Rainow Paper Mill
George Longden wrote in his Historical Report for KRIV ...
The paper mill was on the site of Rainow Mill [in Ingersley
Vale where the glass factory is today], which had been a corn
mill in 1611. I
can find no reference to the history of the mill between
1611 and the late 18th century,
by which time it had become a paper mill. The Bollington
Civic Society archive includes
part of a document by which Joseph Wagstaff granted permission
to George Antrobus to
dam the stream above Antobus's cotton mill [Higher Mill],
provided that the level of the
water was not raised above that at the bridge "near
the said Joseph Wagstaff's paper
mill" (10). The document is undated, but probably dates
from the early days of Higher Mill, which was founded in
1789 or 1790 (see below).
The Rainow land tax returns describe Rainow Mill as being in
the ownership and
occupation of Joseph Wagstaff between 1794 (the first year in
which the returns name the properties being taxed) and 1796.
From 1797 to 1802 (the last year in which properties were
described) it was owned and occupied by Lawrence Wagstaff
(11).
A deposition of 1806 by a Rainow millwright, William Richardson,
tells us that the paper mill was converted to a cotton
spinning mill in 1801 by Lawrence Plant Wagstaff and his
partner William Watts (12).
References:
10. Kenneth Cameron, ENGLISH PLACE NAMES, 1961
11. Jane Laughton, SEVENTEENTH CENTURY RAINOW, 1990
12. Walter Smith, RAINOW IN THE OLDEN TIME, articles in the Macclesfield
Courier,
1932-3
Backhouse & Coppock Ltd
This company of paper makers was founded in Castleton, near Rochdale,
by Major Backhouse. In 1876 they moved the business to Bollington,
but I don't yet know which mill they occupied. While here Major
Sidney Coppock joined Backhouse in partnership and the company
name changed. Later the Major's son Colonel Backhouse and stepson
Mr G H Mason joined the business. They then moved the business
out of Bollington to Pickford Street, Macclesfield, and later still
to Sutton Mill.
It would be interesting to know whether this firm actually made
paper or whether it took in stock and further processed it. Paper
making requires a great deal of water and I suspect that our rivers
would not have provided sufficient for such a process.
The main products were embossed, fancy and enamelled papers and
cards. Very similar, in fact to the products of the two paper coating
companies in Bollington today - Tullis Russell and Slater Harrison.
It is interesting to note that while these latter two have been
in Bollington a long time, they were not the original paper coating
business in Bollington.
Tullis Russell
Lower Mills (pictured below) is the home of Tullis
Russell
,
one of the major employers in Bollington. This employee owned
company takes in paper and card stock and processes it to add
coatings for various purposes. For example, they apply the glue
to the back of stamp paper which is supplied to many countries
all around the world.
Slater Harrison
The present company was established in 1929 (company
history
).
Today they are housed at Lowerhouse Mill at Lowerhouse.
They process paper and card stock by adding coloured coatings,
often shiny or fluorescent, particularly for the retail display
industry - promo boards and signs in shops.
An earlier company, Henry & Leigh Slater, was incorporated
in 1888, and were located at Lower Mills, where Tullis Russell
are today, around the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. See
below their advertisement from the British Printer magazine of
the late 19thC showing a fine engraving of the mill at the end
of Church Street. There is some artist's licence in the form of
the surrounding hills!
