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Den första hossan. Spinneriarbetare i Henrik Krutmeijers Strump och stoff-fabrik 1768–1784

Nilsson, Malin LU orcid and Olsson, Mats LU (2025) In Malmö University publications in urban studies
Abstract
The aim of this chapter is to contribute to the knowledge on the organization of work in the textile supply chain on the eve of industrialization. To do this we make a case-study of Herman Krutmeijers Hosiery and textile factory which was active in Malmö between 1768 and 1784. We are especially interested in the role of the spinners and try to answer three specific questions: what did the organization of work at the factory look like? Which were the demographic characteristics of the spinners, and can the spinning be characterized as unskilled work?

To answer these questions we use archive material from the Hall och Manufakturrätten in Malmö and material from ”Spinneriberättelserna”. We found that in this factory the production of... (More)
The aim of this chapter is to contribute to the knowledge on the organization of work in the textile supply chain on the eve of industrialization. To do this we make a case-study of Herman Krutmeijers Hosiery and textile factory which was active in Malmö between 1768 and 1784. We are especially interested in the role of the spinners and try to answer three specific questions: what did the organization of work at the factory look like? Which were the demographic characteristics of the spinners, and can the spinning be characterized as unskilled work?

To answer these questions we use archive material from the Hall och Manufakturrätten in Malmö and material from ”Spinneriberättelserna”. We found that in this factory the production of thread, textiles and garments was centralized and vertically integrated, and that gender affected both tasks, organization of work and where the work was performed.

Those working within the walls of the factory were to a larger extent men, these men had titles of master, journeyman, and apprentice, indicating a guild-type organization. Women on the other hand were most often found working for the factory in their own homes, albeit with spinning wheels and winders owned by
the factory. These women only had occupational titles like knitter, or spinner.

Spinners were the largest group of workers; they were almost always women. In total we have data from 315 unique spinners, forming a dataset of 788 annual observations on occupational and individual features. Their ages range between 9 and 77, however the median is 38. Almost 80 percent of the women were married, most of them to soldiers. There was a rather large turnover, and 80 percent of the spinners worked less than three years at the factory. Most of them spun worsted wool, however a few also spun cotton. The ones who spun cotton seem to have been the ones with more spinning experience. They also had higher piece-rates compared to the women who spun wool. Whether spinning could be characterized as unskilled is therefore uncertain, high turnover rate and low ages could be an indication of unskilled work, however the difference between the fibers indicates that there was also some type of
skill premium and thus differences in skill within the group.

The women spinners at Herman Krutmeijers hosiery and textile factory worked in their own homes but for a centralized factory, for wages with tools owned by an employer. To a large extent, these women share the experience of modern industrial workers. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Industrialization, Gender, Spinning, Organization of work, Textile supply chain
host publication
Weaving It Together: Histories of the Textile Industry in Sweden and International Perspectives
series title
Malmö University publications in urban studies
editor
Brunnström, Pål and Sirenius Frohlund, Simon
issue
31
ISSN
1654-6881
ISBN
978-91-7877-487-6
project
Spinning women revisited - Work and life before industrialisation
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
id
aa0ff21d-355f-4c99-8d32-194541a64895
date added to LUP
2025-04-14 14:59:02
date last changed
2025-04-17 09:32:44
@inbook{aa0ff21d-355f-4c99-8d32-194541a64895,
  abstract     = {{The aim of this chapter is to contribute to the knowledge on the organization of work in the textile supply chain on the eve of industrialization. To do this we make a case-study of Herman Krutmeijers Hosiery and textile factory which was active in Malmö between 1768 and 1784. We are especially interested in the role of the spinners and try to answer three specific questions: what did the organization of work at the factory look like? Which were the demographic characteristics of the spinners, and can the spinning be characterized as unskilled work?<br/><br/>To answer these questions we use archive material from the Hall och Manufakturrätten in Malmö and material from ”Spinneriberättelserna”. We found that in this factory the production of thread, textiles and garments was centralized and vertically integrated, and that gender affected both tasks, organization of work and where the work was performed.<br/><br/>Those working within the walls of the factory were to a larger extent men, these men had titles of master, journeyman, and apprentice, indicating a guild-type organization. Women on the other hand were most often found working for the factory in their own homes, albeit with spinning wheels and winders owned by<br/>the factory. These women only had occupational titles like knitter, or spinner.<br/><br/>Spinners were the largest group of workers; they were almost always women. In total we have data from 315 unique spinners, forming a dataset of 788 annual observations on occupational and individual features. Their ages range between 9 and 77, however the median is 38. Almost 80 percent of the women were married, most of them to soldiers. There was a rather large turnover, and 80 percent of the spinners worked less than three years at the factory. Most of them spun worsted wool, however a few also spun cotton. The ones who spun cotton seem to have been the ones with more spinning experience. They also had higher piece-rates compared to the women who spun wool. Whether spinning could be characterized as unskilled is therefore uncertain, high turnover rate and low ages could be an indication of unskilled work, however the difference between the fibers indicates that there was also some type of<br/>skill premium and thus differences in skill within the group. <br/><br/>The women spinners at Herman Krutmeijers hosiery and textile factory worked in their own homes but for a centralized factory, for wages with tools owned by an employer. To a large extent, these women share the experience of modern industrial workers.}},
  author       = {{Nilsson, Malin and Olsson, Mats}},
  booktitle    = {{Weaving It Together: Histories of the Textile Industry in Sweden and International Perspectives}},
  editor       = {{Brunnström, Pål and Sirenius Frohlund, Simon}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-7877-487-6}},
  issn         = {{1654-6881}},
  keywords     = {{Industrialization; Gender; Spinning; Organization of work; Textile supply chain}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  number       = {{31}},
  series       = {{Malmö University publications in urban studies}},
  title        = {{Den första hossan. Spinneriarbetare i Henrik Krutmeijers Strump och stoff-fabrik 1768–1784}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/217138429/2025_Weaving_It_Together.pdf}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}