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===Industrial Revolution=== [[File:Canal side, Shipley - geograph.org.uk - 347005.jpg|thumb|left|alt=Mill buildings alongside the Leeds and Liverpool Canal in Shipley|Canal-side mills, Shipley]] Shipley was shaped largely by the [[Industrial Revolution]] and, in particular, the growth of the [[textile industry]]. Textile manufacture dates from pre-industrial times. As the place name indicates, Shipley had a history as sheep grazing land, so wool was plentiful, and the River Aire was a ready source of water for powering water mills and cleaning processes. There was a [[fulling]] mill in Shipley by 1500 and two more by 1559.{{sfn|Sheeran|1984|p=13}} Another mill was built by the Dixon family on the banks of the Aire in 1635. New Mill on the far side of Hirst Wood was built in the 1740s and by the late 18th century between 9,000 and 10,000 pieces of broadcloth were being fulled annually at Shipley's mills.{{sfn|Sheeran|1984|p=15}} Much work was undertaken in workers' cottages which had 'loom shops' for spinning yarn. Home workshops were once a common sight along the River Aire and often had external flights of steps. Examples can be seen in the cottages at Jane Hills along the canal in [[Saltaire]].{{sfn|Sheeran|1984|p=14}} The industrial era ended [[cottage industry]]. Providence Mill, one of the first steam-driven mills was built for Denby Bros. in 1796.{{sfn|Burrows|p=2}} Other spinning mills followed, including Ashley Mill, Prospect Mill, Red Beck Mill on Heaton Beck (c. 1815), Well Croft Mill (c. 1840s) and Whiting Mill on Briggate.{{sfn|Sheeran|1984|pp=21–22}} The smaller mills gave way to larger premises which could combine all the processes of [[worsted]] production on one site. The first was Joseph Hargreaves' Airedale Mills (demolished 1970s), [[Salts Mill]] (built in 1853, now a gallery and restaurant complex), an enlarged Well Croft Mill (demolished 1950s) and Victoria Mills, near the canal.{{sfn|Sheeran|1984|p=23}} Hargreaves employed 1,250, Salt initially 2,500, and by 1876 total employment in the mills was 6,900.{{sfn|Sheeran|1984|p=23}} The growth in textile production stimulated the growth of associated supply industries. Other local employers included [[loom]] makers, Lee and Crabtree, WP Butterfield's galvanised containers and J. Parkinson and Sons machine tool makers.{{sfn|Firth|1996|p=7}} The other major effect of industrialisation was the vast expansion in housing stock. [[Titus Salt]]'s [[Saltaire]] is an example of a [[model village]], and Hargreaves had cottages built for his workers around the town centre and his mill. He built 92 [[back-to-back houses]] along Market Street and Central Avenue in an area which came to be called ''Hargreaves Square'' or ''The Square''. The houses were built by filling in the old courtyards.{{sfn|Sheeran|1984|p=32}} The population of the township grew from 1,214 in 1822{{sfn|The Edinburgh Gazetteer|1822|p=572}} to just over 3,000 in 1851 to 10,000 by 1869.{{sfn|Watson|1989|p=4}} It was then the landowning families—the Rosses, the Crompton-Stansfields and the Wainmans—took advantage of the demand for housing by selling their less productive land on Low Moor and High Moor. Houses for the better off were built in Sunny Bank and Hall Royd in the 1840s, 1850s and 1860s.{{sfn|Sheeran|1984|p=35}} Kirkgate was lined with villas from the 1860s, some of which still stand. Middle-class houses were built in the Nab Wood and Moorhead districts In 1870 a tranche of land in Moorhead was sold by the Countess of Rosse to build five streets of terraces. The public house on Saltaire roundabout that bears her name dates from that time.{{sfn|Watson|1989|pages=4–5}}
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