Taylors of Marsden: Difference between revisions
Created page with "of Marsden, near Huddersfield, Yorkshire This is a collective heading for the business of ironfounders, engineers, millwrights & machine makers which went under the following..." |
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[[Robert Taylor and Sons]] | [[Robert Taylor and Sons]] | ||
'Taylors of Marsden' will be used when the precise date of manufacture of an item or an event is not precisely known. | 'Taylors of Marsden' will be used when the precise date of manufacture of an item, or the date of an event, is not precisely known. | ||
They built a very large suspension-type waterwheel for J. W. Wheelwright and Co at their New Mill, Rishworth (c.1862?). Diameter 57 ft 6 ins, width 12 ft. Weight 70 tons. 174 buckets. Cast iron shaft. <ref>'Stationary Steam Engines of Great Britain, Volume 1: Yorkshire' by George Watkins, Landmark Publishing, 2000</ref> | They built a very large suspension-type waterwheel for J. W. Wheelwright and Co at their New Mill, Rishworth (c.1862?). Diameter 57 ft 6 ins, width 12 ft. Weight 70 tons. 174 buckets. Cast iron shaft. <ref>'Stationary Steam Engines of Great Britain, Volume 1: Yorkshire' by George Watkins, Landmark Publishing, 2000</ref> |
Latest revision as of 09:57, 12 February 2014
of Marsden, near Huddersfield, Yorkshire
This is a collective heading for the business of ironfounders, engineers, millwrights & machine makers which went under the following sequence of names:-
'Taylors of Marsden' will be used when the precise date of manufacture of an item, or the date of an event, is not precisely known.
They built a very large suspension-type waterwheel for J. W. Wheelwright and Co at their New Mill, Rishworth (c.1862?). Diameter 57 ft 6 ins, width 12 ft. Weight 70 tons. 174 buckets. Cast iron shaft. [1]
See Also
Sources of Information
- ↑ 'Stationary Steam Engines of Great Britain, Volume 1: Yorkshire' by George Watkins, Landmark Publishing, 2000