John Edward Crowther
John Edward Crowther | |
---|---|
Born |
1863 West Riding of Yorkshire |
Died |
4 July 1931 Marsden, West Yorkshire |
Occupation | Businessman, mill owner |
John Edward Crowther (1863–1931) was a businessman and philanthropist who made a number of charitable donations to the village and people of Marsden, West Yorkshire.
Early life
Crowther was born in 1863 in the West Riding of Yorkshire.[1]
Career
Crowther owned and ran the family company John Edward Crowther Ltd based at Bank Bottom Mill, which in the early part of the 20th century was one of the largest cloth producing mills owned by a single individual in the world.[1]
He was responsible for a number of charitable donations to the town of Marsden, such as the purchase and donation of an ambulance in 1912.[2] After the Great War, in 1930, Crowther donated land for the clubhouse of the local chapter of the British Legion.[3] He also helped to maintain a curate at the parish church and helped pay for the peal of bells in the church tower.[4]
Death
On April 7, 1930 his wife died. In 1931 the economic downturn caused by the Great Depression caused the mill to work short time, and on 4 July 1931 Crowther took his own life.[5] When he was cremated on 8 July, the mills in Marsden closed, shops shut and drew their blinds, and flags flew at half mast on the mills and other buildings in the town.[4]
Notes
Further reading
- Armstrong, Thomas; The Crowthers of Bankdam, HarperCollins (1991). ISBN 0002211025
- Marsden History Group, Marsden – Then and Now: A Photographic Journey, ISBN 0955717507
- Pearson, Irene E., Marsden Through the Ages, (1984), ISBN 978-0950953304
External links
- www.marsdenhistory.co.uk Retrieved 4 January 2014
- "Picture of the Week: John Crowther mill memories in the shadow of the moors", Huddersfield Daily Examiner, 24 May 2012. Retrieved 31 December 2013
- Pearson, Irene E., Marsden Through the Ages, (1984), ISBN 978-0950953304 Retrieved 4 January 2014