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Rochdale

  • 1 Рочдейл

    Новый русско-английский словарь > Рочдейл

  • 2 (г.) Рочдейл

    Geography: Rochdale (метроп. граф. Большой Манчестер, Англия, Великобритания)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > (г.) Рочдейл

  • 3 г. Рочдейл

    Geography: Rochdale

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > г. Рочдейл

  • 4 Рочдейл

    Geography: (г.) Rochdale (метроп. граф. Большой Манчестер, Англия, Великобритания)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Рочдейл

  • 5 Рочдейл

    (Великобритания, Англия) Rochdale

    Русско-английский географический словарь > Рочдейл

  • 6 Byron

    m.
    Byron, Sixth Baron Byron of Rochdale.

    Spanish-English dictionary > Byron

  • 7 Ball Sizing

    Consists of three processes, sizing, drying and beaming. Used for coloured warps or for grey warps about 24's and lower, that are to be heavy sized, such as for heavy domestics, Wigans, etc. This system gives a leather-like feel to the yam and cloth, and is much used in the Rochdale district. The yam is not flattened as it is in tape sizing. For coloured work it is very suitable, owing to the shorter length, various colours, etc. The warp, in the form of a rope, is taken through the size trough (passing under and over rollers at the bottom). The excess size is squeezed out and the warp dried by passing over hot cylinders, then wound on to the weaver's beam. This system is very suitable for short warps, but is more expensive than tape sizing. A sectional view of the machine is shown in the illustration. A is the ball warp, it passes through eyes C and C1 down to rollers D and E in size box R. Then around rollers F. These rollers are free to move in groove S, and they press the yarn from roller F1 to F9. From the sizing, the yarn is squeezed between G and H, passes round J and between J and K, where it is squeezed again on to a guide; roller L and into box M. From M the yarn is taken to a drying machine and, after drying, it is reballed. The screw N regulates the pressure put upon the size by roller K

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Ball Sizing

  • 8 Banda Stripes

    This is a waste weft cloth made in the Rawtenstall and Rochdale districts. Widths about 50-in. to 54-in. finished. Lengths 10 and 6 yards. Designs all blue and grey stripes. Finished with a stiff finish to weigh about 31/2-lb. for 53-in. 10 yards (56-in. soft). A popular cloth is 56-in., 100 yards (soft), 48 X 40 per inch, 30's/8's condenser. The twist is heavily sized. Ends per inch vary from 48 to 56, and picks from 36 to 44. Twist nearly always 30's and weft 7's, 8's, or 9's. The colour is indigo blue.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Banda Stripes

  • 9 Blotch Checks

    A favourite and an old pattern, very popular among the better-class of West African natives for dress purposes. The design effect is obtained from a printed warp, and looks as if a large quantity of deep blue ink has been splashed on it in big blotches. The checking is 2 white, 2 blue, the warp also being 2 blue and 2 white. A good quality is 30-in., 20 yards, 9's blue, 40's white warp, 11's blue, 32's white wefts. Usually 2 green, 1 red heading each end. Finished stiff finish. Made in Radcliffe and Rochdale.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Blotch Checks

  • 10 Coloured Goods

    A term applied to fabrics in which dyed yarn is used either in warp or weft or both. The districts of Colne, Radcliffe and Rochdale are the principal centres for weaving coloured goods, and a special list of weaving wage prices applies.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Coloured Goods

  • 11 Cranky Checks

    This is one of the oldest cloths made for West Africa, and still finds a sale. It is a blue and white check, with designs about 2-in. square, coarse yarns all through. The style of checking is draughtboard type with the squares filled with blue and white lines on the hairline principle. The fabric is usually 36-in. finished, 20 yards, and headed at each end with a three green, one red, heading. The finish is the usual stiff finish, and a good quality is 37-in. soft, 20 yards, 89/3 of 16's grey and 16's indigo twist, with 24 picks per inch of 16's indigo and 18's cop weft. Made in Radcliffe-and Rochdale. When woven with double ends and picks it is termed a Zanzibar shirting.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Cranky Checks

  • 12 Domet

    A strong, heavy twill cotton cloth, with a raised face on both sides, grey or bleached. The original domet had a cotton warp and woollen weft and was loosely woven. It was used by dressmakers as wadding. The usual -widths are 36-in. and 45-in., in many weights; warp from 14's to 24's, and weft 6's to 14's. A cloth is made in Rochdale and Burnley called a domet, in plain weave, 40 ends and 28 picks per inch, 30's T., 10's W., all cotton. A hard twist warp is used.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Domet

  • 13 Lancashire Flannels

    A term commonly applied to the blue, yarn-dyed woollen flannel, raised slightly on the face, woven in the Rochdale district. The selvedges are white.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Lancashire Flannels

