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Difference between revisions of "Lloyd's Paper Mills"

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==Description==
 
==Description==
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Edward Lloyd was a successful publisher and printer before deciding to move into the paper-making industry. He opened a paper-making mill at Bow Bridge in 1861. By this time printing was expanding rapidly and paper-making was shifting from a small craft to an industrial process, and the traditional supplies of [[linen]], [[cotton rags]], and [[straw]] were running low. Lloyd began searching elsewhere for a new way to make paper and discovered North African [[esparto]] grass. A patent had been developed in 1837 that used [[esparto]] in paper-making, but the current quantities of [[esparto]] that were being shipping in were not adequate for Lloyd’s needs. Lloyd went to [[Algeria]] and southern [[Spain]] to set up lands to grow [[esparto]] in larger quantities. In 1863 Lloyd purchased an old paper mill at Sittingbourne in Kent that he then used to process the pulp that was shipped to the mill at Bow to be made into paper. In 1877 the entire paper-making operation was moved to Sittingbourne.  
 
Edward Lloyd was a successful publisher and printer before deciding to move into the paper-making industry. He opened a paper-making mill at Bow Bridge in 1861. By this time printing was expanding rapidly and paper-making was shifting from a small craft to an industrial process, and the traditional supplies of [[linen]], [[cotton rags]], and [[straw]] were running low. Lloyd began searching elsewhere for a new way to make paper and discovered North African [[esparto]] grass. A patent had been developed in 1837 that used [[esparto]] in paper-making, but the current quantities of [[esparto]] that were being shipping in were not adequate for Lloyd’s needs. Lloyd went to [[Algeria]] and southern [[Spain]] to set up lands to grow [[esparto]] in larger quantities. In 1863 Lloyd purchased an old paper mill at Sittingbourne in Kent that he then used to process the pulp that was shipped to the mill at Bow to be made into paper. In 1877 the entire paper-making operation was moved to Sittingbourne.  
  

Revision as of 15:07, 21 April 2016



Operation

1861 to 1877


Location

Loading map...


Located in

London


Produced

Paper


Used Raw Materials

Esparto


|1859 |1877 |Edward Lloyd |-


|1861 |1877 |Paper Making |-

Description

Edward Lloyd was a successful publisher and printer before deciding to move into the paper-making industry. He opened a paper-making mill at Bow Bridge in 1861. By this time printing was expanding rapidly and paper-making was shifting from a small craft to an industrial process, and the traditional supplies of linen, cotton rags, and straw were running low. Lloyd began searching elsewhere for a new way to make paper and discovered North African esparto grass. A patent had been developed in 1837 that used esparto in paper-making, but the current quantities of esparto that were being shipping in were not adequate for Lloyd’s needs. Lloyd went to Algeria and southern Spain to set up lands to grow esparto in larger quantities. In 1863 Lloyd purchased an old paper mill at Sittingbourne in Kent that he then used to process the pulp that was shipped to the mill at Bow to be made into paper. In 1877 the entire paper-making operation was moved to Sittingbourne.

“Establishing a paper mill and growing his own raw material made Lloyd the only Victorian newspaper proprietor to apply vertical integration – ownership and control of every aspect of the supply chain – to his business.” http://www.edwardlloyd.org/innovation.htm


http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/The_Engineer_1867/07/26

https://books.google.ca/books?id=qidJAAAAcAAJ&lpg=PA413&ots=WTif7H6RWm&dq=Lloyd's%20Paper%20Mills%20bow%20bridge&pg=PA413#v=onepage&q&f=false

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Lloyd_(publisher)#Paper-making

http://edithsstreets.blogspot.ca/2012/08/river-leabow-creek-bromley-by-bow.html