Heather Mills, Selkirk - Feb. 2009

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BenCooper

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Did you know that Paul McCartney bought Heather Mills a plane for her birthday ... and a Ladyshave for the other leg. Thank you very much, I'm here 'till Friday. So, anyway, Heather Mills in Selkirk in the Scottish Borders was founded in 1892 and soon became one of the town's largest employers with over 200 workers. It was owned by Edinburgh Woollen Mills until March 2008, when it was bought by the Border Weaving Company, but orders dried up, and the company closed at the beginning of this year. One of the senior people told me "that's how it goes - we've been closing mills here for 100 years"

This was a with-permission visit for the Clyde Heritage Trust to photograph everything before the mills were stripped out. In the weaving mill, furniture and fittings were being removed:



In the showroom, a few lonely samples:



Stacks of samples in the offices:



With an old sign in the corner:



In the weaving shed, lights were still on, machines were beeping for attention, and steam was hissing from overhead pipes - it looked like the workers had just popped out for lunch:



Weaving machines were modern computerised ones:



Though some were programmed by punched tape - a small office holds the tape-punching machines:



And a rack holds stacks of tapes - one of these labels reads "Black Watch":



The yarn store is still full of stock:



With a staff photo in the corner:



The warpping shed is also fully equipped:



With a very natty desk:



100 yards away, in the separate and older spinning mill, the scrap merchants are already at work -the blue haze is from their forklift:



Rows of carding machines stand packed together:



There's just about enough space to squeeze between them:



In a smaller shed, some older machines are squeezed in:



Raw materials wait in the receiving area:



Outside, an air raid shelter is used for storage:



In another shed, some antique machines:



Some strict rules:



Stacks of spares in the attic:



And a panorama of one of the antique machines:



Lots more pictures, as usual, in my Flickr set...
 
Great place Ben nice of them to let you in to take the photo's. Any idea where the looms are going to. The punch cards for the tartan designs (Black Watch etc.) must be worth a few bob to the right buyer. Great report and Pics mate
 
Love, just absolutely love the spares in the attic...a wonderful place for a wander! :mrgreen:
What a shame all the machines have been scrapped! Glad you had the opportunity to document it, Ben. Fab photos. :)
That desk!!! Nightmare! :lol:
 
wouldnnt it be funny if they mispelt weavers with a b replacing the W.on that air raid sign::lol:Heather mills mcartney was proven to be very unstable sir paul sais a beer mat under her false leg usually sorts the situation out!!:laugh:!seroiusly though guys nice report and some great pics of milling machines its a shme they are being scrapped
 
It was, oddly, sadder than visiting somewhere that's been derelict for a long time - it was as if the workers had just gone for a tea break, and there were still some older people there happy to tell me all about the place - and also wanting to get some stuff off their chests I think.
 
Very interesting site. :)

I used to work in a clothing factory years ago. I was kept on as warehouse staff while the production side went to China. Anyway, after the staff had been paid off (about 500) we had to clear out the factory part. It was madness.

Everyone had left their "factory slippers" behind, their personal cups and plates, handbags and many other trinkets. The whole place felt very odd and strange. I guess it felt like we were the only ones left in the world in there.

Some machinery was hired so it had to be sent back to the suppliers but the majority was scrapped or sent to landfill. We must have sent 200 industrial sewing machines to the scrapmen alone. We had no choice - it was ordered by headquarters. For other equipment we ended up hiring eight wheel heavy-duty bin lorry things to help crush the "bulk" to a manageable size.

It's funny how some things remind you of the past. :)
 
I did hear that Heather was complaining to Krela about your poor taste "jokes" you lot.

Personally, I don't think he'll take her seriously. She hasn't really got a leg to stand on.
 
such a shame!

That no buyer could be found for the factory OR any of the machines, paticuarly some of those early 20th century jobbies. All to the scrapman, any old Iron eh? :(

Glad they let you have a look round and you got some pics before they ripped it apart.
 

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