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<font color=\"blue\"><b>The History of Carpet</b></font> \"The History of British Carpets\" by Bertram Jacobs (1968) is the definitive volume on the subject, published by the respected trade magazine \"CFR\" with the encouragement of the then editor Harry Tysser. With the kind permission of Carpet Review we have incorporated information recorded by Mr Jacobs in the following summary. \"Carpets\" by George Robinson, published by Textile Book Service in 1972 is also an excellent manual and has a broader scope including the mechanics of construction. \"Tufting\" by Derek Ward, published by Textile Business Press (1969) is also an invaluable source, especially for the recent history of carpets. <font color=\"blue\">BC 6000 </font>Evidence of goats and sheep being sheared for wool and hair and then spun and woven. <font color=\"blue\">BC1480 </font>Egyptian fresco of handloom (discovered in 1953) <font color=\"blue\">BC464 </font>Pazyryk rug woven, (Discovered in ice filled tomb Outer Mongolia 1960). It has all the characteristics of a modern Persian or Anatolian with a pile and Ghiordes knot. <font color=\"blue\">AD 1000</font> Marco Polo confirms rug making in Central Anatolia. From there the technique spread through the Caucasus, Turkomania, Persia, Meshed, Herat, Kabul, India and Kashmir. Traders took rugs to Samarkand, Bokhara, Tashkent, Sinkiang and Peking, the craft swept through Tunisia, Biskra, Bou Saada, Marakesh and Fez. <font color=\"blue\">AD1537 </font>Robert Rothe imports weavers from the East to make rug on his estate in Kilkenny <font color=\"blue\">AD1540 </font>Cardinal Wolsey imports Turkie rugs to England <font color=\"blue\">AD1550 </font>Carpet knotting exhibited by Richard Hickey <font color=\"blue\">AD1570 </font>Verulam carpet made for Elizabeth 1st <font color=\"blue\">AD1580 </font>Aubusson carpet centre set up in Beauvair <font color=\"blue\">AD1586 </font>Ardebil carpet made (now in Victoria Albert Museum, London) Made by Maksud the Keshani. (Robinson suggests 1586. Jacobs asserts 1540. One of a pair made for the Mosque of Ardebil. The other is in the Los Angeles Museum of Art) <font color=\"blue\">AD1596 </font>Pierre DuPont sets up weaving carpets in Palais Royal Paris (Jacobs suggests 1604) moves in 1620 to soap works \"Savonerie\" <font color=\"blue\">AD1619 </font>Inventory on Naworth Castle mentions Kidderminster Fote Cloths (\"Seven carpets of Kitterminster Stuff\"). <font color=\"blue\">AD1655 </font>Carpet factory built at Wilton <font color=\"blue\">AD1685 </font>Huguenot weavers flee France some settle in England and start weaving in Wilton. Wilton carpet weavers received Royal Charter in 1699. <font color=\"blue\">AD1720 </font>Earl of Pembroke persuades weavers from Savonnerie factory to work in Wilton and teach locals to make Brussels carpet. (Legend has it that the Duke smuggled the weavers out of France in wine barrels). The Duffossy family still live in Dorset. <font color=\"blue\">AD1735 </font>Pearsall & Broome set up in Kidderminster making reversible double (Kidder) cloth. The last \"Kidder\" loom was dismantled in <font color=\"blue\">AD1936</font>. In 1745 Broome brings weavers from Tournai to Kidderminster to compete with <font color=\"blue\">AD1749 </font>Dufossy developed method to cut loops of Brussels weave to make a nap. This became known as Wilton carpet. <font color=\"blue\">AD1750 </font>Peter Parisot sets up carpet weaving in Paddington with two Savonnerie weavers, under patronage of Duke of Cumberland. He moved to larger premises near the Golden Lion Inn in Fulham. In <font color=\"blue\">AD1755 </font>the factory was brought by Passavant who moved plant to Exeter. (The Golden Lion still exists and when I last visited the hostelry in 1979 there were a couple of topless dancers working the bar). <font color=\"blue\">AD1755 </font>Moore opened in Moorfield and Whitty opened in Axminster closing in 1835 and looms moved to Wilton. Original hand knotted looms still in operation at Wilton until 1957 <font color=\"blue\">AD1756 - 1759 </font>Royal Society of Arts presented premiums for finest carpets. Won by Whitty three times and Passavant once. <font color=\"blue\">AD1770 - 1790 </font>Hand made carpet making flourished and attracted designers such as the Adam Brothers and Laverton. <font color=\"blue\">AD1770 </font>Brintons, previously cloth makers, started making carpets. The dynasty still exists and is the largest privately owned carpet company in the UK. (1997). <font color=\"blue\">AD1790 </font>Whitty makes carpet for Throne Room at Carlton House and Brighton Pavilion and supplied £1000 carpet to Sultan of Turkey. Coals to Newcastle. It became the fashion to match carpets to ceilings, a trend that is still followed by today\'s equivalent of Whitty\'s factory, Axminster Carpets of Devon. See Axminster Contract page - Number One Nob Hill, San Francisco). <font color=\"blue\">AD1801 </font>Jacquard invents method of presenting different coloured yarn to weaving face. Revolutionises patterned fabric making the system still in use. (1997) <font color=\"blue\">AD1810 </font>Decline in fine hand made carpets due to Napoleonic War and competition from machine made. More looms introduced