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Rope Making: Spinning

Image: A group of five male employees at Lowe’s posing at a rope walk in Northwood Lane, Bewdley in 1900. They each have a “head” of hackled hemp round their waist. The fibres are being fed onto the “traveller” which is being twisted by a boy.

[Image from: Bewdley Museum]

The purpose of spinning is to produce yarn, a continuous series of overlapping fibres which have been twisted together so that they are forced together by friction to make the yarn strong. Yarn can be turned into rope by various methods. Traditionally, it was spun on a spindle whorl. This was a weighted stick which was rotated, often by rolling along the thigh. The spinning wheel was a technological advance which allowed the spinner to keep the yarn twisting continuously. It was also spun into rope in ropewalks where the fibres were wrapped around the waist and then attached to a spinning wheel. A spinner then drew out the fibres to form a yarn as the wheel revolved. By the mid 19th century, machines were used to produce yarn. These were similar to the spinning mules used in the cotton industry.


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943-0Rope Making 288-0Rope Making and Bewdley 279-0Lowe’s Rope and Twine Manufactory 301-0Lowe’s Rope and Twine Manufactory 272-0Work and Labour 282-0Work and Labour 273-0Products and Markets 299-0Products and Markets 286-0Rope Making: Dressing or Hackling 280-0Rope Making: Spinning 283-0Rope Making: Laying the Rope 296-0Rope Making: Inserting the Tops 285-0Rope Making: Stretching 291-0Rope: Making: Mechanisation 300-0The Decline of Rope Making