Scope and Contents
The Crompton & Knowles Graphics conains graphics related to Crompton & Knowles including an image of the mill complex, "The Modern Loom", an ad from Textile World, exhibit material, and W-3 Loom and wire test.
Dates
- 1973
Conditions Governing Access
Access to the collections in the Kheel Center is restricted. Please contact a reference archivist for access to these materials.
Conditions Governing Use
This collection must be used in keeping with the Kheel Center Information Sheet and Procedures for Document Use.
Biographical / Historical
Crompton & Knowles Corporation was a medium-sized company whose business was divided into three highly specialized areas: dyemaking, the manufacture and marketing of extrusion equipment and components (for processing of plastics), and the production of flavors, food colorings, and fragrances for the food processing and pharmaceutical industries. At one point, Crompton & Knowles was one of the largest dye producers in America for the textile and related industries and the sole supplier of 40 percent of the dyes it made. Today it produces a wide-range of specialty chemicals.
Crompton & Knowles's roots lie in the cotton weaving industry, one of the first enterprises to be mechanized in western Europe in the late eighteenth century. William Crompton was a New England businessman who originated an improved loom, which he began manufacturing and marketing in the town of Worcester, MA, in 1837. For the next four decades, the Crompton Loom Works was practically without competitors, and it steadily prospered. Toward the end of this exclusive reign, Lucius J. Knowles, another New England businessman, developed an improved version of the textile loom in 1862, whereupon he too established his own company, L. J. Knowles & Bros., in the town of Warren, MA. In 1879, these two compaies merged to form Cromton & Knowles Loom Works. In 1999, Crompton & Knowles merged with Witco Corporation and in 2000 the company changed its names to Crompton Corporation. In 2005, Crompton Corporation merged with Great Lakes Chemical Corporation to form Chemtura.
Extent
1.44 cubic feet
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
Collection of graphics related to Crompton & Knowles including an image of the mill complex, "The Modern Loom", an ad from Textile World, exhibit material, and W-3 Loom and wire test.
Custodial History
American Textile History Museum Collection, gift of Bookworm & Silverfish, Lewis M. Coiner, and Ralph A. Huey.
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives Repository
227 Ives Hall
Ithaca NY 14853