in Kidderminster, Yorkshire and Scotland. <font color=\"blue\">AD1824 </font>Three ply fabric commenced in Kilmarnock. In America, hand knotted rugs and rag rugs made plus imports from England. In 1791 </font>Sprague opens carpet factory in Philadelphia and 1825 mill opened in Massachusetts. <font color=\"blue\">AD1750 - 1850</font> Industrial development in England. Population increase from 7 million to 18 million. End of cottage industries. Industrial revolution brought textile inventions by Hargreaves, Arkwright, Crompton. Cartwright and Watt\'s steam engine. <font color=\"blue\">AD1803 </font>Crossley Carpets start in Halifax (Crossley Carpets are still made under Carpets International brand by new owners Shaw Carpets of USA. Decendents of Crossley still make carpets in Yorkshire) <font color=\"blue\">AD1832 </font>Whytock invents method to print yarn and then weave it into flat fabric with design incorporated. Tapestry Carpet Loom. Start of Henry Widnell Stewart Ltd in Edinburgh later bought by stoddard - who still manufacture carpet. (See stoddard carpet on British Wool pages). Whytock leases Tapestry Carpet Loom rights to Crossley. <font color=\"blue\">AD1837 </font>James works with Quigley to perfect the Chenille Axminster loom. Chenille expanded to meet demand for large seamless patterned carpets at an economic price. Chenille eventually succumbed in 1968. It grew to a multi-million company over 150 years and were bought by Stoddard around 1970. Quigley took his share and disappeared in America around 1850. <font color=\"blue\">AD1839 </font>Erasmus Bigelow in America invents power loom to make double ingrain and sold it to Scottish and English manufacturers who installed steam power. In 1951 he introduced a steam powered Brussels loom at the Great Exhibition and demonstrated it at Hoobrook in Kidderminster (Near the site of today\'s Brockway Carpets, see Brockway pages), eventually Crossley purchased it. <font color=\"blue\">AD1852 </font>William Grosvenor built steam driven factory in Green Street, Kidderminster, where the company still occupies in a listed building. <font color=\"blue\">AD1862</font> Alfred Stoddard, an American, took over the tapestry factory of Ronalds at Elderslie, near Glasgow, to make carpets. By 1867 he was selling 75% in America. Stoddard now owns and still make carpets on the original site. <font color=\"blue\">AD1878 </font>Spool Axminster, invented by Halcyon Skinner in America, introduced into England by Tomkinson and Adam in Kidderminster. (Both families still making carpets - 1997). Morris opened hand knotting factory Hammersmith. (Morris designs still produced on Wilton looms see Hand Made Carpets pages). <font color=\"blue\">AD1880 </font>William Gray of Ayr develops seamless Kidder carpets <font color=\"blue\">AD1890 </font>Brintons develop Gripper Axminster (also from Halcyon Skinner of Yonkers) with efficiency advantages over traditional Spool. Later the two techniques were combined in Spool-Gripper. <font color=\"blue\">AD1896 </font>Donegal hand made factory set up and still in operation. (1997) <font color=\"blue\">AD1905 </font>Brintons produce carpet from first power driven wide loom. 15 ft wide. (4.57m) <font color=\"blue\">AD1927 D</font>avid Crabtree, loom builders since 1853, start to export wide Gripper looms, three yards or three metres wide. 10 ft 6in introduced in 1932. <font color=\"blue\">AD1930 </font>Decline in Tapestry carpet in favour of huge increase in Gripper Axminster especially for \"Seamless Squares\". <font color=\"blue\">AD1940 - 50 </font>Tufted carpets developed in USA from candlewick weaving techniques. <font color=\"blue\">AD1960 </font>Chenille Axminster disappeared under avalanche of tufted carpet. <font color=\"blue\">AD1950 - 1970 </font>Tufted carpet limited to plan yarn effects but gradually printing white carpet improved. <font color=\"blue\">AD1970 - 1995 </font>Woven Carpet production declined by 70% but tufted production increased by 300% (UK). <font color=\"blue\">AD1995 </font>Fully patterned tufted carpets produced in England by Ryalux Carpets. Individual coloured yarns presented to substrate effectively for the first time. Patterned tufted carpet produced to rival woven (Gripper Axminster and Figured Wilton) carpets. <font color=\"blue\">AD2000 </font>Carpet choice has never been so diverse. Identifying the need to move with the changing demands of the consumer, the carpet manufacturers across the world offer a huge variety of diverse carpet ranges. 1000¡¯s of textures, colours, designs and styles leave no stone unturned. The evolution of carpeting has been affected by social, economical and fashion pressures. Developments in man-made fibres, loom widths and machine efficiencies brought carpets within reach of the mass market. Fashions for seamless square and then seamless close-cover carpet helped introduce wider looms. Investigation into thermal and acoustical requirements led to fitted carpets in public buildings, shops and offices. Ingenious manufacturing solutions proliferated from the 1960\'s. Tiles, printing, warp printing, needle punched fibres and double faced bonded carpets all increased the ability of the carpet trade to cater for specific areas, price points and the demands of fashion.