In November last year, we
visited John Boyd Textiles in Castle
Cary, Somerset, where, by 1800, handloom
weavers began to weave a horsehair cloth
using a cotton warp. The horsehair came
from cropping the tails of local live
horses, a fashionable practice at the
time. John Boyd, a travelling textile
merchant from Scotland began weaving
horsehair cloth in Castle Cary in1837.
In 1851 he moved to his own purpose
built factory in North Street to expand
his output. The building is still there
with his name over the entrance.
Prior to the 1870
Education Act which introduced
compulsory primary education, children
were part of the weaving scene. In
Andrew Ure’s Dictionary (1846) we read “The
weft is of hair, and is thrown with a
long hooked shuttle; having a catch at
its end. The length of the shuttle is
about 3 feet; its breadth half an inch
and its thickness one sixth. It is made
of boxwood. ….. The workman passes
this shuttle through the threads of the
warp with one hand when the shed is
opened by the treddles (sic); a child
placed on one side of the loom presents
a hair to the weaver near the selvedge,
who catches it with the hook on his
shuttle, and by drawing it out passes it
through the warp.”
(Figure 5 shows a cross-section of such
a loom in Knight’s Dictionary) The loss
of child labour necessitated the
invention of a mechanical loom.
C. Bradley patented (No.
3066, Nov 29th
1865) a loom for weaving ‘horse-hair
fabrics’ in which ‘single
hairs are selected automatically from a
bunch of prepared hair, and are
presented to a weft inserter which draws
it through the shed.’
The mechanism is complex as it has to
allow for the picker failing to pick up
a single hair. John Boyd took out his
own patent in 1872 for his mechanical
loom. His looms were made in a small
foundry in Bruton, Somerset and are
still in use in the Castle Cary mill!
By 1900, horsehair fabric
was so popular that he employed over 200
people and was one of the main employers
in the town. His fabric was used for
Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s Argyle St.
tearoom chairs, and for the Lutyens
designed ‘Napoleon’ chair.
John Boyd died in 1890
but his company lives on. In the 1930s
the company moved to some old flax mills
on the other side of town, buildings
which they occupy today. The new site
had a ropewalk which is now covered in
and used for storage. One mill had a
waterwheel and the site had a central
steam plant, now demolished. John Boyd
Textiles is now one of the last
surviving mechanised horsehair weavers
in the world. Horsehair fabric is now
used for restoration and for upmarket
designer handbags and interior décor.