Archibald Winterbottom
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Archibald Winterbottom | |
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Archibald Winterbottom, circa 1880 | |
| Born | 1814 Linthwaite, Huddersfield, England |
| Died | 18 January 1884 (aged 67–68) |
| Education |
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| Spouse |
Helen E. Woolley (m. 1845) |
| Children |
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| Parents |
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Archibald Winterbottom (1814 – 18 January 1884) was a British cotton cloth merchant who is best known for becoming the largest producer of bookcloth and tracing cloth in the world.[1] Bookcloth became the dominant bookbinding material in the early 19th century, which was much cheaper and easier to work with than leather, revolutionising the manufacture and distribution of books.[2]
Winterbottom was born in Linthwaite in the heart of the West Riding of Yorkshire, the son of a third generation wool cloth merchant, William Whitehead Winterbottom (1771–1842) and Isabella (née Dickson, 1784–1849).[3] Not long after, the family moved to the civil parish of Saddleworth, where Winterbottom, at the age of 15, left home in search of his fortune. He reportedly promised his father that, when he obtained a position, he would "do his utmost to succeed".[4]
Early career
In 1829, Winterbottom is said to have walked the 12 miles to Manchester, presumably seeking an apprenticeship, beginning his working life as a clerk with the largest cotton merchants in Manchester (Henry Bannerman & Sons).[5] He remained with Bannerman's for the next twenty-three years, where he learned how to refine cloth to the highest degree and developed different finishes that could be applied to plain cloth.[6] At the age of nineteen, he was appointed to manage their Bradford accounts and to run their Silesia department, patenting a silvery finish lining, which became known as Dacians.[7][8] Winterbottom was made a partner at Bannerman's aged thirty, which he held for the next nine years.
Social reformer

Manchester was at the heart of the cotton industry in Britain during the 19th century, which was a labour-intensive sector at a time when half of the workforce were children.[9][a] In 1845, Winterbottom married Helen Woolley, whose family came from a Unitarian tradition.[3][b] At the same time, he became actively involved in the Lancashire Public School Association (LPSA) founded in 1847, which was dominated by Unitarians.[11][12] By 1852, Winterbottom formed part of a delegation of the National Public School Association (NPA) to present a draft bill to Lord John Russell at 10 Downing Street "for the establishment of non-denominational free schools in England and Wales".[13] He remained active within the NPA, listed as secretary to the general committee on education in 1857, but by 1862, the NPA had achieved some of what it had set out to achieve and was dissolved.[14] Winterbottom went on to work with the newly formed Manchester Educational Aid Society campaigning for compulsory primary education.[15][16] He spent the rest of his life actively involved in improving child welfare, creating new schools and changing legislation to protect children.[17][18][19]
