13.08.2013 Views

The Earle family : Ralph Earle and his descendants

The Earle family : Ralph Earle and his descendants

The Earle family : Ralph Earle and his descendants

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Gen.] GENEALOGY. 105<br />

As has already been seen, Robert <strong>Earle</strong>, senior [89-9], conveyed,<br />

in 1792, <strong>his</strong> homestead to <strong>his</strong> gr<strong>and</strong>sons, Pliny <strong>and</strong> Jonah Eai-le.<br />

<strong>The</strong> house was at the junction of what are now Mulberry <strong>and</strong> <strong>Earle</strong><br />

streets.<br />

—<br />

Pliny immediately made the place <strong>his</strong> home, <strong>and</strong> <strong>his</strong> gr<strong>and</strong>father<br />

lived in the <strong>family</strong> until <strong>his</strong> decease, in 1796. A barn was erected<br />

in 1792, ten or twelve rods southwest of the house. In 1793, the<br />

house was removed directly across the road (Mulberry street),<br />

enlarged, <strong>and</strong> made the factory in which Pliny <strong>Earle</strong> & Brothers<br />

carried on the manufacture of h<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> machine cards.<br />

A larger dwelling was immediately erected upon the old site, the<br />

<strong>family</strong>, meanwhile, making the new barn their temporary home.<br />

T<strong>his</strong> house, with some alterations <strong>and</strong> additions, is still st<strong>and</strong>ing.<br />

Its framework is a model for strength <strong>and</strong> durability, <strong>and</strong> with simi-<br />

lar usage will outlast most of the. wooden dwelling-houses erected at<br />

the present day.<br />

As a combination of circumstances led the subject of t<strong>his</strong> notice<br />

into a work of no inconsiderable importance in the introduction of<br />

manufactures into the United States, it is proper that some account<br />

of that work should be inserted here.<br />

From Washburn's History of Leicester, published in 1826, we<br />

make the following extract :<br />

" Pliny <strong>Earle</strong> is the great-gr<strong>and</strong>son of <strong>Ralph</strong> <strong>Earle</strong>, one of the first<br />

settlers of the town, <strong>and</strong> possesses much of the mechanical ingenuity,<br />

in addition to a great fund of general knowledge, which has seemed<br />

to characterize those of that name in t<strong>his</strong> town."<br />

"<strong>The</strong> manufacture of cotton <strong>and</strong> wool h<strong>and</strong>-cards * * * was<br />

commenced [in Leicester] about the year 1785, by Mr. Edmund<br />

Snow ; <strong>and</strong> amongst those most early engaged in its prosecution was<br />

Mr. Pliny <strong>Earle</strong>. (He began it in 1786.) About the year 1790,<br />

Mr. Samuel Slater, the venerable originator of cotton factories in the<br />

United States, * * having in vain endeavored to procure suitable<br />

cards for <strong>his</strong> machinery in the principal cities of the Union, applied<br />

to Mr. <strong>Earle</strong>. Machine cards had, till then, been made in the<br />

manner called by manufacturers ' plain.' A part of the cards used on<br />

a machine is called ' filleting,' <strong>and</strong> t<strong>his</strong> part it was desirable to have<br />

made what is termed ' twilled.' For t<strong>his</strong> purpose, Mr. <strong>Earle</strong> was<br />

obliged to prick the whole of the filleting with two needles, inserted<br />

into a h<strong>and</strong>le, in the manner of an awl. T<strong>his</strong> process was extremely<br />

tedious, but Mr. <strong>Earle</strong> at length completed <strong>his</strong> undertaking, <strong>and</strong><br />

furnished to Mr. Slater the cards by which the first cotton was<br />

wrought that was spun by machinery in America. <strong>The</strong> difficulty<br />

*4

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!