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A RAPIDLY MADE COAT.

Manufacturers are always pleased to turn out the product of their establishments in less than the average time, and many have made records to which they point with pride. Recently a short article was published on making a coat in thirteen and a half hours, from shearing the sheep to putting the finished garment on a man's back. This was done at Greenham Mills, in England, in 1811. Mrs James Lyon, of Bath. New York, writes that a similar feat took place in that town in 1816. and was accomplished in less than nine hours by one George McClure. who asserted that- it could be done in ten hours. The record of each step of the work still exists, with the exception of the shearing. The wool was coloured in thirty-five minutes: carded, spun, and woven in two hours and twenty-five minutes; fulled, warped, and dyed in one hour and fifty-one minutes; carried to the tailor in four minutes: and was turned into the finished coat by him and his journeymen in three hours and fortynine minutes. The shears used in the work are still preserved, and can be seen at the Steuben Agricultural Society's Fair Grounds, at Bath. This feat, at the time, doubtless attracted as much attention as a recordbreaking railroad train or steamship does to-day. It is probable that many of our present manufacturers make such trials for their own edification, which, if described, would prove interesting.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZGRAP18980604.2.72.3

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Graphic, Volume XX, Issue XXIII, 4 June 1898, Page 719

Word Count
244

A RAPIDLY MADE COAT. New Zealand Graphic, Volume XX, Issue XXIII, 4 June 1898, Page 719

A RAPIDLY MADE COAT. New Zealand Graphic, Volume XX, Issue XXIII, 4 June 1898, Page 719