On this day … 3 August 1792

Sir Richard Arkwright, the Preston-born inventor and cotton industry pioneer, died aged sixty at his home in Cromford, near Matlock, Derbyshire, the centre of his operations.

The story of his life has been told many times (see source below), and Anthony Hewitson duly recorded the fact of his death in his History of Preston. But, like the good journalist he was, Hewitson decided to chase information on one of the lesser known and now virtually forgotten characters who played a key role in Arkwrightโ€™s enterprise.

This was John Smalley, Arkwrightโ€™s backer when he returned to Preston to continue work on his experimental spinning machine. In his history, Hewitson wrote:

โ€˜While compiling the cotton trade chapter โ€ฆ the question more than once cropped up in our mindโ€” โ€œWhat became of Smalley?โ€ In none of the histories, biographies, newspapers, &c., which we had occasion to consult, at the time, did we meet with any allusion to the fate of this adventurous Prestonian.โ€™

His curiosity piqued, he set out to discover more about Smalley and his subsequent career, after he and Arkwright left Preston to set up in business together. He uncovered a great deal, but today, blessed with Google, historians have discovered more, and their findings are summarised in the entry for Arkwright in the Dictionary of National Biography.

John Smalley was a Preston publican and relative of Arkwrightโ€™s. He was the landlord of the Bull Hotel (now the Bull and Royal) when Arkwright returned to Preston in 1768, later selling it to the Earl of Derby in 1773.

Arkwright House, Preston - interior
The room in what is now known as Arkwright House where the inventor worked in secret. From Hewitson’s History

Arkwright had been running out of money and approached Smalley and another relative, David Thornley, for funds. It was Smalley who rented the room at the back of the home of the grammar school headmaster in Stoneygate, now known as Arkwright House. In May 1768, the three men went into partnership to exploit Arkwrightโ€™s invention, Smalley being โ€˜so well convinced of the utility of the machine that he joined Arkwright with hand and purseโ€™.

When Arkwright left Preston for Nottingham in 1768, Smalley accompanied him, retaining partnership in the business. While establishing themselves in Nottingham, the partners were running low on funds and brought in two local businessmen, Samuel Need and Jebediah Strutt, as partners. They later moved to Cromford.

Smalley would seem to have moved back to Preston for he appears in the court leet records in October 1772. But the following year he was back working with Arkwright at his Cromford mill, serving as mill manager, having sold the Bull Inn to the Earl of Derby.

According to the DNB:

โ€˜โ€ฆ relations with Arkwright were bad. Smalley seems to have suggested to Strutt that Arkwright be forced out, but Strutt, who wrote of Arkwright, ‘We cannot stop his mouth or prevent his doing wrong’, could not agree, arguing, ‘it is [not] in our power to remove him โ€ฆ for he is in possession & as much right there as we’ โ€ฆ The matter went to arbitration and Smalley left; he died in 1782, shortly before Arkwright was to commence action for breach of patent.โ€™

After falling out with Arkwright, Smalley struck out on his own account, and with another partner built a cotton mill in Flintshire in North Wales, where he was living until his death at the age of 53.


Source
Dictionary of National Biography (a superb source which anyone with a Lancashire library card can access on line): https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/645


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One thought on “On this day … 3 August 1792

  1. We did Arkright at school 50 years ago. I’ve been reading the auction papers for the Pedders bank bust. Have you seen more they seem we’ll short of the ยฃ600000 needed to clear the debts?

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