Chris Bennett

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Viewing 15 posts - 91 through 105 (of 138 total)
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  • in reply to: Burnley Board Mill #803
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Burnley Board Mill No 4 Machine 1994.

    Larger file attached

    BBM No4 Machine

    in reply to: Star Paper Mill (Feniscowles) #801
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Aerial Photo courtesy of Peter Preston.

    Date unknown but likely to be around 2005. Larger version attached.Star Paper Mill

    in reply to: Spring Grove Paper Mill (Oughtibridge) #800
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster
    in reply to: Aylesford Paper Mills #799
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Aylesford Site was fairly self contained with Medical Services, Canteens and a bank among many others.

    Details on the bank are given at:

    martinsbank.

    MARTINS BANK LIMITED
    11 83 50 AYLESFORD PAPER MILLS
    BRANCH INFORMATION
    Title: 11 -83-50 Aylesford Paper Mills Type: Sub to 11-83-50 Maidstone
    Address: Aylesford Paper Mills Maidstone Kent
    Index Number and District: 418 London
    Hours: Mon Thu and Fri 12 noon to 2.30pm No Saturday Service
    Telephone: Maidstone 77777 x427 Services: No Nightsafe
    Manager: Mr T J W Ivey Manager (Maidstone)
    BRANCH HISTORY
    1958 opened by Martins Bank Limited
    15 December 1969 7 April 2000 Barclays Bank Limited
    20-54-10 Maidstone High Street
    Currently Closed
    This area has been redeveloped

    in reply to: Barrow Paper Mills #796
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Advert from Phillip’s Paper Trade Directory 1923 p. xii. Kellner-Partington Paper Pulp Co. Ltd part of Olives & Partington Ltd

    Grades made at Barrow – Fine printings, M.F. and super-calendered.

    Other Mills – Turnlee – Glossop, Dover – Glossop, Broughton Bridge – Manchester Ramsbottom Paper Mill (Mill 73)  – Ramsbottom Advert Phillip's Trade 1923

    in reply to: Carrongrove Mill (Denny) #795
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Thanks John. Important reminder of the machines of the era.

    in reply to: Carrongrove Mill (Denny) #776
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Many thanks John

    in reply to: Stoneywood Paper Mill, Denny #771
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Many thanks John

    in reply to: Empire Paper Mills (Greenhithe) #757
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    I used to visit Empire Paper Mill in the late 1960s and early 1970s when I worked for Reed Engineering and Development in Aylesford.

    One of the projects was to try to reduce water consumption as the mill was faced with installing effluent treatment, presumably as the Control of Pollution Act 1974 was looming.  Water had never been lacking so was used widely and unnecessarily in many places.

    A major task was to generate the first map of where the water was used and water and fibre lost. This involved hunting around the sub-basement for pipes coming from above and taking samples. The sub-basement was an other-worldly place. Low ceilinged, with not many lights, the water was supposed to flow in open V-shaped channels but these had over flowed many times, leaving swamps of pulp rotting away with piles of writhing red worms on the surface. There was one guy, who was reputed to live down there, tasked with reporting major losses and generally keeping the loses “out of sight and out of mind”.

    Many flows were hard to measure so we did a lot of tracer studies using lithium or potassium chloride or fluorescent dyes. The mill ran a three-shift system, running Monday to Saturday night and It quickly became apparent that the weekly shut would be critical to any effluent control. However, this had to be quantified, so our team were co-opted to getting to the mill on Saturday nights between 9 and midnight to catch the flood of discharges at shut-down.

    A bit damaging to my social life but even more frustrating as several times we turned up at the mill only to be told at the gates – “sorry you missed it – x machine threw a felt so they shut early”.  There was an element of danger too. On one occasion, Chris Wilson (the Department Head, later Group Technical Director St Regis Group) who was setting a good example by being part of the team, was nearly drowned when the water level in the sub-basement quickly reached the roof nearly trapping him. He rushed to the entrance ladder with water coming up his body.

