Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Camperdown Works closure in 1981 marked end of an era for jute empire

- BY GRAEME STRACHAN

THE closure of Camperdown Works 40 years ago was the death knell for Dundee’s “Juteopolis” empire.

For 130 years the Camperdown complex, at one time sprawling over more than 25 acres, was the industrial giant of the suburb.

Countless thousands of Lochee folk spun there, sons and daughters following parents, generation after generation.

When the jute trade was busy, Lochee prospered.

In its heyday the city was the world centre for the manufactur­e of the fabric, with about 50,000 people dependant on the industry for their livelihood­s.

The impact of the jute industry ultimately attracted more people to Lochee.

Irish workers started to arrive to join the endless rows of women, men and children who made the bobbins fly and the mills bustle.

They came mainly from the Irish counties where linen and yarn were produced such as Donegal, Londonderr­y, Monaghan, Sligo and Tyrone.

By 1900, Camperdown Works employed more than 5,000 people and was one of Britain’s greatest industrial complexes.

The 282-foot Cox’s Stack was the landmark for what became the largest jute works in the world, and undergroun­d tunnels fed it from 58 furnaces.

The Cox family built it to ensure smoke from the furnaces was carried well above the nearby workers’ houses.

The red and white brick chimney was built in 1866 and reputedly contained a million bricks.

Camperdown was so big it had its own branch line and railway station.

The industry was hit by a series of booms and slumps in the 19th Century, before falling into decline in the 20th Century.

In 1920, Cox Brothers was one of several Dundee firms which came together to form Jute Industries (which later became Sidlaw Industries), under the chairmansh­ip of James Ernest Cox, with Camperdown remaining one of its key works.

By 1950, there were only 39 jute firms left out of a total of 150 at the industry’s peak, with polypropyl­ene being widely used as the backing for carpets at the expense of jute.

But Camperdown weathered all the storms until markets slumped to an all-time low.

The announceme­nt by Sidlaw Industries that Camperdown Works would be closing was made in January 1981.

The 340 jobs which went would bring the redundancy total for jute, propylene and carpets in Dundee since the start of the 1980s to almost 2,000.

The jute industry of Tayside shrunk to seven firms with a workforce of less than 3,000.

After the Camperdown closure, Sidlaw Industries was left with 650 textile employees and only two jute mills at Manhattan in Dundee and Selbie in Gourdon.

The directors were hopeful the closure would ensure the remainder of their jute operations would become viable after they had been running at a heavy loss.

There was an atmosphere of gloom and despondenc­y in Lochee although workers admitted the closure was inevitable.

Local historian Dr Kenneth Baxter, from the University of Dundee, said: “Although by 1981 its workforce was a fraction of what it had been at the start of the 20th Century, Camperdown Works was still employing a workforce of 340 people when it was announced that Sidlaw Industries was ending its textile operations at the site.

“Aside from the obvious financial implicatio­ns for those who would lose their jobs and local businesses which had benefited from the millworker­s custom, the closure was undoubtedl­y of huge symbolic importance for Lochee and for Dundee as a whole.

“Camperdown Works was inextricab­ly linked to the growth and history of Lochee for over a century and a quarter, so its closure was always going to be felt hard by its inhabitant­s.

“Although it was not quite the end of the jute industry in Dundee, Camperdown Works’ closure cannot be seen as anything other than a blow to the city.

“Camperdown Works, and its famed Cox’s Stack, can be seen as the ultimate physical symbols of Victorian Dundee’s industrial might.

“The end of this iconic works showed beyond question that the era of Dundee as a great centre of the textile industry was well and truly over.

“While a significan­t portion of the site would eventually be redevelope­d, for some time after the closure the derelict buildings and others remains of industrial activity on the site served as a rather stark reminder of the rise and fall of Juteopolis.”

Following closure of the works in 1981, some parts of the complex were sold for demolition in 1985.

Much of the industrial heritage made way for the Stack Leisure Park which opened in 1993.

Cox’s Stack was retained as a landmark feature linking the new commercial area with the housing.

The end finally came when the freighter Banglar Urmi arrived in Dundee in October 1998 to signal the end of a glorious era in the city’s history.

The 310 tonnes of raw jute on board represente­d the last consignmen­t to be spun at the last mill in Dundee, the Tay Spinners premises on Arbroath Road.

Once the consignmen­t was spun into yarn for carpet backing, all

that was left of the industry was a heritage museum and bitter-sweet memories.

“At its peak Camperdown Works employed 5,000 hands,” said historian Dr Norman Watson.

“It made its own machinery, had its own railway stop, fire station and school.

“In its time it was the biggest and grandest jute mill in the world.

“In other words, Lochee put all its employment eggs in one basket.

“Its strength in Victorian times became its undoing in the 20th Century.

“There was little alternativ­e work and in some ways the suburb has never recovered from jute’s gradual decline.

“When Cox’s whistle blew and the Camperdown gates swung open, a sea of cloth-capped, shawlclad workers spilled on to Lochee High Street.

“Pictures of closing time are reminiscen­t of the full-time exodus at Tannadice or Dens.

“Now Lochee’s streets are too often quiet.”

 ??  ?? Workers leaving Camperdown Works in 1952. Inset: Edward Cox.
Workers leaving Camperdown Works in 1952. Inset: Edward Cox.
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 ??  ?? The interior of Camperdown Works, pre-1936.
The interior of Camperdown Works, pre-1936.

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