In
1784 John Cockshott and John Cunliffe became the assignee's
in a bankruptcy of an estate at West Hall, this gave them
the opportunity use water power of the river. In 1787 a
small piece of land was purchased from Isaac Robinson with
permission to erect a dam. Isaac Robinson's house is still
at the end of the Low Mill development. Cockshott and Cunliffe
intended to build a cotton mill, on its completion in 1787
instead of spinning cotton on the water frames they experimented
with wool to produce a worsted yarn. This was the worlds
first commercially viable factory produced worsted yarn.
The mill by
the river became known as the Old End or Low Mill.In 1793
John Cockshott became bankrupt, this left John Cunliffe
financially embarrassed, he was bailed out by his relation
Nicolas Cunliffe who in turn sold his shares to Thomas Gill.
In 1802 the Cunliffe family bought out Gill. By 1811 the
mill was now owned by J. Cunliffe and Sons, the mill
and hamlet had increased to
26 cottages and 40 spinning frames. John Cunliffe died in
1813. His son Ellis lived in Bradford,and his second son
William was living the life of a country gentleman at Farfield
hall. Thomas Lister Thompson Cunliffe was not of age yet.
On the death of William in 1824, Jeremiah Horsfall took
out a 20 year lease and came to live at Farfield hall.
In
1826 he was re-equipping the mill with new
spinning mules, they were being brought from
Manchester but the shipment was attacked
by a mob and destroyed. The mob led by 'Gurt
Bill' of Cowling were men who had been put out
of work by the new machinery.
They were called 'Luddites', allegedly named after Ned Ludd
a fabled leader from Nottingham, he was, as
legend told; the carrier of 'Great Enoch', a sledge hammer
for smashing machinery. The mob decided to attack the mill
that had bought them, In Addingham as the news got through
the workers started to prepare to defend the mill, iron
grills were placed over the windows,
stones and firearms were taken to the higher storeys. The
mill was put in charge of Timothy Brayshaw who had fought
Waterloo who then sent a warning to Greenholme mills at
Otley, who in turn called in the Yorkshire Hussars from
Leeds. The women of the village put up their shutters and
chalked on them "this house "to let" to deceive
the rioters.
The defenders
were able to hold them off but the outhouses were
ransacked. The next day the attack went on and some of the
rioters got into the mill. A Justice of the Peace was needed
to read the Riot Act, this was John Ellis Cunliffe now living
in Manningham with his second wife Mary Kay. Soldiers were
sent from Leeds and local farmers and work people helped
to drive
the attackers away. One of the rioters was suffocated in
a tank that was draining a privy. Two other rioters were
sent to York jail and later tried and imprisoned. Two defenders
also died. The Hussars stayed for a few weeks and the violence
died down. 
Horsefall
now had the opportunity build a
new and larger mill, the New End, to the west
of the Old End. He re-equipped the mill for mule spinning
and later brought in power looms
without protest, the Addingham workforce was content. When
the New End was built he added another water wheel, this
survived until 1938 when a new turbine was installed. In
1835
Horsefall added a steam engine of 34 hp. In 1827
Horsefall made a gas works for supplying lighting to the
mill and the hamlet of Low Mill, this soon supplied all
the other mills and the village of Addingham. In 1841 Horsefall
unexpectedly ceased trading explaining a drop in population.
In 1842 William Threlfall and
William Seed took out a 21 year lease and continued spinning
cotton for nine years. In 1859 they went bankrupt, and the
mill ceased working again. In 1850 the owners of Low Mill
were the brothers and sisters of the Cunliffe - Listers.
Samuel Cunliffe-Lister took over the lease, Samuel who had
already persuaded his father to build a mill in Manningham
was a very inventive young man, he had identified combing
as being the major bottleneck in worsted yarn production.
In 1851 he achieved success by carding the wool before combing
it with his machine which he patented [see Bradford Industrial
Museum]. Samuel after taking over Low Mill continued cotton
spinning. In 1855 he took on a new project with a partner
called Warburton trying to comb silk, he was initially unsuccessful
and after time Warburton withdrew from the project by selling
his 20 percent to Samuel Cunliffe - Lister. By the
late 1860's the process was improved to become economically
viable. Up until 1870 the weaving of velvets was by hand.
Again in 1878, Samuel
and his partner Reixach perfected and patented a power loom
[cut pile] for weaving velvets.
These inventions had a dramatic effect on employment, of
the 120 hand combers in 1851 only 13 remained in 1861. In
1894 the 55 velvet cutters were employed at Low Mill this
dwindled sharply as the effectiveness of the machines were
improved. In 1871 the Lister household moved from Bradford
to Farfield Hall and donated Lister Park and its mansion
to Bradford. By the turn-of-the-century Listers owned five
mill in Addingham, and the operations at Low Mill carried
on spinning and weaving velvets. Samuel Cunliffe-Lister
left Farield Hall and moved to Swinton Castle at Masham,
he died in 1906 at the age of 91, he is interred in the
Cunliffe-Lister vault at St. Peters.
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During
the First World War Low Mill produced cordite silk.
Listers diversefied into Botany Wools and in 1926 a 3 storey
mill was built at Low Mill, later Listers entered into a
partnership with the Peltzers of Crefeldt Germany weaving
velvet in the UK to avoid tariffs, when the Second World
War broke out the German workers were interned on the Isle
of Man. In 1941 the S.U. carburettor factory was bombed
in Coventry, production of the carburettor's was switched
to Addingham at the Low Mill factory. Up to 1000 people
worked there and a number of prefabricated houses were erected
in Ilkley to house them. The other textile factories were
busy during the war with Listers expertise in silk they
made such things as parachute silk etc. After war carburettor
production ceased and Low Mill returned to textiles, Textiles
in Britain never really recovered after the Second World
War. After an initial busy period when re-equipment
should have taken place the economics of having outdated
equipment as against modern foreign competition, began to
have an effect. Spinning ceased at Low Mill in 1967 and
all other operations in 1976. The houses and Old End at
Low Mill were modernised and converted into luxury cottages
in the 1980's. In 1998/99 Textiles returned to Low
Mill in the form of a 'State of the Art' wool scouring plant
owned by a Norwegian company Straume, but this will shortly
be closing.

The new water gauging weir,
a good spot for fly fishing. This section is managed by
Bradford Angling club

Modernised mill cottages on
the right and a converted spinning mill on the left. this
was renovated between 1984 - 1988

The end of the old spining
mill see old photograph shows a footbridge into this from
main mill which has now been demolished


This
all thats left of the original mill the 3 storey unit built
in the 1920,s and the Peltzers weaving shed, the 3 storey
unit will become offices for Straume. The weaving shed in
being demolished for the new factory unit only the stone
walls will be left to ensure that it fits in with the surroundings.
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