British Northrop Loom Co Ltd was an engineering firm based in Blackburn, Lancashire, England. The company manufactured machinery for producing textiles, particularly the Northrop Loom.[1]
It expanded rapidly around the time of the First World War, and by the 1950s it exported over 10,000 machines annually worldwide.[2]
With the exception of electric motors, the majority of loom parts were manufactured in the Blackburn factory which had a foundry, machine shop, a smithy for forging and welding, wood working shop for slays, bobbins and shuttles and an assembly line with the enterprise occupying a total area of 1,050,000 sq ft by 1956. Production declined in the face of competition from new technologies such as shuttleless looms from continental Europe and Japan.
References
edit- ^ "Small-Scale Weaving: CHAPTER III. WEAVING TECHNOLOGIES: V. Automatic power looms". Archived from the original on 20 June 2017. Retrieved 28 July 2017.
- ^ "BBC - A History of the World - Object : Northrop 'Model T' Automatic Loom".