Yorkshire Post

Firm gets weaving to preserve the history of textiles

New not-for-profit company will ensure ‘significan­t’ mill collection remains for future generation­s to see

- LINDSAY PANTRY NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: lindsay.pantry@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @LindsayPan­tryYP

ONE OF the most significan­t woven textile archives in the country, that helps to tell the social history of one of West Yorkshire’s mill towns, has been secured for the future.

A new not-for-profit company has been set up to safeguard the textile archive at Sunny Bank Mills, at Farsley, between Leeds and Bradford, which contains a wealth of historic items, including over 60,000 lengths of fabric, 8,000 fabric designs, 5,000 wool dyeing recipe cards, weaving looms, photograph­s and a library of mill-related books.

The Mills, which were originally built in 1829, have been in the Gaunt family for six generation­s and are currently owned and managed by cousins John and William.

They establishe­d the archive two years after production ended in 2008, but have taken the step to form the new company, along with a board of trustees, to ensure it is safe even after they are gone.

John Gaunt said: “It is important to William and I that the archive has a secure future beyond our lifetimes, so we have taken the decision to create a new company to oversee the management, restoratio­n, conservati­on, preservati­on, use and promotion of the archive at Sunny Bank Mills.

“This will facilitate and encourage public use and enjoyment of the archive; to provide educationa­l activities and to facilitate and encourage creative arts activities inspired by the archive.

“To help make the archive sustainabl­e, the new company will also be able to apply for funding for all these activities.”

The “substantia­l” archive is essentiall­y the company records and the contents of all department­s from 1829 until production ceased nine years ago. The archive, establishe­d in a 3,000 sq ft old warping shed, is overseen by curator Rachel Moaby, who has been charged with cataloguin­g, preserving and developing the archive.

The collection contains hundreds of leather-bound guard books holding cuttings of all the cloth made at Sunny Bank Mills.

These alone can offer a fascinatin­g insight to the social history of Farsley, Ms Moaby said. Along with teams of volunteers at the Mills, she is currently researchin­g the First World War and its connection­s to the Mills, based on one particular book in the archive.

“Unlike the other guard books in the collection, it is very different due to the pages and pages of orders of khaki,” she said. “The research, with the help of the fabulous volunteers at Sunny Bank Mills Archive, will help to build the story of khaki and the textile industry, but also focus on the people who made it and what life was really like in the town.

“Telling the stories of the ordinary and the extraordin­ary lives held together by the threads of cloth and khaki.”

The research aims to create a book and exhibition about the community during the war, and link with local schools so that children can connect with their local heritage.

The new company, Sunny Bank Mills Ltd, will be officially launched on Saturday, when the archive will be open to the public as part of National Heritage Open Days.

Mill tours are also due to run from Friday to Sunday this weekend hourly from 10am to 4pm.

The archive is open on the first Wednesday of every month from 10am to 12pm.

It is important that the archive has a secure future. John Guant, joint managing director Sunny Bank Mills.

 ?? PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY. ?? STITCHES IN TIME: Above, John Gaunt, Joint MD of Edwin Woodhouse Co Ltd, looking through one of the many items in the textile collection; left, one of the many guards books preserved in the archive; centre, some of the 5,000 recipe cards which have...
PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY. STITCHES IN TIME: Above, John Gaunt, Joint MD of Edwin Woodhouse Co Ltd, looking through one of the many items in the textile collection; left, one of the many guards books preserved in the archive; centre, some of the 5,000 recipe cards which have...

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