Photos, articles and places from "Around Bamford" Rochdale from Victorian times up to the 1970s and the present day.
Saturday, 14 January 2023
Birtle Dene Mill, near Bury, Greater Manchester.
There is nothing much, if anything, left of Birtle Dene Cotton spinning mill in
the lower Cheesden Valley today. But, back in the 19th century it was a thriving
manufacturing establishment, even though it was located well away from the towns
of Bury and Rochdale, making it difficult to reach for the workers who came from
the local towns and villages down in the valley, especially in the Winter
months. Some workers were even persuaded to up-sticks and come from other parts
of the country to work at Birtle (Bircle) Dene Mill. It was back in 1824 that
industrial entrepeneur Mr Thomas Rams-bottom built his spinning mill at Birtle
Dene. Thomas and his brother John had earlier built a mill at Harwood Fields in
the nearby town of Bury, and, they owned three coal mines in the vicinity of
Birtle Dene. To reach the mill one had to walk the two or three miles up Elbut
Lane and Birtle Road, and then on up to the mill where the industrial revolution
seemed to have arrived at breakneck speed by the early 19th century, and, at
which time the Ramsbottom family had 'secured their place in cotton spinning
history'. The mill finally closed in 1894-5. OS Grid Ref: SD 83261345. I'm just
thinking here - would Birtle Dene Mill have been called Mr Tom's by its workers?
H.D.Clayton says of Birtle Dene Mill:
"This was a large establishment, owned by the Ramsbottoms for most of its
life, and consisting of a four-storey spinning mill and a weaving shed, lit by
their own gas. It was driven by a large waterwheel and auxiliary engine. Lying
at the foot of a steep hill, access was difficult down a winding road on which
were two rows of cottages with their backs to the hill, so that only front
doors could be provided. A windlass was used to haul goods up and down the
hillside to the top road and the same procedure was adopted for coal from a
nearby pit. When the boiler was installed the mill had a day's holiday, owing
to the danger of the boiler falling on the mill as it was lowered down the
hillside. When the mill closed towards the end of the 19th century, the boiler
was removed and hauled up the hill by a large team of horses."
Sandiford & Ashworth (2000) tell us that:
Beyond Deeply Vale the Cheesden Brook wanders across a broad plain flanked on
either side by steep hills. Here there are no mills but it is as if the valley
chooses to pause before making its final and perhaps most surprising
revelation. The stream curves gently round the towering contours of Birtle
Edge and the valley gradually opens into a deep gorge, curiously patterned
with low embankments and crumbling walls, its thick undergrowth strewn with
sturdy masonry and gouged with hollows and enigmatic channels, for it was here
in Birtle Dene that the industries of the Cheesden Valley reached their
pinnacle. The mill that Thomas Ramsbotttom of Harwood Fields built there in
1824 was far removed, in both style and spirit, from those humble enterprises
to the north of the valley.
"Thomas Ramsbottom, however, showed no such caution when he built his mill at
Birtle Dene. Here was a cotton mill in its own right, in no way dependent on
the putting-out system or the domestic outworker. It was a vertical concern
spinning the raw cotton into yarn and weaving the yarn into cloth, with
possibly some yarn dyeing capacity and cloth finishing. It was planned and
built with the boldness and confidence of a man who clearly had caught the
spirit of the Industrial Revolution. Yet when the observer stands at the top
of the mill road, a good 340 yards from the valley bottom with a steady and
formidable gradient of one in seven, he may ask why Ramsbottom chose such a
remote site for such an ambitious mill. There were, of course, the usual
facilities of water and coal, but for an enterprise of this scale, comparable
with many of the edifices of the growing towns beyond this valley, its
situation created intrinsic problems.
"The Observer may also ask how Ramsbottom raised his capital for the project.
There is, in fact, evidence that the Ramsbottom family had been involved in
textile manu-facture previously at Harwood Fields."
Sandford & Ashworth go on to say:
"Perhaps Ramsbottom, for all his ambitions, was still at heart a man of the
valley. There is no doubt that he used his resources to the full. Birtle Dene
Mill was powered by two, possibly three, water wheels, a small one being
provided solely for used in the mechanic's shop when the rest of the mill was
closed. The mill also used steam power and Ramsbottom owned three mines
situated above the Dene, Bassy Mine, Lower Foot Mine (known as Halfpenny Hole)
and Upper Foot Mine (known as Mountain Mine). Access was by narrow tracks
running along the hillside to the south of the mill, though there is no
evidence of a rail line...... these mines were frequently subjected to
flooding and by 1887 they were either unworkable or unable to meet the demands
of the large mill. Supplies were then brought up from the Lancashire and
Yorkshire Railways coal yards at Buckley Wells in Bury. The Dene Mill, like
several others in the valley, produced its own gas for lighting and the
circular depression which once held the gasholder is still in evidence. In
later year electricity was introduced.
"To spare the horses the strenuous haul of goods up the steep slope from the
mill, the woven cloth consigned to the merchant houses of Manchester was taken
up the hillside by means of a windlass and stored in a building before
loading. Such consideration for employees was not, however, universal. Three
rows of cottages were provided for work-people on the road down to the mill,
while others came from Jericho and Fairfield, hamlets some two miles away.
Labour was also recruited from the unfortunate inmates of Jericho workhouse
and in 1836, following revisions in the administration of the Poor Law, large
numbers of people from areas of Suffolk, Norfolk, Buckinghamshire and
Bedfordshire were persuaded to come North to regular work in the new cotton mills."
Sources and References:
Clayton, H.D., A History of Ashworth near Rochdale, Ashworth Hall, Rochdale, 1979.
Sandiford, A.V., & Ashworth, T.E., The Forgotten Valley, Bury and District Local History Society, Reprinted 2000.
Colour photo (above) of Birtle Dene Mill in the Cheesden Valley is by John Westhead on Geograph (Creative Commons).
https://www.heywoodhistory.com/2018/01/mills-a-z.html
Copyright © RayS57, 2023.
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