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and several related newspapers. He believed that, in order to sell newspapers to the large number of cotton mill workers in the area, he would have to create a newspaper which specifically targeted them, in particular by including extensive reporting on issues relating to the industry in which they
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Edward Andrew, John's son, became proprietor of the newspaper following his father's death, in 1906, then his brother
William succeeded in 1919. For many years, they avoided making changes, but when Taylor retired in 1932, William appointed James Haslam, with a remit to relaunch the paper. The
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Sales of the newspaper fell from the mid-1900s. By 1910, it was selling 20,000 copies an issue, even as cotton trade union membership grew. Some efforts were made to reinvigorate the paper, adding a prize for the best joke, printed in a "Mirth in the Mill" section, and a cartoon drawn by Sam
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paper was again increased to eight pages, and the layout updated, while Haslam attempted to make new connections with cotton trade union leaders. Circulation continued to fall, and by 1937, sales were below 2,500. That year, the paper was finally closed.
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Andrew also built up a network of local correspondents to report on local events, in a section entitled "Voices from the
Spindle and the Loom". The newspaper also included entertainment pages, featuring fiction in serial format, often written in
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227:, which was aimed at workers in non-textile trades in Lancashire, Yorkshire and Cheshire. Both of these newspapers moved to support the
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In order to access news on the cotton industry, Andrew partnered with several well-known cotton trade unionists, including
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194:. Of the eight-page newspaper, their reports filled the front page, and often one or more of the inside pages. The
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Cass, Eddie; Fowler, Alan; Wyke, Terry (1998). "The remarkable rise and long decline of the Cotton
Factory Times".
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was a particular supporter of the newspaper, and in 1887 it invested £1,000 in the venture.
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The newspaper was established in 1885 by John Andrew, owner of the daily
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was a weekly
British newspaper, aimed at cotton mill workers in
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History of the textile industry in the United
Kingdom
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in the early 1890s, and by 1907 both had been sold.
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169:Cheshire
51:Owner(s)
108:Country
80:Founded
70:Editor
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