  • 14 Union Shirtings

    Fabrics for use as shirtings, pyjamas, etc., made with cotton warp and wool weft, or mixture yarn for weft, the amount of wool varies from 5 per cent up to 80 per cent. Made in Rochdale and many Yorkshire districts, 58 ends and 40 picks per inch, 16's warp, 16's weft, cotton counts.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Union Shirtings

  • 15 როქდეილი

    n
    Rochdale

    Georgian-English dictionary > როქდეილი

  • 16 cooperative movement

    Gen Mgt
    a movement that aims to share profits and benefits from jointly owned commercial enterprises among members. The movement was begun in Rochdale, Lancashire, England, in 1844 by 28 weavers and developed to include manufacturing and wholesale businesses as well as insurance and financial services. The Co-op in the United Kingdom and the Mondragon cooperative in Spain are two of the best known examples.

    The ultimate business dictionary > cooperative movement

  • 17 Brindley, James

    SUBJECT AREA: Canals
    [br]
    b. 1716 Tunstead, Derbyshire, England
    d. 27 September 1772 Turnhurst, Staffordshire, England
    [br]
    English canal engineer.
    [br]
    Born in a remote area and with no material advantages, Brindley followed casual rural labouring occupations until 1733, when he became apprenticed to Abraham Bennett of Macclesfield, a wheelwright and millwright. Though lacking basic education in reading and writing, he demonstrated his ability, partly through his photographic memory, to solve practical problems. This established his reputation, and after Bennett's death in 1742 he set up his own business at Leek as a millwright. His skill led to an invitation to solve the problem of mine drainage at Wet Earth Colliery, Clifton, near Manchester. He tunnelled 600 ft (183 m) through rock to provide a leat for driving a water-powered pump.
    Following work done on a pump on Earl Gower's estate at Trentham, Brindley's name was suggested as the engineer for the proposed canal for which the Duke of Bridge water (Francis Egerton) had obtained an Act in 1759. The Earl and the Duke were brothers-in-law, and the agents for the two estates were, in turn, the Gilbert brothers. The canal, later known as the Bridgewater Canal, was to be constructed to carry coal from the Duke's mines at Worsley into Manchester. Brindley advised on the details of its construction and recommended that it be carried across the river Irwell at Barton by means of an aqueduct. His proposals were accepted, and under his supervision the canal was constructed on a single level and opened in 1761. Brindley had also surveyed for Earl Gower a canal from the Potteries to Liverpool to carry pottery for export, and the signal success of the Bridgewater Canal ensured that the Trent and Mersey Canal would also be built. These undertakings were the start of Brindley's career as a canal engineer, and it was largely from his concepts that the canal system of the Midlands developed, following the natural contours rather than making cuttings and constructing large embankments. His canals are thus winding navigations unlike the later straight waterways, which were much easier to traverse. He also adopted the 7 ft (2.13 m) wide lock as a ruling dimension for all engineering features. For cheapness, he formed his canal tunnels without a towpath, which led to the notorious practice of legging the boats through the tunnels.
    Brindley surveyed a large number of projects and such was his reputation that virtually every proposal was submitted to him for his opinion. Included among these projects were the Staffordshire and Worcestershire, the Rochdale, the Birmingham network, the Droitwich, the Coventry and the Oxford canals. Although he was nominally in charge of each contract, much of the work was carried out by his assistants while he rushed from one undertaking to another to ensure that his orders were being carried out. He was nearly 50 when he married Anne Henshall, whose brother was also a canal engineer. His fees and salaries had made him very wealthy. He died in 1772 from a chill sustained when carrying out a survey of the Caldon Canal.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    A.G.Banks and R.B.Schofield, 1968, Brindley at Wet Earth Colliery: An Engineering Study, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.
    S.E.Buckley, 1948, James Brindley, London: Harrap.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Brindley, James

