Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,710 pages of information and 247,104 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

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* 1821 [[Joseph Whitworth]] worked here
* 1821 [[Joseph Whitworth]] worked here


* 1850 Listed in Slater’s Directory as Crighton & Co., machine makers, iron and brass founders of 58 Great Bridgewater Street. The 'street directory' contained in Slater’s Directory places Crighton next door to Sharp, Roberts & Co. on the south side of Great Bridgewater Street. The 1849 OS map shows a complex of buildings to the immediate west of Sharp, Roberts’ works, including a thread mill and an iron foundry. It seems likely that the foundry was Crighton’s. This was immediately alongside the branch of the Rochdale Canal which passes under Great Bridgewater Street. <ref>'The Godfrey Edition' 'Old Ordnance Survey Town Plans: Manchester Sheet 33: ‘Manchester (Oxford Street & Gaythorn)' [http://www.alangodfreymaps.co.uk/] </ref>.  Adshead's 1851 map clearly shows 'Crightons & Jackson's Machine Works' at this location <ref>'Adshead's Twenty Four Illustrated Maps of the Township of Manchester, Corrected to the 1st May, 1851'. These maps are available on CD from the Digital Archives Association[http://digitalarchives.co.uk/] </ref>
* 1850 Listed in Slater’s Directory as Crighton & Co., machine makers, iron and brass founders of 58 Great Bridgewater Street. The 'street directory' contained in Slater’s Directory places Crighton next door to Sharp, Roberts & Co. on the south side of Great Bridgewater Street. The 1849 OS map shows a complex of buildings to the immediate west of Sharp, Roberts’ works, including a thread mill and an iron foundry. It seems likely that the foundry was Crighton’s. This was immediately alongside the branch of the Rochdale Canal which passes under Great Bridgewater Street. <ref>'The Godfrey Edition' 'Old Ordnance Survey Town Plans: Manchester Sheet 33: 'Manchester (Oxford Street & Gaythorn)' [http://www.alangodfreymaps.co.uk/]</ref>.  Adshead's 1851 map clearly shows 'Crightons & Jackson's Machine Works' at this location <ref>'Adshead's Twenty Four Illustrated Maps of the Township of Manchester, Corrected to the 1st May, 1851'. These maps are available on CD from the Digital Archives Association[http://digitalarchives.co.uk/] </ref>


* 1851 'The Official Catalogue of the Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations 1851' includes an entry for Crichton & Co., Great Bridgewater Street, exhibiting a cotton opener on Hardacre’s patent principle. It is likely that this is a misprint for Crighton.  
* 1851 'The Official Catalogue of the Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations 1851' includes an entry for Crichton & Co., Great Bridgewater Street, exhibiting a cotton opener on Hardacre's patent principle. It is likely that this is a misprint for Crighton.  


* 1853 William Crighton is recorded as a 'machinist (Crighton & Co), home address 135 Radnor Street, Hulme'. Crichton & Co are listed as machinists and iron and brass founders of 58 Great Bridgewater Street.<ref>Whellan’s Directory of Manchester & Salford, 1853</ref>
* 1853 William Crighton is recorded as a 'machinist (Crighton & Co), home address 135 Radnor Street, Hulme'. Crichton & Co are listed as machinists and iron and brass founders of 58 Great Bridgewater Street.<ref>Whellan's Directory of Manchester & Salford, 1853</ref>


== See Also ==
== See Also ==

Latest revision as of 20:16, 17 December 2014

of Manchester

See also Crighton and Son

a leading firm of textile machine-makers

  • 1850 Listed in Slater’s Directory as Crighton & Co., machine makers, iron and brass founders of 58 Great Bridgewater Street. The 'street directory' contained in Slater’s Directory places Crighton next door to Sharp, Roberts & Co. on the south side of Great Bridgewater Street. The 1849 OS map shows a complex of buildings to the immediate west of Sharp, Roberts’ works, including a thread mill and an iron foundry. It seems likely that the foundry was Crighton’s. This was immediately alongside the branch of the Rochdale Canal which passes under Great Bridgewater Street. [1]. Adshead's 1851 map clearly shows 'Crightons & Jackson's Machine Works' at this location [2]
  • 1851 'The Official Catalogue of the Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations 1851' includes an entry for Crichton & Co., Great Bridgewater Street, exhibiting a cotton opener on Hardacre's patent principle. It is likely that this is a misprint for Crighton.
  • 1853 William Crighton is recorded as a 'machinist (Crighton & Co), home address 135 Radnor Street, Hulme'. Crichton & Co are listed as machinists and iron and brass founders of 58 Great Bridgewater Street.[3]

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. 'The Godfrey Edition' 'Old Ordnance Survey Town Plans: Manchester Sheet 33: 'Manchester (Oxford Street & Gaythorn)' [1]
  2. 'Adshead's Twenty Four Illustrated Maps of the Township of Manchester, Corrected to the 1st May, 1851'. These maps are available on CD from the Digital Archives Association[2]
  3. Whellan's Directory of Manchester & Salford, 1853