this stimulated research into the problem of applying power to the winding stroke of the mule 20 The draw while spinning had been assisted by power but the push of the wind had been done manually by the spinner the mule could be operated by semiskilled labor Before 1830 the spinner would operate a partially powered mule with a maximum of 400 spindles after self acting mules with up to 1300 spindles could be built 21 Number of looms in the UK 22 Year 1803 1820 1829 1833 1857Looms 2400 14650 55500 100000 250000The industrial revolution changed the nature of work and society The three key drivers in these changes were textile manufacturing iron founding and steam power 23 24 25 26 The geographical focus of textile manufacture in Britain was Manchester and the small towns of the Pennines and southern Lancashire Textile production in England peaked in 1926 and as mills were decommissioned many of the scrapped mules and looms were bought up and reinstated in India 20th century Edit See also Clothing industry Textile factory workers in Poland 1950s Textile workers at Finlayson factory in Tampere Finland in 1951 Manila hemp warp yarns being prepared for weaving in a modern textile factory Major changes came to the textile industry during the 20th century with continuing technological innovations in machinery synthetic fibre logistics and globalization of the business The business model that had dominated the industry for centuries was to change radically Cotton and wool producers were not the only source for fibres as chemical companies created new synthetic fibres that had superior qualities for many uses such as rayon invented in 1910 and DuPont s nylon invented in 1935 as in inexpensive silk substitute and used for products ranging from women s stockings to tooth brushes and military parachutes The variety of synthetic fibres used in manufacturing fibre grew steadily throughout the 20th century In the 1920s the computer was invented in the 1940s acetate modacrylic metal fibres and saran were developed acrylic polyester and spandex were introduced in the 1950s Polyester became hugely popular in the apparel market and by the late 1970s more polyester was sold in the United States than cotton 27 By the late 1980s the apparel segment was no longer the largest market for fibre products with industrial and home furnishings together representing a larger proportion of the fibre market 28 Industry integration and global manufacturing led to many small firms closing for good during the 1970s and 1980s in the United States during those decades 95 percent of the looms in North Carolina South Carolina and Georgia shut down and Alabama and Virginia also saw many factories close 28 The largest exporters of textiles in 2013 were China 274 billion India 40 billion Italy 36 billion Germany 35 billion Bangladesh 28 billion and Pakistan 27 Billion 29 Pakistan Edit The textile sector accounts for 70 of Pakistan s exports The industry s contribution in the nation s exports account for 8 5 of the total GDP Textile exports stood at 4 4 billion in 2017 2018 The industry employs a large section of the labour force in the country Pakistan is the 4th largest producer of cotton with the third largest spinning capacity in Asia It contributes 5 to the global spinning capacity At present there are 1 221 ginning units 442 spinning units and 124 large spinning units in addition to 425 small units which produce textiles Pakistan is the third largest consumer of cotton Exports of 3 5 billion were recorded in 2017 2018 6 5 of the total exported cotton on the world In 1950 textile manufacturing emerged as the central of Pakistan industrialisation Between 1947 and 2000 the number of textile Mills increased from 3 to 600 In the same time spindles increased in number from 177 000 to 805 million The textile industry provides 45 of the bank redit in Pakistan Bangladesh Edit Many Western multinationals use labor in Bangladesh which is one of the cheapest in the world 30 euros per month compared to 150 or 200 in China Four days is enough for the CEO of one of the top five global textile brands to earn what a Bangladeshi garment worker will earn in her lifetime In April 2013 at least 1 135 textile workers died in the collapse of their factory Other fatal accidents due to unsanitary factories have affected Bangladesh in 2005 a factory collapsed and caused the death of 64 people In 2006 a series of fires killed 85 people and injured 207 others In 2010 some 30 people died of asphyxiation and burns in two serious fires In 2006 tens of thousands of workers mobilized in one of the country s largest strike movements affecting almost all of the 4 000 factories The Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association BGMEA uses police forces to crack down Three workers were killed and hundreds more were wounded by bullets or imprisoned In 2010 after a new strike movement