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The first reference to a papermill in the United Kingdom was in a book printed
by Wynken de Worde in about 1495, this mill belonging to John Tate and was near
Hertford. Other early mills included one at Dartford, owned by Sir John
Speilman, who was granted special privileges for the collection of rags by
Queen Elizabeth and one built in Buckinghamshire
before the end of the sixteenth century. During the first half of the
seventeenth century, mills were established near Edinburgh, at Cannock Chase in
Staffordshire, and several in Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Surrey.
The Bank of England has been issuing bank-notes since 1694, with simple
watermarks in them since at least 1697. Henri de Portal was awarded the
contract in December 1724 for producing the Bank of England watermarked
bank-note paper at Bere Mill in Hampshire. Portals have retained this contract
ever since but production is no longer at Bere Mill.
There were two major developments at about the middle of the eighteenth century
in the paper industry in the UK. The first was the introduction of the
rag-engine or
hollander,
invented in Holland sometime before 1670, which replaced the stamping mills
which had previously been used for the disintegration of the rags and beating
of the pulp. The second was in the
design and construction of the mould used for forming the sheet. Early moulds
had straight wires sewn down on to the wooden foundation, this produced an
irregular surface showing the characteristic
laid
marks, and, when printed on, the ink did not give clear, sharp lines.
Baskerville, a Birmingham printer, wanted a smoother paper. James Whatman the
Elder developed a woven wire fabric,
thus leading to his production of the first
wove
paper in 1757.
Increasing demands for more paper during the late eighteenth and early
nineteenth centuries led to shortages of the rags needed to produce the paper.
Part of the problem was that no satisfactory method of bleaching pulp had yet
been devised, and so only white rags could be used to produce white paper.
Chlorine bleaching was being used by the end of the eighteenth century, but
excessive use produced papers that were of poor quality and deteriorated
quickly. By 1800 up to 24 million lb of rags were being used annually, to
produce 10,000 tons of paper in
England and Wales, and 1000 tons in Scotland, the home market being supplemented
by imports, mainly from the continent. Experiments in using other materials,
such as sawdust, rye straw, cabbage stumps and spruce wood had been conducted
in 1765 by Jacob Christian Schäffer. Similarly, Matthias Koops carried out
many experiments on straw and other materials at the Neckinger Mill,
Bermondsey around 1800, but it was not until the middle of the
nineteenth century that pulp produced using straw or wood was utilised in the
production of paper.
By 1800 there were 430 (564 in 1821)papermills in England and
Wales (mostly single vat mills), under 50 (74 in 1823) in Scotland and 60 in
Ireland, but all the production was by hand and the output was low. The first
attempt at a papermachine to mechanise the
process was patented in 1799 by Frenchman Nicholas Louis Robert, but it was not
a success. However, the
drawings were brought to England by John Gamble in 1801 and passed on to
the brothers Henry and Sealy Fourdrinier, who financed the engineer
Bryan Donkin to build the machine. The first successful machine was installed at
Frogmore,
Hertfordshire, in 1803.
The paper was pressed onto an endless wire cloth, transferred to a continuous
felt blanket and pressed again, it would have been cut off the reel into sheets
and loft dried in the same way as hand made paper. In 1809 John Dickinson
patented a machine that
that used a wire cloth covered cylinder revolving in a pulp suspension, the
water being removed through the centre of the cylinder and the layer of pulp
removed from the surface by a felt covered roller (later replaced by a
continuous felt passing round a roller). This machine was the
forerunner of the present day
cylinder mould
or
vat machine,
used mainly for the production of boards. Both these machines produced paper
as a wet sheet which require drying after removal from the machine, but in 1821
T B Crompton patented a method of drying the paper continuously, using a woven
fabric to hold the sheet against steam heated drying cylinders. After it had
been pressed, the paper was cut into sheets by a cutter fixed at the end of the
last cylinder.
By the middle of the nineteenth century the pattern for the mechanised
production of paper had been set. Subsequent developments concentrated on
increasing the size and production of the machines. Similarly, developments in
alternative pulps to rags, mainly wood and esparto grass, enabled production
increases. Conversely, despite the increase in paper production, there was a
decrease, by 1884, in the number of paper mills in England and Wales to 250 and
in Ireland to 14 (Scotland increased to 60), production being concentrated
into fewer, larger units. Geographical changes also took place as many of the
early mills were small and had been situated in rural areas. The change was to
larger mills in, or near, urban areas closer to suppliers of the raw materials
(esparto mills were generally situated near a port as the raw material was
brought in by ship) and the paper markets.
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