    Later, visiting Empire was part of my duties doing press monitoring and troubleshooting. I would go to most of the Reed mills, the Kent ones more frequently than the Northern ones. Main duty was testing felt moisture contents using the Scanpro and then adjusting until the profiles were optimised for each position. Kit was heavy so it was great weight-training as well as stimulating.

    in reply to: Withnell Fold Paper Mills #755
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Very good information, including memories at:

    http://www.boydharris.co.uk/wf00.htm

    in reply to: Empire Paper Mills (Greenhithe) #753
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Empire Mills Calendar for 1979

    Courtesy of Jean Stirk

    Calendar, with cover, has seven A3 pages  well illustrated with supporting text. Most pages have a microphotograph, including  loose paper fibres, paper surface, starch granules, printed surface and coloured paper cross-sections.

    These were supplied by the Reed Engineering and Development Microscopy Department, based in Aylesford, who provided the service for the Reed Group and many outside customers.

    A few pictures of mill – pulp in pulper; size press; beta-gauge head near calender, illustrating the use of computers for substance and moisture control which was not universal at that time, and paper in warehouse.

     

    in reply to: Cheddleton Paper Mills (Brittains) #752
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Pictures of mill fire appliance now to be seen at the Black Country Living Museum in BAPH The Quarterly  News No. 107 – Summer 2017

    in reply to: Silverton Mill #751
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

     

    Mill Silverton Paper Mill
    Also known as The Bridge Paper Mills
    Address Silverton, nr. Cullompton, Somerset,
    Nat Grid Location SS978011
    Companies Reed & Smith, Ltd.; St. Regis;
    English Mill Excise No 456
    Status Shut during 1970 to 2015
    Est. Papermaking Start Date
    Date Closed 1999
    Links
    Link1 http://www.devonbuildingsgroup.org.uk/uploads/documents/Newsletters/Newsletter%208%20October%201989.pdf
    Link2 http://www.middevongazette.co.uk/silverton-demolished-national-trust-agreement/story-21464778-detail/story.html
    Britain from Above http://www.britainfromabove.org.uk/image/epw041145

     

    in reply to: Sittingbourne Paper Mill #750
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

     

    Article by Jon Rady and Damien Boden of Canterbury Archaeological Trust Ltd on their survey of the site in 2011-12.

    Good information on prehistoric and land use prior to major mill use. Good information on the development of the mill in late 19th and early 20th centuries; i.e. the peak of the operation. Especially helpful is the mill blueprint plan on p17 showing the locations of Machines 5-13 in 1911. Also marked is the Galloway Engine. Was Galloway a relation to Brian Galloway, a long serving manager in the 1980-90s?

    https://www.canterburytrust.co.uk/_files/ugd/cf851a_dc986aaa3de248fd852d9dcd6428b5e2.pdf

    Accessed April 2023

     

    • This reply was modified 3 years, 1 month ago by Chris Bennett. Reason: Modified link
    in reply to: Empire Paper Mills (Greenhithe) #746
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    WISEArchive
    Working Lives of Older People

    My Working Life 1960 – 2008 Anonymous

    http://www.wisearchive.co.uk/story/my-working-life-1960-2008/

    Author moved from Imperial Mill:

    Eventually in 1983 I was offered a transfer to Empire Paper Mills at Greenhithe, I didn’t have to cycle as I had done to Everards in 1960 as I could now drive. My title was now Cost & management Accountant, much the same responsibility I had at Imperial but with some extra. It was here that I was introduced to “Desk Top Computers” what a revolution, we could now do our own input and get our own printouts without all the hassle of transporting information backwards and forwards to Aylesford as had been done up to that point. The whole of the accounts operation was now speeded up but the downside was that there was no need for the punch room, (this was where all the data was transferred onto, originally punch cards and later magnetic tape). This meant further redundancies as technology had taken the place of people again.

    Empire struggled on for year after year and in 1991 was sold to a Norwegian company called Norske Skogâ they believed they had enough knowledge and experience to turn the business around but in 1993 they had to admit defeat and the mill was closed down.

Viewing 15 posts - 91 through 105 (of 138 total)