Power Loom
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The Industrial Revolution started in Great Britain during the 18th century largely with the mechanization of the textile industry. One of the men who made significant contributions to this mechanization was a clergyman-turned-inventor named Edmund Cartwright, who devised the power loom for weaving. Cartwright was born in Marnham in Nottinghamshire on April 24, 1743. He was educated at Wakefield grammar school and Oxford University. In 1779 he became the rector of the parish of Goadby Marwood in Leicestershire. He would probably have passed his life as an obscure country clergyman but for a visit to Cromford in 1784. There he saw Richard Arkwright’s cotton-spinning mills. These fascinated him, and he decided to construct a similar machine for weaving. In 1785 he took out a patent for a very simple machine. It was later improved and developed into the modern power loom.
In 1789 he patented the wool-combing machine. It lowered manufacturing costs, but he made little money from it or from any of his inventions. In 1809 the British Parliament, in recognition of the benefits bestowed on the nation through the power loom, voted to award Cartwright a payment of 10,000 pounds. He bought a farm in Hollander, where he spent many years. He also invented a rope-making machine, a steam engine that operated on alcohol, and various farm implements.
In 1789 he patented the wool-combing machine. It lowered manufacturing costs, but he made little money from it or from any of his inventions. In 1809 the British Parliament, in recognition of the benefits bestowed on the nation through the power loom, voted to award Cartwright a payment of 10,000 pounds. He bought a farm in Hollander, where he spent many years. He also invented a rope-making machine, a steam engine that operated on alcohol, and various farm implements.