Rensselaer Republican, Volume 17, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 April 1885 — A Poor Boy’s Bomance. [ARTICLE]
A Poor Boy’s Bomance.
I spent a day with great interest, says Mrs. Sarah K. Bolton in the Conor eg alionalist, in visiting the worsted | mill and warehouses at Saltaire, just out from Bradford, ~England, which covers about ten acres. The history of the proprietor, Sir Titus Salt, reads like a romance. A poor boy, a son of a plain Yorkshire man, at 49 in a loose blouse he was sorting and washing wool; a little later a good salesman, a faithful Christian worker, and the Superintendent of a Sundayschool. At 33, happening to be in Liverpool, he observed in the docks some huge pieces of dirty-looking alpaca wool. They had long lain in the warehouses, and, becoming a nuisance to the owners, were soon to be reshipped to Peru. Young Salt took away a handful of the wool in his handkerchief, scoured and combed it, and was amazed at its attractive appearance. His father and friends advised him strongly to have nothing to do with the dirty stuff, as he could sell it to no one, and if he attempted to make cloth from it himself, he ran a great risk of failure. Finally he said: “I am going into this alpaca affair right and left, and I’ll either make myself a man or a mouse.” Returning to Liverpool he bought the whole 300 bales for a small sum and toiled diligently till, proper machinery was made for the new material. The result was a great success. In three years over two million pounds of alpaca wool were imported, and now four million, pounds are brought to Bradford alone. Employment was soon furnished to thousands, laborers coming from all over Great Britain and Germany. Ten years later Mr. Salt was made Mayor of Bradford; ten years after this a member of Parliament, and ten years later still a baronet by Queen Victoria. A great change from the boy in his soiled, coarse blouse, but he deserved it all. He was a remarkable man in many ways. Even when worth his millions and giving lavishly on every hand, he would save blank leaves and scraps of paper for writing, and lay them aside for future use. He was an early riser, always at the works before the engine was started. It used to be said of him, “Titus Salt makes a thousand pounds before others are out of bed.” He was punctual to the minute, most exact, and unostentatious. After he was knighted it was no uncommon thing for him to take a poor woman and her baby in the carriage beside him, or a tired workman, or scatter hundreds of tracts in a village where he happened to be. Once a gypsy, not knowing who he was,’ asked him to buy a broom. To her astonishment, he bought all she was carrying. The best of his acts, one which he had thought out carefully, as he said, “to do good to his fellow men,” was the building of Saltaire tor his four thousand workmen. When asked once what he had been reading of late, he replied, “Alpaca. If you had four or five thousand people to provide for every day you would not have much £ime left for reading. ” Saltaire is a beautiful place on*-the banks of the River Aire, clean and restful. In the center of the town stands the great six-story mill, well ventilated, lighted, and warmed, 545 feet long, of lightcolered stone,'costing over a half million dollars. The four engines of 1,800 horse power consume fifteen thousand tons of coal per year. The weaving shed, covering two acres, holds 1,200 looms, which make eighteen miles of fabric per day. The houses of the work people are an honor to the capitalist. They are of light stone like the mill, two stories high, each containing parlor, kitchen, pantry, and three bed-rooms or more, well-ventilated and tasteful. Flower beds are in every front yard, with a vegetable garden in the rear. No broken carts or rubbish are to be seen.
