Griswold Yarn Winder

Additional views

Side view of yarn winder

Basic details

Griswold Yarn Winder is an artifact, with genre equipment.
It was created sometime in 1800.
Worthington Historical Society is the contributor.
You can find the original at Worthington Historical Society.

Background

A spinning reel with clicking mechanism was brought to Worthington, Ohio by Ruth Roberts Griswold (b. Jan 24, 1768 d. May 31, 1847) from Simsbury, Connecticut in 1803. Ruth was the wife of Ezra Griswold, Scioto Company proprietor. Known as a "click reel" or a "clock reel", the reel had a mechanism that would count the turns, helping the user to make skeins of uniform length.

Spinning and weaving was an important economic function in most households around 1800. Cloth and clothing was produced at home, consuming great amounts of time and labor. Most people had only one or two changes of clothes, as textiles were very expensive.

They were usually made of linen or wool, fibers that could be produced on farms. Cotton was a warm climate crop, and was not heavily used in the United States until Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin. Cotton textile manufacturing in New England, using water power, led to inexpensive fabrics and the demise of home weaving and spinning by the mid-1800's.

The Griswold reel is on display at the Orange Johnson House in Worthington.

Subjects

It features the person Ruth Griswold.
It covers the city Worthington.

Record details

This file was reformatted digital in the format video/jpeg.
The Worthington Memory identification code is whs0380_001.
This metadata record was human prepared by Worthington Libraries on . It was last updated .

Downloads

Image file (584.76 KB)