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See also: British See also: cotton manufacturer, was See also: born at Edgeworth, near Bolton, in 1768
.
His See also: father was the owner of a small See also: quarry, and See also: John Horrocks spent his early days in dressing and polishing millstones
.
The
See also: Lancashire 'cotton industry was then in its See also: infancy, but Horrocks was greatly impressed with its future possibilities, and he managed to obtain a few spinning-frames which he erected in a corner of his father's offices
.
For a See also: time he combined cotton-spinning on a very small See also: scale with See also: stone-working, but finally devoted himself entirely to cotton-spinning, working the frames with his own hands, and travelling through the Lancashire manufacturing districts to sell the
See also: yarn
.
His goods obtained a reputation for quality, and his customers increased so rapidly that in 1791 he removed to See also: Preston, where he began to manufacture cotton shirtings and long-cloths in addition to spinning the cotton yarn
.
By taking full See also: advantage of the machinery invented for manufacturing textiles, and by rigidly maintaining the quality of his goods, Horrocks rapidly See also: developed his business, and with the aid of the capital of a See also: local banker, whom he took into partnership, erected within a See also: year of his arrival in Preston his first large See also: mill, securing shortly afterwards from the
See also: East See also: India See also: Company a See also: monopoly of the manufacture of cottons and muslins for the See also: Indian market
.
The demand for Horrocks's goods continued to increase, and to See also: cope with the additional See also: work he took first an elder See also: brother and in i8o1 a Mr See also: Whitehead and a Mr 'See also: Miller into partnership, the title of the See also: firm being altered to Horrockses, Miller, & Co
.
In 1802 he entered parliament as tory member for Preston
.
He died in See also: London in 1804 of See also: brain-fever resulting from over-work
.
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