Workers at Ross & Hardy Paper Works (1901)
Where was this Edwardian paper works?
By 1901 wood pulp had begun to replace more costly cotton fibre in paper-making, leading to a burgeoning market in cheaply-produced newspapers and other print materials. We don't know where this long-gone works was, but its handsome stuccoed frontage and healthy appearance of its employees - some of them proudly holding beautifully-clothed infants up for the cameras - suggest a thriving business.
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Edwardian Enigmas
We've learned a lot about Mitchell and Kenyon since hundreds of their films were rediscovered in 1995. Research by the University of Sheffield and the BFI revealed a wealth of background detail about the films, the events they depict, how they were commissioned and shown. But a few films have so far stubbornly refused to give up their secrets.
So now's your chance to play amateur detective. Do you recognise this town, that street, those factory gates, that football team... even a face in the crowd? If you can, please let us know. And if you can't, you can still enjoy these heady slices of Edwardian (or Victorian) life.
16 videos in this collection
Factory Exit in Lincoln (1900)
Unidentified Chinese Men (c.1900)
Parade of Schoolchildren (c.1902)
Textile Workers Leaving a Factory (c.1901)
Workers Leaving a Factory in Wigan (1902)
Scene Outside a Factory (c.1902)
Employees Leaving a Factory (c.1901)
Street Scenes in North of England (c.1902)
Factory Gate Exit (c.1901)
Exit of Clerical and Factory Workers (c.1901)
Workers at Ross & Hardy Paper Works (1901)
Unidentified Factory Gate Exit in Lancashire (c.1900)
Workforce Leaving a Factory in the North of England (c.1900)
Unidentified Factory Gate (c.1900)