Baumwollspinnerei Ermen & Engels

LVR-Industriemuseum - Baumwollspinnerei Ermen und Engels site, in Engelskirchen, Nordrhein-Westfalen

The Baumwollspinnerei Ermen & Engels is a former cotton mill in Engelskirchen, Nordrhein-Westfalen, that has become part of the LVR Industrial Museum.

Location

Engelskirchen is midway between Köln and Olpe, today served by the A4 autobahn. In 1840 it was a quiet village on the banks of the Agger (river), a tributary of the Sieg (river). In Bergisches Land it is 54 km south east of Barmen (Wuppertal). This put it in the heart of the North European Textile belt.

History

Friedrich Engels from Barmen, was the father of Friedrich Engels who worked with Karl Marx on a series of influential literary works in the fields of sociology and economics. Engels senior made a visit to Manchester in 1837 with the manufacturer Peter Albertus Ermen.

On their return, they founded the company "Peter Ermen & Co", which was renamed "Ermen & Engels" on 1 August 1838.[1] They planned to convert the Unterbarmen church into a cotton spinning mill, which would spin and double yarn.[2] The church was a two-story Fachwerkhaus, in the old Bergisches Land tradition, and by 1821 the town already had water-powered mills, warehouses and over 50 textile factories.

Also in 1837 Engels acquired the former Schnabelsch Hammerwerk in Engelkirchen with the ensuing water-rights. This enabled him to use water from the River Agger to drive a water-wheel, at a point where it dropped over a 20 feet (6.1 m) waterfall. There were expansion possibilities. This land was less expensive, and being less developed than Barmen there was a pool of available labour. The company, with capital from Manchester was founded 1 July 1837, with its head office in Barmen where it remained until 1885.[3] Production started in 1844: in the 1970s all textile work had moved to Asia and closure occurred in 1979. The land was sold to a property company and the usual destruction took place. Before all had been destroyed it was protected as an important historical monument (Denkmalschutz). Alternative usage was sought, and reconfiguration occurred between 1993 and 1996.[4]

Power

The first mill was powered by water using a waterwheel, and the power transmitted to the individual machines using leather belts and lineshafts.[4] in 1854 the water wheels were replaced by water turbines and reserve steam boilers, which could deliver 130 hp, were installed two years later.

In 1900 the turbines started to drive electric generators to power the machines, which had individual electrical motors. Three years later the turbines were providing electricity to the mill and to deliver electric street lighting to the town,[5] and in 1909 the new company turbines were generating 640 hp.

In 1924 this had changed and the Elektrizitätswerk Engelskirchen was providing mains electricity to the whole town and to the factory from their steam turbines in the Kreiselektrizitätswerk in Dieringhausen. This became part of the Rheinisch-Westfälischen Elektrizitätswerk in 1935.[4]

Industrial museum

The museum is an integral part of the restored site. It is one of the sites of the LVR Industrial Museum. It is an important site to show the early generation of electricity, as well as demonstrating the cotton heritage. Some of the other buildings on the site have other usages. There is housing but also two buildings now act as the Engelkirchen rathaus (local government administrative buildings).

Cotton Gallery

Owners

Ermen and Engels were prominent in cotton and had mills both in Bergisches Land and in Manchester and Oldham. It was to Victoria Mill, in Weaste that Friedrich Engels (the father) sent his son Friedrich in 1842. It was while working for the firm that Friedrich wrote his influential bookThe Condition of the Working Class in England.[6] The book was written between September 1844 and March 1845 and printed in German in 1845 and in English in 1887. In the book, Engels gave way to his views on the "grim future of capitalism and the industrial age".[7][8] The Engels were a pietist, fiercely Calvinist family with solid beliefs in predestination and the rejection of forms of worldly pleasure. Hardwork and prayer were mantras: and they saw no contradictions in creating vast wealth while neighbours, their employees remained in poverty; as that was their destiny.[9] From Rhineland farming stock, the family's prosperity began when Johann Casper Engels (1715-1787) arrived in Barmen and saw that the crystal clear lime free waters of the Wupper was idea for linen bleaching. He built up a mechanical lace production enterprise which he passed onto his sons. They were paternalistic employers, building houses, schools and a granary co-operative for his workers in Barmen. The second generation expanded the firm to include ribbon weaving. Johann Casper II became a town councillor and built the Barmen United Protestant Church.[10] They were fabricants (merchant-manufacturers) representing everything Biedermeier. With the next generation, the family fragmented- the Engels & Sohne went to one brother, and Friedrich left to join the Ermen brothers to spin and double sewing cotton and trade in Manchester and Engelskirchen.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Michael Knieriem: Die Firma „Ermen & Engels“ in Manchester und Engelskirchen im 19. Jahrhundert. S. 218.
  2. Thomas Schleper: Mit Engels ins Industriezeitalter, Von Wasserkraft, Fabrikarbeit und Baukunst. 2. unveränderte Auflage, Rheinland-Verlag, Köln 1993, ISBN 3-7927-1254-7.
  3. Thomas Schleper: Ermen & Engels in Engelskirchen, Industrialisierunge einer ländlichen Region, Rheinland-Verlag, Köln 1989, ISBN 3-7927-0977-5.
  4. 1 2 3 Thomas Schleper: Unter Spannung, Bei Ermen & Engels dem Strom auf der Spur. Rheinland-Verlag, Köln 1996, ISBN 3-7927-1572-4.
  5. Unter Spannung – LVR-Industriemuseum Schauplatz Engelskirchen abgerufen am 24. Oktober 2011 Archived September 28, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  6. The Condition of the Working Class in England is contained in the Collected Works of Marx and Engels: Volume 4 (International Publishers: New York, 1975) pp. 295–596.
  7. Fox Hunter, Party Animal, Leftist Warrior by Dwight Garner, The New York Times, 18 August 2009
  8. Whitfield, Roy (1988) The Double Life of Friedrich Engels. In: Manchester Region History Review, vol. 2, no. 1, 1988
  9. Hunt, pp. 14-15.
  10. Hunt, p. 13.

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

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Coordinates: 50°59′01″N 7°24′36″E / 50.983544°N 7.409864°E / 50.983544; 7.409864

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