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FROM 1870 - 1914 > CRAFT & INDUSTRY |
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Shipyard Workers On the eve of the First World War, Belfast had the biggest shipyard in the world and Harland and Wolff employed 14,000 men. The ... |
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Yardmen at work The success of Harland and Wolff in this period was due to its willingness to develop new technology. Iron and steel ships were ... |
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The Titanic The most famous ship built by Harland and Wolff was, of course, the Titanic which sank in the Atlantic on its maiden voyage in April ... |
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Ship’s Turbine The photograph shows yardmen working on the casing for the Britannic’s turbine. This unit could produce 17,000 horse power. The ... |
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York Street Linen Mill On the eve of the First World War, Belfast was the biggest linen producing centre in the world with a workforce rising steadily from a ... |
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Mill workers More than half of these linen workers were female, while a quarter were children under the age of 18. Although women did the same ... |
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Ropeworks In 1873 Edward Harland set up a ropework company to meet demand from the shipyard. The firm imported hemp which was then bathed in oil. ... |
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Rules for Shipyard Workers As the shipyard paid the best wages for workers in Belfast, there was great competition for places at the yard. This was in spite of ... |
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Harland & Wolff Indenture To become a well paid skilled worker young men had to serve a five – year apprenticeship during which they learned their trade. Before ... |
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Gilford Mill Not all of these large linen mills were in Belfast. Dunbar and McMaster’s mill in Gilford (Co. Down), which made linen thread, was ... |
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