Unravelling the Yarn: The Textile Industry in Arnprior Unravelling the Yarn: The Textile Industry in Arnprior Arnprior and District Museum
This shop order was designed in Huyck’s New York Factory and modified to work in the Arnprior Mill guaranteeing consistent quality among the Huyck products whether they were […]
This honour scroll shows the names of Kenwood Mills employees who volunteered for service in WWII. This document, designed, by A.J. Casson, a member of the Group of […]
The application above was submitted by Gerald Homuth on November 6, 1941. He was hired at 16 years old to operate the ring spinner. In January of 1943, […]
Ambrose Bond, hired in January of 1919, was one of the first hires made at Kenwood Mills after the Huyck’s takeover. He started as a wool picker making […]
The building generally known as Kenwood Mills, Ltd. was originally the Griffith-McNaughton Ltd. factory. Additions on the west (right) and north (front) sides of the building were added […]
Francis Conkling Huyck Sr. was the founder of Kenwood Mills. Born in upstate New York, Francis had 40 years of experience making paper-maker’s felts before his death in […]
This brick three-storey structure was the location of Griffith-McNaughton, Ltd. The side of the building advertises “We manufacture felt for all grades of pulp and paper, also mangle […]
Throughout WWI Griffith and McNaughton, Ltd. had private business dealings outside their contracts with the Canadian Department of Militia and Defence and the U.S. War Department. This letter […]
This 1916 document illustrates an agreement between William A. Cole, the liquidator of the Arnprior Felt Co.’s assets and effects, and James Griffith, formerly of the Felt Co., […]
This tender, submitted to the Canadian War Purchasing Committee of the Department of the Militia and Defence, shows the Arnprior Felt Co.’s estimate to produce 300 General Service […]
As WWI stretched on, it became apparent that soldiers in the frontline trenches of France desperately needed blankets to ward of freezing temperatures, and dry, well-made socks to […]
Dated July 31, 1916, the first page of this account ledger shows the takeover of the contract for socks and blankets by the Canadian Department of Militia and […]