「Woolen」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 115件
| The mill would later be used to produce | woolen and knitted textiles. |
| More refined | woolen and linen fabrics and even silk were now being |
| Woolen and cotton fabrics are also produced, and blea | |
| ecame head of the firm, which is involved with | woolen and worsted manufacturing at Moorland Mills. |
| mill became known as Wheelock Mill or Stanley | Woolen, and then became part of the Blackstone River |
| atchelder, they set out to produce the outdoor | woolen apparel for the logging industry. |
| Furnishings include a | woolen bed-rug made in 1724, said to be the second ol |
| He worked in the | woolen business in Palmer, Massachusetts, and became |
| The family carried on the processing of | woolen cloth at the fulling mill across the road from |
| tton warps used locally in the production of a | woolen cloth known as satinet.":7 |
| mon Falls Manufacturing Company to manufacture | woolen cloth using the power of the Salmon Falls Rive |
| Virtually bankrupt, the American | Woolen Co. was purchased by Textron and incorporated |
| Home | Woolen Company - added November 29, 1984 |
| e season and his successors ended the American | Woolen Company's sponsorship of the Indians. |
| Daughter Ellen married American | Woolen Company's William Madison Wood. |
| also served as an executive with the American | Woolen Company, Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company, W |
| y cashmeres as the name changed to the Calumet | Woolen Company. |
| d to smother the flames with the sleeve of his | woolen coveralls, which caught on fire in the chamber |
| Eventually, he served an apprenticeship as a | woolen draper in the town of Shrewsbury. |
| Born the son of a London | woolen draper, Collinson entered his father's busines |
| d been noted only for the production of coarse | woolen fabrics produced under a strict feudal system. |
| fied with a number of investment companies and | woolen factories. |
| There is a | woolen factory and medronho, a local brew made from d |
| John Capron, Sr. started a | woolen factory nearby which used the first power loom |
| hen the population was 1,332, Northfield had a | woolen factory and a wrapping paper mill. |
| sh and door factory, and in 1865 a large brick | woolen factory. |
| kind of mortarboard from which dangles a thick | woolen fringe. |
| Pope Benedict XVI bestowed the pallium, a | woolen garment reserved to metropolitan archbishops, |
| eep herds moved further west the production of | woolen goods moved with them. |
| The new tariff provisions for wool and | woolen goods were exceedingly protectionist. |
| ff schedule revisions, the act made almost all | woolen goods subject to the maximum duty rate. |
| wines into England, while Portugal will import | woolen goods from England. |
| , until 1866, when he began the manufacture of | woolen goods. |
| esented them with maple-leaf tuques (tukes, or | woolen hats) to enhance their Canadian patriotism in |
| Fancy | woolen hosiery is also manufactured. |
| dge powered America's fist Power looms for the | woolen industry at John Capron's historic mill |
| , and typically was uniformed with short green | woolen jackets and white linen or doeskin pants, some |
| h organized citizens of Philadelphia in making | woolen, linen and cotton fabrics. |
| olds a hollowed jade stone, a leather pouch, a | woolen loincloth, a wooden mask painted red and with |
| The Troy Cotton & | Woolen Manufactory was a textile manufacturing compan |
| fourteen years of age he was apprenticed in a | woolen manufactory and subsequently learned the print |
| By 1917, the Troy Cotton & | Woolen Manufactory contained a capacity of 52,544 spi |
| nsea, Massachusetts and then the Troy Cotton & | Woolen Manufactory in 1813 in Fall River, Massachuset |
| Troy Cotton & | Woolen Manufactory |
| It was built in 1882 and was the home of | woolen manufacturer Henry J. Bird. |
| orn as Eliza Ann Wetherby in 1833 to a wealthy | woolen manufacturer and minister who had opened the W |
| A | woolen manufacturer, he was elected to the Canadian H |
| ed as president of the National Association of | Woolen Manufacturers 1877-1884. |
| s career in 1836 as an apprentice to a firm of | woolen manufacturers at Leeds. |
| ter he was involved in his father's cotton and | woolen manufacturing firm. |
| pany was a pioneer in blending synthetics with | woolen manufacturing. |
| 0 July 1856, and engaged in the manufacture of | woolen materials. |
| He built and operated the first | woolen mill at Tianjin, China. |
| At one time there was a | woolen Mill which stood at the north end of Ellery. |
| hed in 1791 the first successful water-powered | woolen mill in North America. |
| Shields | Woolen Mill is located along the edge of the Mississi |
