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Bolton |
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BoltonTown and seat of Bolton metropolitan borough, Greater Manchester, northwest England, on the River Croal, 18 km/11 mi northwest of Manchester; population (2001) 139,400. Industries include engineering and the manufacture of chemicals, paper, and textiles. Bolton developed rapidly in the 18th century as a cotton-spinning town. HistoryThe Manor of Bolton was first recorded in 1067, owned by the Montgomery family, but there is evidence of Bronze Age settlement in the area. The town received its first charter to hold a market and annual fair in 1251. Following the arrival of Flemish weavers in about 1337, the town became a centre for the wool trade. During the Industrial Revolution there was a prominent cotton-spinning industry; with engineering developing alongside textile production. Growth was encouraged by the opening of the canal to Manchester in 1791 and the railway in 1838. Bolton's cotton-textile industry outlasted that of many other towns, but demand eventually diminished and the town's economy diversified. The Textile Museum, to the north of the town, illustrates the early machinery used in the industry. Exhibits include examples of Samuel Crompton's spinning mule (1779), and the spinning frame invented in 1768 by Richard Arkwright, both of whom lived and worked in Bolton.
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| Chivas USA rookie John Cunliffe, a Bolton, England native, has started two games. Sandusky Walmsley, Bolton, England, has joined forces with threading systems experts William Kenyon, Dukinfield, to bid for several paper machine rebuild projects in the United Kingdom and throughout the world. The obituary prompted a response from a consultant radiologist in Bolton, England, Rakesh Mehan, who said it would have been more appropriate in "one of the many nursing journals rather than the BMJ". |
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