Title
Long Service Certificate Presented to John Houldsworth
Reference
YA1997.32
Production date
26-04-1928 - 26-04-1928
Creator
- Fine Spinners and Doublers LimitedBiographyBiography
In 1898 encouraged by Herbert Dixon and Scott Lings a group of spinning companies in the North West formed the Fine Spinners and Doublers Association. Businesses joining the Association from its foundation included A. and G. Murray, Thomas Houldsworth and Co, C. E. Bennett and Co, James and Wainwright Bellhouse, and McConnel and Co. Rapid expansion in the following years encompassed many more firms.
The Fine Spinners and Doublers Association enjoyed a huge advantage due to its size. Being much larger than its competitors enabled it to secure Sea Islands cotton, named after an area in South Carolina, where it was grown and Egyptian cotton. Until c 1930 it was the world's largest cotton-spinning concern, operating 60 mills and employing a workforce of 30,000 operatives.
In 1946 the name of the business was changed to Fine Spinners and Doublers Limited and enjoyed a brief period of prosperity before being purchased by Courtaulds in 1963.
Scope and Content
Long Service Certificate Presented by the Board of Directors to John Houldsworth after 50 years of service as an employee of the company.
Physical description
Fair
Language
English
Archival history
Provenance unknown
Level of description
ITEM
Repository name
Science and Industry Museum
Associated people and organisations
- Houldsworth, JohnBiographyBiography
John Houldsworth worked at Robert Marsland & Co Ltd, receiving a long service certificate for 50 years' service in 1928.
- Tabor, Alan LansdownBiographyBiography
Alan Lansdown Tabor was born in Bedminster, Somerset. He established himself as a 'commercial and artistic designer' in Manchester in the early years of the 20th century. He produced illuminated addresses and certificates from a studio in St Ann's Passage, moving to premises in Albert Square in around 1933.
In 1937 he produced a loyal address from the City of Manchester upon the accession of George VI (Manchester Guardian, 4 March 1937, p. 13), and in 1943 he designed the scroll conferring the freedom of the city upon Winston Churchill. Tabor died on 28 September 1957.
Conditions governing access
Open access.
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions.