Archives

Hornworking

Image: Showcase displaying the products of the local hornworking industry in Bewdley Museum.

Hornworking
The showcase represents a reconstruction of the shop window of G J Humpherson and Son, Hornworker, Bewdley (established in 1749).

Summary

Horn-made objects are no longer in daily use, but before the 20th century, they served many purposes. Cattle and deer horns were turned into a household items and products used in the textile industry. Horn working was one of many traditional crafts which operated in Bewdley for several centuries. The industry was even significant enough to experience a degree of mechanisation when the Snuff Mill outside of the town, was adapted to cut the teeth of combs. Like other local trades, horn working declined because of a fall in demand. The history of the trade is illustrated by photographs of artefacts and displays held at Bewdley Museum.

Rope Making

Text: Malcolm Dick

Image: This photograph of about 1897 shows Lowe’s Rope Manufactory, the most important in Bewdley, against a steam train and railway viaduct of the Severn Valley Railway. To the left finished ropes are shown laid up on stretchers. In the yard two men stand in the background with two-wheeled carts in front.

[Image from: Bewdley Museum]

Summary

The records of Lowe’s Rope Manufactory provide a detailed picture of one significant Bewdley business. They provide an insight into the experiences of its owners and workers and the nature of its markets and customers in the 19th and 20th centuries. Remarkably, photographs also survive, which present people at work, the tools they used and the machines which turned flax into rope and twine. These varied sources enable more to be written about this local industry than most other manufacturing concerns in the town.

Industry and Agriculture: Rope Making and Horn Working in Bewdley

Text: Malcolm Dick

Image: This photograph, taken in 1910, shows Bewdley’s river frontage in commercial decline. It also provides indicators that reveal the links between the town’s industrial experience and the supply of agricultural products in the 18th and 19th centuries.
• It shows the River Severn, Bewdley’s main transport link for sources of raw materials, such as animal products and hemp, and markets for horn, rope and leather.
• Thomas Telford’s Bewdley Bridge (wrongly spelt in the picture), which was built in 1798, dominates the picture’s background, with its toll bridge on the right, which was demolished in 1960. The bridge improved road links across the river.
• The road over the bridge led on the left to Load Street, another main transport route to and from the Severn, leading to Bewdley’s cattle markets. Cattle were not only a source of food, but also provided horn for hornworkers and leather for tanning. Hides were also imported from elsewhere along the River Severn.
• Wribbenhall, the location for Lowe’s ropeworks is on the right of the photograph. The riverbank shows the remains of a stone wharf and a derelict boat. Hemp for Lowe’s was offloaded on this wharf.
• The opposite bank shows Severnside South, another wharf. Bewdley’s last tannery, which closed in 1928, was located here.

[Image from: Bewdley Museum]

Summary

Historians have traditionally focused on large concerns such as textile factories and breweries when they have explored the relationship between agricultural products and manufacturing, but other businesses were part of the increasingly complex and specialised economy of the 18th and 19th centuries. Bewdley, in Worcestershire had a diverse industrial base linked to markets and sources of supply across the English Midlands and beyond. Several trades were dependent on animal products such as hides and horn, others required plants to provide essential raw materials. Textile factories were never located in Bewdley, but the town was home to an important rope works which supplied a range of finished products to factories, farms and families.