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  1. Bradford, or at least the Bradford of the nineteenth and early to mid-twentieth centuries, was defined by mills, ironworks, mines and textiles. Henry VIII’s reign (1509–47) had seen Bradford exceed Leeds as a manufacturing centre and the start of two hundred years of relentless growth, with it ultimately becoming the UK’s premier wool ...

  2. 30 de ago. de 2021 · The history and legacy of Bradford’s manufacturing industry. By Kenneth Booth. August 30, 2021. Despite its unassuming and at times unflattering reputation over the years, the city of Bradford in West Yorkshire was once a northern powerhouse of epic proportions.

  3. During the 19th century Bradford became ‘Wool Capital of the World’, a boomtown of the Industrial Revolution led by Sir Titus Salt, a forward-thinking industrialist and philanthropist who founded Saltaire in 1853, a vast textile mill and model village that is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

  4. 4 The Tudor Era (1485-1603) 1400 its population had grown again. In Tudor times Bradford continued to grow, becoming more prosperous. The cloth-making industry expanded, producing coarse woollen cloth known as ‘kersey’. Most people farmed just enough for their own needs and made extra money from spinning and weaving at home.

  5. Bradford Industrial Heritage. During the 19 th century, Bradford was at the very centre of the global textile industry. The intensification of textile processing and production within Bradford and the surrounding landscape during the Industrial Revolution resulted in exponential growth and vast prosperity, which transformed a small market town ...

  6. Bradford has a rich industrial heritage having played a major part in the Industrial Revolution of the 1900s holding a Industrial Exhibition in 1904. The launch of manufacturing in the early 18th century had started Bradford's development while a new canal and turnpike road links encouraged trade.

  7. In 1970, Bradford Council bought Moorside Mills from Messrs. W & J Whitehead to create an innovative museum. Bradford Industrial Museum has permanent displays of textile machinery, steam power, engineering, printing machinery and motor vehicles, along with an exciting exhibitions programme.