Items
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D4-099: Centenary Services Programme for Saltaire Congregational Church April 1957Centenary Services Programme for Saltaire Congregational Church April 1957
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D4-100: Leisure - ReligionTimeline for - 'William Evans Glyde - 1814-1884'
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D4-101: Saltaire Congregational ChurchCopy of a colour photo of Saltaire Congregational Church (now the United Reformed Church) in Saltaire
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D4-102: Leisure - ReligionTimeline for - 'William Evans Glyde - 1814-1884'
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D4-103: Information sheet about Saltaire Congregational Church from Saltaire Education Pack 1853-present dayInformation sheet about Saltaire Congregational Church from Saltaire Education Pack 1853-present day
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Damems, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom Village in West Yorkshire on the outskirts of Keighley. Site of a mill owned by Salts (Saltaire) Ltd. -
Dayton Coal and Iron Company Limited Company founded in Dayton, Tennessee, United States owned by the Salts company. The company manufactured iron and stell, based on the large local deposits of iron ore and coal. The Salts made major investements in the company which were partly to blame for the subsequent financial difficulties of the textile business in the UK. The Salts gave up their interest in the Dayton company in 1892 and sold the textile business the following year. Dayton was the site of rich coal and iron deposits. Its original developers obtained a loan from Sir TItus Salt Bart. and Sons Ltd, but they went bankrupt. The directors of the Salts company, including Titus Salt Junior, took over the Dayton firm and made large investments to develope the site. They built: two large blast furnaces with a capacity of 250 tons of iron ore per day, three fire brick kilns and 200 coke ovens were constructed as well as 200 homes, a manager's house (costing $15,000), a company store, a schoolhouse and other social amenities. What had been a small hamlet grew into a sizeable town over a very short period. In 1892 the Salt business partners had to surrender their interests in Dayton due to the collapse of Sir Titus Salt (Bart) Sons and Co. Ltd. The investment the company had made in Dayton was a significant factor in the Salt family’s loss of their business and the estate of Saltaire. -
Dayton, Tennessee, United States of AmericaDayton was the site of large deposits of coal and iron. During the 1880s the Salt family invested heavily in a local coal and iron smelting business, and created a town for its workers. The cost of the investment contributed to the financial problems of the Salts' textile business which eventually led to its being sold in the 1890s. In 1925 Dayton was the location for the famous 'Scopes Monkey Trial' concerning the teaching of evolution in schools.
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Denby, GertrudeEliza Gertrude Denby married Bertram Foster Roberts, a son of Sir James Roberts, in 1903.
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Derby, Derbyshire, United KingdomDerby is a city in the English midlands. An ancient market town, Derby became a leading site for textile production during the earliest days of the Industrial Revolution.
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Dickens, CharlesRenowned nineteenth century novelist. Dickens wrote an article in his Household Words publication entitle 'The Great Yorkshire Llama' regarding the early days of Titus Salt's discovery and use of Alpaca wool.
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Digital1: Mill Time Lines 1853-1955 [set of]Mill Time Lines 1853-1955 [set of]
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Digital10: R.W. Guild - familyR.W. Guild - family
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Digital11: Salts Mill DirectorsA Set of copies of Colin Coates' TIMELINES (Other Timelines are computer files *)
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Digital2: Osterer Bros - OxfordOsterer Bros - Oxford
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Digital3: Roberts in FranceRoberts in France
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Digital4: Catherine CrossleyCatherine Crossley
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Digital5: John RhodesCompilation of information from newspapers and census records on John Rhodes, one of the consortium of four Bradford businessmen who purchased Sir Titus Salt Bart. and Sons Limited from the Salt family in 1892/93.
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Digital6: John WilmotJohn Wilmot
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