  • 18 Jessop, William

    [br]
    b. 23 January 1745 Plymouth, England
    d. 18 November 1814
    [br]
    English engineer engaged in river, canal and dock construction.
    [br]
    William Jessop inherited from his father a natural ability in engineering, and because of his father's association with John Smeaton in the construction of Eddystone Lighthouse he was accepted by Smeaton as a pupil in 1759 at the age of 14. Smeaton was so impressed with his ability that Jessop was retained as an assistant after completion of his pupilage in 1767. As such he carried out field-work, making surveys on his own, but in 1772 he was recommended to the Aire and Calder Committee as an independent engineer and his first personally prepared report was made on the Haddlesey Cut, Selby Canal. It was in this report that he gave his first evidence before a Parliamentary Committee. He later became Resident Engineer on the Selby Canal, and soon after he was elected to the Smeatonian Society of Engineers, of which he later became Secretary for twenty years. Meanwhile he accompanied Smeaton to Ireland to advise on the Grand Canal, ultimately becoming Consulting Engineer until 1802, and was responsible for Ringsend Docks, which connected the canal to the Liffey and were opened in 1796. From 1783 to 1787 he advised on improvements to the River Trent, and his ability was so recognized that it made his reputation. From then on he was consulted on the Cromford Canal (1789–93), the Leicester Navigation (1791–4) and the Grantham Canal (1793–7); at the same time he was Chief Engineer of the Grand Junction Canal from 1793 to 1797 and then Consulting Engineer until 1805. He also engineered the Barnsley and Rochdale Canals. In fact, there were few canals during this period on which he was not consulted. It has now been established that Jessop carried the responsibility for the Pont-Cysyllte Aqueduct in Wales and also prepared the estimates for the Caledonian Canal in 1804. In 1792 he became a partner in the Butterley ironworks and thus became interested in railways. He proposed the Surrey Iron Railway in 1799 and prepared for the estimates; the line was built and opened in 1805. He was also the Engineer for the 10 mile (16 km) long Kilmarnock \& Troon Railway, the Act for which was obtained in 1808 and was the first Act for a public railway in Scotland. Jessop's advice was sought on drainage works between 1785 and 1802 in the lowlands of the Isle of Axholme, Holderness, the Norfolk Marshlands, and the Axe and Brue area of the Somerset Levels. He was also consulted on harbour and dock improvements. These included Hull (1793), Portsmouth (1796), Folkestone (1806) and Sunderland (1807), but his greatest dock works were the West India Docks in London and the Floating Harbour at Bristol. He was Consulting Engineer to the City of London Corporation from 1796to 1799, drawing up plans for docks on the Isle of Dogs in 1796; in February 1800 he was appointed Engineer, and three years later, in September 1803, he was appointed Engineer to the Bristol Floating Harbour. Jessop was regarded as the leading civil engineer in the country from 1785 until 1806. He died following a stroke in 1814.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    C.Hadfield and A.W.Skempton, 1979, William Jessop. Engineer, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Jessop, William

  • 19 Rennie, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Canals, Civil engineering
    [br]
    b. 7 June 1761 Phantassie, East Linton, East Lothian, Scotland
    d. 4 October 1821 Stamford Street, London, England
    [br]
    Scottish civil engineer.
    [br]
    Born into a prosperous farming family, he early demonstrated his natural mechanical and structural aptitude. As a boy he spent a great deal of time, often as a truant, near his home in the workshop of Andrew Meikle. Meikle was a millwright and the inventor of a threshing machine. After local education and an apprenticeship with Meikle, Rennie went to Edinburgh University until he was 22. He then travelled south and met James Watt, who in 1784 offered him the post of Engineer at the Albion Flour Mills, London, which was then under construction. Rennie designed all the mill machinery, and it was while there that he began to develop an interest in canals, opening his own business in 1791 in Blackfriars. He carried out work on the Kennet and Avon Canal and in 1794 became Engineer for the company. He meanwhile carried out other surveys, including a proposed extension of the River Stort Navigation to the Little Ouse and a Basingstoke-to-Salisbury canal, neither of which were built. From 1791 he was also engaged on the Rochdale Canal and the Lancaster Canal, as well as the great masonry aqueduct carrying the latter canal across the river Lune at Lancaster. He also surveyed the Ipswich and Stowmarket and the Chelmer and Blackwater Navigations. He advised on the Horncastle Canal in 1799 and on the River Ancholme in 1799, both of which are in Lincolnshire. In 1802 he was engaged on the Royal Canal in Ireland, and in the same year he was commissioned by the Government to prepare a plan for flooding the Lea Valley as a defence on the eastern approach to London in case Napoleon invaded England across the Essex marshes. In 1809 he surveyed improvements on the Thames, and in the following year he was involved in a proposed canal from Taunton to Bristol. Some of his schemes, particularly in the Fens and Lincolnshire, were a combination of improvements for both drainage and navigation. Apart from his canal work he engaged extensively in the construction and development of docks and harbours including the East and West India Docks in London, Holyhead, Hull, Ramsgate and the dockyards at Chatham and Sheerness. In 1806 he proposed the great breakwater at Plymouth, where work commenced on 22 June 1811.
    He was also highly regarded for his bridge construction. These included Kelso and Musselburgh, as well as his famous Thames bridges: London Bridge (uncompleted at the time of his death), Waterloo Bridge (1810–17) and Southwark Bridge (1815–19). He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1798.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1798.
    Further Reading
    C.T.G.Boucher, 1963, John Rennie 1761–1821, Manchester University Press. W.Reyburn, 1972, Bridge Across the Atlantic, London: Harrap.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Rennie, John

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