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A millwright is a craftsman or skilled tradesman who installs, dismantles, maintains, repairs, reassembles, and moves machinery in factories, power plants, and construction sites. [ 1 ] The term millwright (also known as industrial mechanic [ 2 ] ) is mainly used in the United States, Canada and South Africa to describe members belonging to a ...
While millwrighrs have evolved overtime from specialized carpenters who also added the shafts of a water mill to a group of metal working skilled tradesmen who set up the production apparatus in a place such as a power plant, the change is not at any point so abrupt we can justify a category break.
The Journeymen Steam Engine, Machine Makers' and Millwrights' Friendly Society, also known as the Old Mechanics, was an early trade union representing engineers in the United Kingdom. The union was founded on 26 July 1826 in Manchester, when it was known as the Friendly Union of Mechanics. In its early years, it held an annual delegate meeting ...
Thomas Cheek Hewes (1768 – 26 January 1832) [1] was an English millwright, textile machine manufacturer and civil engineer professionally active from 1790 to 1830,
John Hall (5 September 1765 – 7 January 1836) was an English millwright and mechanical engineer, who, in 1785, founded the Dartford-based engineering company which became J & E Hall, today a prominent supplier of refrigeration machinery, and part of the Daikin group.
William Thorold (9 October 1798 – 17 December 1878 [1]) was a 19th-century millwright, architect and civil engineer in Norwich, Norfolk, England.. He was born in 1798 in Methwold, Norfolk, the son of a farmer.
The Twin City Carpenters District Council was founded in 1915 to build strength for the Union Locals throughout the area. The Millwrights were already a part of the Brotherhood and additional crafts joined later: Pile Drivers in 1937, Floor Coverers in 1940, and the Lathers in 1979.
Mills were made by millwrights, builders and iron founders. [42] By the end of the 18th century there were about 900 cotton mills in Britain, of which approximately 300 were large Arkwright-type factories employing 300 to 400 workers, the rest, smaller mills using jennies or mules, were hand- or horse-driven and employed as few as 10 workers. [43]