nearly 1 000 people were injured among workers as a result of the repression 30 Ethiopia Edit Employees of Ethiopian garment factories who work for brands such as Guess H amp M or Calvin Klein receive a monthly salary of 26 dollars per month These very low wages have led to low productivity frequent strikes and high turnover Some factories have replaced all their employees on average every 12 months according to the 2019 report of the Stern Centre for Business and Human Rights at New York University The report states Rather than the docile and cheap labour force promoted in Ethiopia foreign based suppliers have met employees who are unhappy with their pay and living conditions and who want to protest more and more by stopping work or even quitting In their eagerness to create a made in Ethiopia brand the government global brands and foreign manufacturers did not anticipate that the base salary was simply too low for workers to make a living from 31 Commerce and regulation EditThe Multi Fibre Arrangement MFA governed the world trade in textiles and garments from 1974 through 2004 imposing quotas on the amount developing countries could export to developed countries It expired on 1 January 2005 The MFA was introduced in 1974 as a short term measure intended to allow developed countries to adjust to imports from the developing world Developing countries have a natural advantage in textile production because it is labor intensive and they have low labor costs According to a World Bank International Monetary Fund IMF study the system has cost the developing world 27 million jobs and 40 billion a year in lost exports 32 However the Arrangement was not negative for all developing countries For example the European Union EU imposed no restrictions or duties on imports from the very poor countries such as Bangladesh leading to a massive expansion of the industry there At the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade GATT Uruguay Round it was decided to bring the textile trade under the jurisdiction of the World Trade Organization WTO The WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing provided for the gradual dismantling of the quotas that existed under the MFA This process was completed on 1 January 2005 However large tariffs remain in place on many textile products Women work in a textile factory outside Dhaka Bangladesh Bangladesh was expected to suffer the most from the ending of the MFA as it was expected to face more competition particularly from China However this was not the case It turns out that even in the face of other economic giants Bangladesh s labor is cheaper than anywhere else in the world While some smaller factories were documented making pay cuts and layoffs most downsizing was essentially speculative the orders for goods kept coming even after the MFA expired In fact Bangladesh s exports increased in value by about 500 million in 2006 33 Regulatory standards EditFor textiles like for many other products there are certain national and international standards and regulations that need to be complied with to ensure quality safety and sustainability The following standards amongst others apply to textiles CPSIA e g Standard for the Flammability of Clothing Textiles 34 ASTM Textile Standards 35 REACH Regulations for Textiles 36 China Product Standard for Textiles 37 See also EditDrapers and cloth merchants Textile industry in Bangladesh List of textile fibresNotes Edit includes Knitting processesReferences EditCitations Edit Majeed A January 19 2009 Cotton and textiles the challenges ahead Dawn the Internet edition archived from the original on January 23 2009 retrieved 2009 02 12 Machin processes Spinning the Web Manchester City Council Libraries archived from the original on 2008 10 23 retrieved 2009 01 29 Collier 1970 p 33 Cotton Origin History Technology and Production By C Wayne Smith Joe Tom Cotton Page viii Published 1999 John Wiley and Sons Technology amp Industrial Arts 864 pages ISBN 0 471 18045 9 Pacey Arnold 1991 1990 Technology in World Civilization A Thousand Year History First MIT Press paperback ed Cambridge MA The MIT Press pp 23 24 a b A brief history of Textile Industry in India January 2010 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 22 May 2012 Wearing Apparel Manufacturing Report AnythingResearch India Emerging Markets Offer Growth Opportunities for Apparel Retailers Battling Declines in Domestic Consumer Spending SECTORS Make In India Toynbee Arnold 1884 Lectures On The Industrial Revolution In England Public Addresses Notes and Other Fragments together with a Short Memoir by B Jowett London Rivington s ISBN 978 1 4191 2952 0 Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Textile Manufacturing Boundless World History courses lumenlearning com Retrieved 2021 10 29 Industrial Revolution and the Standard of Living The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics