Draft:Alexander Johnston
Review waiting, please be patient.
This may take 6 weeks or more, since drafts are reviewed in no specific order. There are 1,024 pending submissions waiting for review.
Where to get help
How to improve a draft
You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
Reviewer tools
|
- Comment: Please remove the (somewhat confusingly numbered) inline external links, and cite those sources using citation templates in the usual manner. DoubleGrazing (talk) 12:05, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
Alexander Johnston (31 December 1774 – 16 March 1864) was a Scottish Mill owner and woollen manufacturer who founded the luxury woollen company Johnstons of Elgin in Elgin, Scotland in 1797..[1]
Early Life and Career Beginnings
[edit]Alexander Johnston was born at Ardiffray Farm in the Parish of Cruden, near Aberdeen, on Hogmanay 1774.[2]His father Thomas Johnston was a farmer, and his mother Barbara Johnston (nee Sangster) helped to supplement the family income through bleaching linen and spinning yarn.[1]He was the youngest of six children, by some twenty years, with three older brothers having died in infancy and two surviving sisters.
At the age of fourteen Johnston was apprenticed to a cousin in Aberdeen who ran a successful chemist shop, but this was short lived as the fumes from the chemicals made him ill. He was then apprenticed to another cousin in Newborough, but their business is not known.[1]
In 1789 Johnston travelled to London with an uncle who bought and sold yarn.[1]
It is estimated that Johnston arrived in Elgin around 1791. His first job was foreman at the linen bleach works at Deanshaugh and a few years later he purchased a small woollen manufactory from Messrs Robertson and Forsyth where he established the firm of Alexander Johnston, later Johnstons of Elgin, in 1797.[3] He started with the sale of linen, tobacco, snuff and meal. In 1800, with financial assistance from his sister Barbara, Johnston leased a small meal mill at Newmill, in Elgin, from a Mr King and began to erect machinery for scribbling and carding wool with slubbing and spinning jennies. He applied to the local Town Council for a grant of £100 to invest in this machinery, which he would later receive in 1807.[3]
Career
[edit]Johnston began to take in wool from local farms, card and spin it and then sell it back to the farmers for weaving. By 1811 he had purchased the necessary machinery to process the wool from raw fibre to finished cloth all on one site making Newmill 'vertically' integrated.[4]
In the early days of the business all of Johnston's goods were transported by Alexander on a small gig, travelling the length and breadth of the country. As early as 1799 he started investing in shipping when he purchased a one-eighth share in the Marquis of Huntly and in 1803 he added two sloops, the Eliza and the Elizabeth, to his list of investments.[5]
Johnston's products tended towards rougher woollen cloths such as 'duffles' and 'kersies' produced for durability. His main trade was amongst local merchants, drapers and tailors. In 1813 he took the risk to send a consignment of cloths to Nova Scotia, but this came in at a loss of £19 11s 6d.[6] Further international sales followed, with a better success rate.
Johnston continued to steadily build his business throughout the early 19th century. By the late 1830s his mill at Newmill was a successful woollens manufactory, having phased out the tobacco, linen and other goods over the years. Johnston was successful in securing the patronage of the Duke of Richmond to weave his estate tweed in 1844, still worn today by the ghillies on the River Spey and at Gordon Castle.[7] Estate Tweeds were first designed in the 1840s and Johnstons of Elgin became one of the earliest suppliers. They wove the first Lovat mixture in 1845[8]and the Super Balmoral in 1853[9]
Alexander Johnston retired in 1846.
Family and Personal Life
[edit]Married first Marjory 'May' Anderson 22 December 1805,[10] but she died a year later leaving a six-month-old daughter, Margaret. He then married Mary McAndrew on 24 September 1814,[11] they had seven daughters and one son, James Johnston (1815–1897).
Johnston and his family lived at Newmill House, built in the grounds of the mill in the early 19th century.
Death
[edit]Alexander Johnston died on 16 March 1864 in Elgin. He is buried in the Elgin Cathedral Cemetery.
Legacy
[edit]Alexander's son James Johnston took over the business when his father retired in 1846. In 1920 the business was sold to Edward Stroud Harrison, a colleague of Alexander's grandson Charles, and remains in Harrison family ownership today. Johnstons of Elgin still operates out of the same site at Newmill with a further knitwear mill in Hawick, acquired in 1980[12]]. Newmill is the only surviving vertical weaving mill in Scotland today.[13] The company holds a royal warrant of appointment for the manufacture of Estate Tweeds, Knitwear and Woven Accessories.[14]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Rae, Janet; Urquhart, Ian (2018). Fabric of Scotland: The Story of Johnstons. Johnstons of Elgin. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-9525329-3-4.
- ^ 1775 Old Parish Register of Scotland, Cruden Parish
- ^ a b Harrison, Edward P (1995). Scottish Estate Tweeds. Johnstons of Elgin. p. 31. ISBN 0-9525329-0-5.
- ^ "225 Years in the Making - Chapter 1 | A sense of place: Made in…". Johnstons of Elgin.
- ^ Rae, Janet; Urquhart, Ian (2018). Fabric of Scotland: The Story of Johnstons. Johnstons of Elgin. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-9525329-3-4.
- ^ Harrison, Edward P (1995). Scottish Estate Tweeds. Johnstons of Elgin. p. 36. ISBN 0-9525329-0-5.
- ^ Rae, Janet; Urquhart, Ian (2018). Fabric of Scotland: The Story of Johnstons. Johnstons of Elgin. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-9525329-3-4.
- ^ Urquhart, Ian (2018). Scottish Estate Tweeds (3rd ed.). Johnstons of Elgin. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-9525329-2-7.
- ^ Urquhart, Ian (2018). Scottish Estate Tweeds (3rd ed.). Johnstons of Elgin. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-9525329-2-7.
- ^ 1805 Johnston, Alexander (Old Parish Registers Marriages 127/Birnie) Page 241 of 246
- ^ 1814 Johnston, Alexander (Old Parish Registers Marriages 135/Elgin) Page 152 of 568
- ^ Behrmann, Anna (October 20, 2021). "Johnstons of Elgin: Sustainable luxury meets fast-growing online sales".
- ^ "Luxury in the Making | Meet the makers at Johnstons of Elgin". www.thewalpole.co.uk.
- ^ "Johnstons of Elgin | Royal Warrant Holders Association".