Sir Samuel Fludyer
"I, Sir Samuel Fludyer,
councillor and alderman of the City of London, approached the good
people of Chippenham, making them an offer to buy all their
manufactured cloth at interesting prices. After many discussions
with the clothiers of Chippenham, my offer was accepted and I
became not only Mayor of Chippenham in 1754, but also one of their
Members of Parliament.
Business, I am pleased to say, has prospered, both for me as
wool broker, and for the Chippenham clothiers who have prospered
greatly. It is pleasing to see that many fine Bath Stone houses are
being built out of their profits through selling wool to me. Many
of the good people of England who travel through Chippenham on the
mail coach have commented to me that Chippenham deserves its
description as 'Little Bath'.
My strong business connections with Chippenham, along with other
wool factoring in England, led me to be nominated and elected as
Lord Mayor of London in 1761, followed by being a Director and
Deputy Governor of the Bank of England.
From my recently rebuilt residence at 11 The Market Place, I can
look out of my upstairs window and see the strong evidence for the
prosperity of the Chippenham clothiers.
It is my pleasure to take you on a tour of Chippenham, to admire
the many fine houses and general layout of this prosperous cloth
town of Wiltshire."



Key Dates
Samuel Fludyer born. First son of Samuel Fludyer, a London
clothier originally from Frome in Somerset
- 1734 - Samuel Fludyer becomes a councillor of
the City of London
- 1751 - Samuel Fludyer becomes an alderman of
the City of London
- 1753 - Samuel Fludyer becomes a director of
the Bank of England
- 1754 - Samuel Fludyer is returned as MP for
Chippenham, and buys 11 The Market Place. He also becomes a sheriff
of the City of London in this year.
- 1755 - Samuel Fludyer is knighted
- 1759 - Samuel Fludyer is created a
baronet
- 1761 - Samuel Fludyer is Lord Mayor of
London
- 1766 - Samuel Fludyer becomes Deputy Governor
of the Bank of England
- 1768 - Samuel Fludyer died 18th January



Samuel Fludyer and Chippenham
In 'Beauties of
Wiltshire', published in 1801, John Britton opens his account of
Chippenham in the following way:
"Chippenham is a town of considerable importance, not only on
account of its great antiquity, but also from its increasing
commerce, arising from the establishment of its extensive clothing
manufactories, which, in conjunction with its favourable situation
as a principal thoroughfare to the western cities, will, in all
probability, soon cause it to assume a rank little inferior to any
in the county."
According to Britton,
Samuel Fludyer approached the clothiers of Chippenham offering to
supply them with wool and to sell their cloth in return for making
him their factor and procuring him a seat in Parliament.
Fludyer became MP for Chippenham in 1754. He bought 11 The
Market Place in Chippenham, formerly the Old Bear inn, and had it
rebuilt as a private residence.
Britton tells us that Fludyer exceeded his promise to the
clothiers, and the result of this arrangement was that "the
clothiers acquired fortunes".
New, stone-built
residences were erected with the clothiers' new-found wealth, and
many fine examples can still be seen in Chippenham. This renovation
of the town acquired Chippenham the nickname of 'Little Bath'.
Not only the clothiers benefited, but also the people of
Chippenham and the surrounding villages who were employed in the
cloth industry to spin, card, reel, weave, shear and dress the
cloth.
The cloth industry in Chippenham
Cloth making has
probably existed in Chippenham since the Middle Ages, but this
would have been on a small scale with the cloth worked by
individuals. In the 14th and 15th centuries, Wiltshire was an
important exporter of cloth, and in particular 'broadcloth'.
In the 16th century work in the cloth industry was carried out
on a domestic scale. Clothiers bought wool and then distributed it
to spinners; the spun wool would then be returned to the clothiers
who would take it to the weavers, etc.
By the end of the 17th century, some cloth making families, such
as the Scotts and Goldneys of Chippenham, had moved up the social
ranks to be considered as 'gentry' due their prosperity as
clothiers.
Until the middle of the
18th century, most clothiers had limited capital. However, from the
time of Samuel Fludyer's involvement with this industry in
Chippenham, clothiers began to prosper. The Chippenham clothiers'
association with Samuel Fludyer's London firm continued until 1812,
some time after his death.
Towards the end of the 18 th century, the advent of machines put
pressure on workers in the cloth industry. In 1791, Robert Sadler
of Chippenham published a poem entitled 'The Discarded Spinster;
or, a Plea for the Poor on the Impolicy of Spinning Jennies'.
In 1796, Thomas Goldney bought a house near the Bridge, and
probably used the land there to build the Bridge Factory which
appears in records in 1811. In 1816 the Bridge Factory employed 44
workers, but only two years later the business no longer
existed.
The factory at Waterford Mill is also listed in records for
1811, and was occupied at that time by George Austin & Co. It
was owned by Thomas Bailey who ran the adjacent tannery. In 1815,
the cloth factory, with water wheel and new 14 horse powered engine
was sold to the clothier partnership of John Saunders and Thomas
Hosier Saunders of Bradford-on-Avon, and Charles Salter Taylor of
Chippenham.
By 1816, the Chippenham
cloth industry was in depression, while the Trowbridge and
Bradford-on-Avon clothiers were still prosperous. In the same year,
the advent of the fly-shuttle led to unrest among the cloth workers
in Chippenham.
By around 1820 there were 3 cloth factories in Chippenham that
were driven by small steam engines, but the industry was in
decline. During the 1820s, empty woollen mills in Chippenham were
being converted to silk and crêpe manufacture.
In 1830, Charles Salter Taylor went bankrupt. The Waterford Mill
factory was owned by Saunders, Fanner & Saunders by 1841, but
they went bankrupt in that year. The factory was auctioned, with
the sale particulars announcing that the factory and tannery
together influenced 50 votes in local elections. The mill used the
new railway to send a bolt of cloth to the Great Exhibition in Hyde
Park in 1851 for which they won a medal.
The cloth industry in Chippenham finally dwindled as other
industries, such as engineering, dominated in the town. Although
partly destroyed by fire in 1915, the Waterford factory continued
in use until 1930 under the ownership of T.P. Pocock and Co.

