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Townshippers'
Association
An
animal that was essential to the settlers was the sheep, whose fleece
could be used to produce wool. On the farms each spring, sheep would
be sheared and the wool washed of its natural grease and dirt, combed,
and finally carded. Carding was the untangling of the fibres. Hand
cards were used. These were wooden palettes about five by seven
inches, studded with rows of wire teeth, and fitted with handles.
Tufts of wool placed between two of these tools would be raked back
and forth until all the fibres lay parallel for spinning. A tedious,
time-consuming job that was often left to children, carding resulted
in a rope of twisted wool called a "sliver," that could
be spun into thread with a spinning wheel or a small hand spinner.
The wool could either be left in its natural colour or dyed using
dyes from plants or berries. The wool could then be used for knitting
or weaving on the loom.
Above: Ulverton Woolen Mill. (Photo: Moulin à
laine d'Ulverton)
Some parts of
the Eastern Townships, Inverness, for example, were originally populated
during a wave of Scottish immigration. Many of these new arrivals
were sheep farmers who brought their skills with them.
As the raising
of sheep increased, the process of handling the wool became too
lengthy, so carding mills were built to handle the bulk wool. Settlers
could bring their fleece to be processed, carded, and rolled in
bundles for use on their spinning wheels and looms. Carding mills
were the forerunners of commercial textile and woolen industries.
One early carding
mill was established in Magog by Ralph Merry around 1818. From about
1840 to 1860, a number of them were built around the Eastern Townships,
producing such items as blankets and yard goods. The largest in
Canada was the Paton Manufacturing Company in Sherbrooke. Today,
one early survivor is the Ulverton Woolen Mill, built near Ulverton,
Quebec in the mid-1800s. Now an interpretation centre, the Mill
has a fully operational set of wool-processing machinery and a turbine.
Visit the Ulverton
Woolen Mill.
To take a virtual tour of the village mills of the
Eastern Townships, click
here.
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