Charlesworth Bicentenary
Charlesworth Mill, located near the Baptist Church on Glossop Road, was one of the first mills to be built by Samuel Booth in 1825, when it was advertised as being 'a new erected stone building, four storeys, 150 feet long and 37 feet wide, with an added attraction of coalpits within half a mile'. The first occupier was John Wood, the owner of the Howardtown Mills complex, Glossop. He ran the mill for five years when in 1831, he decided that the mill was not a profitable venture. He closed it down to give his attention to his more prosperous businesses in Glossop. For three years it lay empty, after which time several tenants made unsuccessful attempts to make it into a paying concern. Eventually the mill was pulled down in 1913 and now no part of the building exists except for a stump of a chimney that is just visible from the roadside.
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