| This was the longest running family-owned | woolen mill in the US until it closed in 1988. |
| liam and Robert James established a cotton and | woolen mill at the mouth of Abrams Creek. |
| He helped organize the | Woolen Mill Company in Salem in 1856, serving as trea |
| was established in 1894 on the site of an old | woolen mill donated to the institute by Stephen Salis |
| nd took refuge in Normandy, where they owned a | woolen mill at Elbeuf. |
| The | woolen mill started by Daniel Day and Jerry Wheelock |
| The Hugh Cain Fulling Mill and Elias Glover | Woolen Mill Archeological Site is a 4.4-acre (18,000 |
| was located in the basement of the Bridgewater | Woolen Mill in Vermont's Green Mountains, but by 1995 |
| s of a grist mill and paper mill, cotton mill, | woolen mill complex and extant hydroelectic plant; we |
| Stolp | Woolen Mill Dye House |
| 1930), and | Woolen Mill Bridge (ca. |
| He was a Harvard graduate (1820), and | woolen mill owner. |
| American | Woolen Mill Housing District is a historic district o |
| Moses Taft built a | woolen mill on the Blackstone River at Uxbridge, circ |
| Cushman | Woolen Mill as seen today in its state of abandonment |
| Cushman | Woolen Mill was built on Cushman Street in Monson, MA |
| metery on the west end of town (behind the old | woolen mill). |
| piece of this historic district is the Stanley | Woolen Mill, aka Central Woolen Mill, built by Moses |
| ndywine added a whiskey distillery, gristmill, | woolen mill, and a dozen houses. |
| state park is the site of the historic Stanley | Woolen Mill, currently being redeveloped for commerci |
| ing Tour 146 Mendon is the site of the Stanley | Woolen Mill, originally known as the Central Woolen M |
| e River at the site of the present day Stanley | Woolen Mill. |
| r Steel and Iron Mine, two flour mills and one | woolen mill. |
| ated the western part in the area around Gelli | woolen mill. |
| e situation Joseph Shields established Shields | Woolen Mills in 1863. |
| The Central | Woolen Mills District is a historic district in Uxbri |
| Woolen Mills Chapel is a historic chapel at 1819 E. M | |
| was also a large stockholder in the Merrimack | Woolen Mills Company. |
| He started Flint | Woolen Mills with a partner and was owner of Stone's |
| le, kiss the stone, and to shop at the Blarney | Woolen Mills center. |
| nd State Park, developed on the site of former | woolen mills in the 19th century well predating the e |
| ational Register of Historic Places as Pioneer | Woolen Mills and D. Ghirardelli Company. |
| lli Square for future generations, the Pioneer | Woolen Mills and D. Ghirardelli Company was listed on |
| Central | Woolen Mills District ** (added 1984 - District - #84 |
| Kendry was manager of the Clyde | Woolen Mills in Lanark. |
| After almost 90 years in business, Bemidji | Woolen Mills continues to manufacture woolen apparel |
| 84, McGhee and Sanford cofounded the Knoxville | Woolen Mills, which by 1900 included a 4.5-acre (1.8 |
| early residents worked at the nearby Knoxville | Woolen Mills, or at the Knoxville Iron Company (forme |
| Bemidji | Woolen Mills, is a leading store and manufacturer of |
| the business was reorganized as the Davenport | Woolen Mills. |
| d Dr. Seth Capron who had expertise in running | woolen mills. |
| Operated flour mills, malt houses, and | woolen mills. |
| uniforms and a cap shaped like a boat, with a | woolen pompom on top, and they used the raised-arm sa |
| The Indio is namely a costumed fan wearing a | woolen poncho and feathered headdress who demands che |
| 1920s, when it controlled 20% of the nation's | woolen production. |
| zed Southern mills were able to produce staple | woolen products like blankets more cheaply. |
| cut, in 1879 and engaged in the manufacture of | woolen products. |
| oublet, a pair of breeches, a shirt, a pair of | woolen stockings and shoes distributed biannually on |
| elmont Hosiery Co., a maker of silk, lisle and | woolen stockings. |
| ered and opened, inside were some fragments of | woolen stuff, which at the time the body had been wra |
| ed as a fairly skinny duck in an oversized red | woolen sweater, with sleeves that ran over his hands |
| Rab's Last | Woolen Testament |
| nton Village Manufacturing Co. made cotton and | woolen textiles. |
| nately, they may surround the grave with a red | woolen thread, ignite the thread, and wait until it w |
| ht on by the excessive heat, hard training and | woolen tracksuit the Irish team had to wear. |
| n over to the rearing of sheep for the growing | woolen trade. |
| nd air conditioning, anti shrink treatment for | woolen, treating seeds, bleaching fabrics, and organi |
| ry and cavalry, often traveled by foot wearing | woolen uniforms in the desert heat. |
| o the conversion to a spinnery for flannel and | woolen yarn. |
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