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Leopold Street, Long Eaton
Home to a set of former tenement lace factories that are well preserved. On the left are West end and Whiteley's Mills and the chimney is that of Harrington Mills.
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Image: © Ashley Dace
Taken: 7 May 2011
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Whiteley's Mill
Image: © Ashley Dace
Taken: 7 May 2011
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3
Harrington Mill across the Erewash Canal
A 550 feet long tenement lace factory, named after its builder and erected 1885-7. At one time it had 26 separate tenants. Now nicely restored and still in multiple occupancy.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 7 May 2011
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4
Harrington Mills, Leopold street, Long Eaton
A 550 feet long tenement lace factory, named after its builder and erected 1885-7. At one time it had 26 separate tenants. Now nicely restored and still in multiple occupancy.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 7 May 2011
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5
Harrington Mill from Leopold Street
Dating from 1887 Harrington mill is the largest, newest and best preserved of the mills on Leopold Street.
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 5 Apr 2008
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Chimney top, Harrington Mills
A fine example of a cast iron cap to a brick chimney. As well as being decorative, it gave protection to the brickwork on the top of the chimney, from both weather and the corrosive exhaust.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 21 Jun 2009
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7
Mills on Leopold Street, Long Eaton
This street is flanked by former tenement lace factories. On the left is the Harrington Mills boiler house. The chimney is just out of sight. The closest mill on the right is Whiteley's Mill and beyond the second gable the architecturally different mill is West End Mills. This whole complex is now in multiple occupancy and its textile days are behind it.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 7 May 2011
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West Park fireworks display
Behind the chimney of Harrington Mill.
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 5 Nov 2015
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Whiteley's Mill
Image: © Ashley Dace
Taken: 7 May 2011
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10
Where the engine stood
The blank wall of the staircase block indicates the point at which there would originally have been a rope-drive chamber from the steam engine to the line-shafting on the various floors. The engine house would have filled the area in the foreground, and the shape of the roof can still just be made out in the brickwork.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 21 Jun 2009
0.01 miles