William Crumblehulme: Difference between revisions
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1863 William had become unemployed through the effect of the American Civil War on trade in Bolton. He found work through his connection with a fellow member of the Temperance Society, John Hiton. He was employed as a cashier/travelling salesman for [[Hiton and Brown|Messrs. Hiton and Brown]], a small foundry, employing twelve men and eight boys. | 1863 William had become unemployed through the effect of the American Civil War on trade in Bolton. He found work through his connection with a fellow member of the Temperance Society, John Hiton. He was employed as a cashier/travelling salesman for [[Hiton and Brown|Messrs. Hiton and Brown]], a small foundry, employing twelve men and eight boys. | ||
Formed [[Crumblehulme and Edge]] | |||
== See Also == | == See Also == |
Revision as of 16:06, 30 April 2020

William Crumblehulme (1831-1910) of W. Crumblehulme and Sons
1831 William Crumblehulme was born into a poor family who lived in the Folds Road area, Little Bolton.
1836 His father died of cholera when he was five, and his mother re-married. William learnt to read and write, first at the Sunday School and later furthering his education at the Mechanics Institute, until in 1851 at the age of twenty he was able to leave the mill to find work as a timekeeper at a foundry in Gas Street, Great Bolton.
1863 William had become unemployed through the effect of the American Civil War on trade in Bolton. He found work through his connection with a fellow member of the Temperance Society, John Hiton. He was employed as a cashier/travelling salesman for Messrs. Hiton and Brown, a small foundry, employing twelve men and eight boys.
Formed Crumblehulme and Edge