Archived 2008 02 21 at the Wayback Machine Library of Economics and Liberty Thomson J K J 1992 A distinctive industrialisation Cotton in Barcelona 1728 1832 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 39482 1 Retrieved 14 July 2022 Hammond J L Hammond Barbara 1919 The Skilled Labourer 1760 1832 pdf London Longmans Green and co p 51 a b Williams amp Farnie 1992 p 11 Great Industries of Great Britain Volume I published by Cassell Petter and Galpin London Paris New York c1880 Earnshaw 1986 p 17 Earnshaw 1986 pp 24 26 a b Hills 1993 p 113 Hills 1993 p 118 Williams amp Farnie 1992 p 9 Hills 1993 p 117 Eric Hobsbawm The Age of Revolution Europe 1789 1848 Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Ltd ISBN 0 349 10484 0 Joseph E Inikori Africans and the Industrial Revolution in England Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 01079 9 Read it Berg Maxine 1992 Rehabilitating the Industrial Revolution PDF The Economic History Review 45 1 24 50 doi 10 2307 2598327 JSTOR 2598327 Rehabilitating the Industrial Revolution Archived 2006 11 09 at the Wayback Machine by Julie Lorenzen Central Michigan University Retrieved November 2006 The U S textile and apparel industry a revolution in progress special report United States Congress Office of Technology Assessment 1987 p 39 ISBN 9781428922945 a b The U S textile and apparel industry a revolution in progress special report United States Congress Office of Technology Assessment 1987 pp 31 2 ISBN 9781428922945 TNN 3 June 2014 India overtakes Germany and Italy is new world No 2 in textile exports Times of India Archived from the original on 30 June 2016 Retrieved 2 September 2016 Au Bangladesh une ouvriere du textile meurt tous les deux jours En Ethiopie les petites mains de H amp M ou Calvin Klein gagnent 23 euros par mois Le Monde fr 8 May 2019 Presentation by H E K M Chandrasekhar Chairman ITCB EC Conference on the Future of Textiles and Clothing after 2004 Brussels 5 6 May 2003 後遺症が残りそうな交通事故で気をつけるポイント PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2008 12 21 Retrieved 2011 10 05 Haider Mahtab Defying predictions Bangladesh s garment factories thrive The Christian Science Monitor 7 Feb 2006 11 Feb 2007 Defying predictions Bangladesh s garment factories thrive Christian Science Monitor 2006 02 07 Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Retrieved 2007 02 11 Standard for the Flammability of Clothing Textiles PDF cpsc gov Archived PDF from the original on 8 January 2013 Retrieved 30 April 2018 Textile Standards www astm org Archived from the original on 30 April 2018 Retrieved 30 April 2018 REACH Regulations How they apply to Textile and Leather articles hktdc com info hktdc com Archived from the original on 30 April 2018 Retrieved 30 April 2018 GB Standards China Certification CCC mark certificate 3C for China Your expert for China Compulsory Certification china certification com Archived from the original on 13 January 2018 Retrieved 30 April 2018 Sources Edit Collier Ann M 1970 A Handbook of Textiles Pergamon Press p 258 ISBN 978 0 08 018057 1 Copeland Melvin Thomas The cotton manufacturing industry of the United States Harvard University Press 1912 online Cameron Edward H Samuel Slater Father of American Manufactures 1960 scholarly biography Conrad Jr James L Drive That Branch Samuel Slater the Power Loom and the Writing of America s Textile History Technology and Culture Vol 36 No 1 January 1995 pp 1 28 in JSTOR Earnshaw Pat 1986 Lace Machines and Machine Laces Batsford ISBN 978 0713446845 Griffiths T Hunt P A and O Brien P K Inventive activity in the British textile industry Journal of Economic History 52 1992 pp 881 906 Griffiths Trevor Hunt Philip O Brien Patrick Scottish Irish and imperial connections Parliament the three kingdoms and the mechanization of cotton spinning in eighteenth century Britain Economic History Review Aug 2008 Vol 61 Issue 3 pp 625 650 Hills Richard Leslie 1993 Power from Steam A History of the Stationary Steam Engine Cambridge University Press p 244 ISBN 9780521458344 Smelser Neil J Social Change in the Industrial Revolution An Application of Theory to the British Cotton Industry 1959 Tucker Barbara M The Merchant the Manufacturer and the Factory Manager The Case of Samuel Slater Business History Review Vol 55 No 3 Autumn 1981 pp 297 313 in JSTOR Tucker Barbara M Samuel Slater and the Origins of the American Textile Industry 1790 1860 1984 Williams Mike Farnie 1992 Cotton Mills of Greater Manchester Carnegie Publishing ISBN 978 0 948789 89 2 Woytinsky W S and E S Woytinsky World Population and Production Trends and Outlooks 1953 pp 1051 98 with many tables and maps on the worldwide textile industry in 19508 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Textile industry amp oldid 1132346576, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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