Asa Lees

Asa Lees was a firm of textile machine manufacturers in Oldham, Lancashire. Their headquarters was the Soho Iron Works, Greenacres. It was second only in size to Platt Brothers.

Asa Lees & Co. Ltd
Limited Company
IndustryTextile machinery
SuccessorTextile Machinery Makers Ltd
Founded1790/1872
FounderSamuel Lees
Headquarters
Oldham
,
UK
ProductsPreparation and spinning machinery, gassing and beaming.

Early history

Samuel Lees founded a roller making works in the 1790s, it was called the Soho Works. His second son Asa Lees (1816–62) inherited the premises. He expanded the business, exporting fustian power looms to St Petersberg. He abandoned looms to concentrate on manufacturing preparation and spinning machinery. The Soho Cotton mills was converted to a Mule carriage works.[1] Asa Lees became a limited company in 1868, four years after Platts and the shares were quoted on the Oldham share market until the 1890s. It never published its accounts, though its dividends were consistently higher than Platts, and remained profitable in 1928 when Platts made a loss. They were conservative in their trading, dealing only with reliable firms. They did not push for exports. They experienced rapid expansion in the 1880s under the management of Robert Taylor (1823–1912) and production peaked in 1906 when they were employing 3000 men.[1]

Later history

In the recession of the 1930s, Platt Brothers, Howard and Bullough, Brooks and Doxey, Asa Lees, Dobson and Barlow, Joseph Hibbert, John Hetherington and Tweedales and Smalley merged to become Textile Machinery Makers Ltd., but the individual units continued to trade under their own names until the 1970, when they were rationalised into one company called Platt UK Ltd.[2] In 1991 the company name changed to Platt Saco Lowell. [3]

The premises

gollark: In my country schools and some exams have switched to NUMBER grades for no good reason.
gollark: Join the Army! Be yelled at by people you *don't* know and possibly die for some arbitrary country!
gollark: Are these "CB hollies" that rare?
gollark: Yes, and you can't control it in any way.
gollark: I guess there's a stupid amount of Birdz ones around.

References

  1. Gurr, Duncan; Hunt, Julian (1998), The Cotton Mills of Oldham, Oldham Education & Leisure, p. 13, ISBN 0-902809-46-6, archived from the original on 18 July 2011, retrieved 9 October 2009
  2. "Platt maker of quality textile machinery and parts". Archived from the original on 29 December 2007. Retrieved 17 April 2009.
  3. "Howard and Bullough, Cotton Machinery Manufacturers". Retrieved 26 January 2009.
  4. Ashmore, Owen (1982). The industrial archaeology of North-west England. Manchester University Press. p. 118. ISBN 0-7190-0820-4.
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