Tannery – copy

  • By the early 1840s, Englishman Richard Paxman (written ‘Pexham’ in some documents) a shoemaker by trade, had built a log house and an outbuilding in which he was operating a tannery
  • The buildings were on a parcel of land along the north shore of the Humber River,  part of George Bolton’s mill site. George Bolton was generous in allowing skilled workers to set up shop and pay for their property as they worked
  • The plentiful supply of hemlock trees in the vicinity provided an ample source of bark that, when dried and ground up, was used in the tanning process that converted raw animal hides into leather
  • Dealing with the hides was a messy, unpleasant job which no doubt polluted the river and fouled the air, but the resulting leather was used to make many early necessities including shoes, boots, saddles, straps, belts, seats, satchels, hats, harnesses and the like
  • In 1845, Richard fulfilled his financial obligations to George Bolton and George, in turn, transferred ownership of the tannery property to him.  Richard had already provided part of the property for a Congregational Church
  • In 1848, Richard sold the tannery business and property to the Warbrick family

As background, James Clarke Warbrick, an early adopter of steam-driven looms in Bradford, UK, gave up his woollen mill in the early 1830s after labour unrest over mechanization.  He then emigrated to Canada with his wife Maria Firth and their family.  For a time, he is thought to have operated a saw mill north of Bolton (Lot 16, NE half, Con 5, Albion)

Promissory note from Richard Paxman dated September 8th, 1847. Bolton is described as ‘Bolton Town’
Tremaine’s 1859 map
  • The Warbricks built a 1½ storey frame house with roughcast exterior for themselves, their son Joseph and two daughters, Sarah Jane and Maria
  • The house was situated on the hillside slope on the north side of the river and was later enlarged with a 2 storey rear addition 
  • Joseph Firth Warbrick is recorded in the 1851 census as the tanner, assisted by a young Englishman named James Best, age 17.  Joseph was by then 26 years old and had first operated ‘Warbrick Brothers’ tannery and saddlery in Weston in the mid-1840s
  • Under his management, the Bolton tannery grew substantially and developed into a large, lucrative business employing 8 men.  There were other buildings on the property including a large store house, an office as well as housing for employees
  • By 1861, two additional tanners lived on the site: Robert Miligan, his wife Jane and 5 children as well as Gilland Kennedy.   By 1871, Joseph Warbrick was employing both Gill Kennedy and Robert Elliott as ‘curriers’ and providing housing for their families
  • Robert Elliott, schooled by Samuel Walford in Bolton’s 1842 school, later became a shoe maker
  • The tannery operation continued into the 1880s and closed when the supply of local hemlock bark was exhausted, shortly before Joseph’s death in 1889
J. F. Warbrick Sr. Photo Credit: Our Bolton Heritage, in the United Church, 1951
Annie McFall and Margaret McFall Warbrick. Warbrick Home circa 1938
A currier is a specialist in the processing of leather hides.  After tanning, the currier applies techniques of dressing, finishing and colouring to the tanned hide to make it strong, flexible and waterproof. The leather is stretched and burnished to produce a uniform thickness and suppleness, and dyeing and other chemical finishes give the leather its desired colour — from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 
The old dam near the bend in Mill Street. Photo taken prior to 1912. Note the denuded hillside.
Panorama view looking west along the Humber River towards the Queen Street bridge. Photo taken prior to 1912.
Humber River looking east from Queen Street. Photo taken prior to 1912.