William Brown was the eldest of ten children and was born in Cranfield in Bedfordshire in 1793. He described himself as a bobbin maker in the census returns of 1841, 1851 and 1861. This was unusual as most bobbin makers were not so specific and described themselves as woodturners or labourers. However, he was called Bobbin Brown by the local people so presumably his greatest trade was in lace bobbins. He had six children with his first wife, Sarah, but sadly she died in 1847 and in the 1851 census William is described as living with his unmarried daughter Mary. However, in 1857, at the age of 64, he married again, this time to a 44-year-old lacemaker called Hannah and they had two sons, one of whom it is thought later became a bobbin maker.
William’s
bobbins are characterised by a small bulbous head with a slight dome at the top
and a shallow pointed tail end. He made a large quantity of bobbins many of
them inscribed with names and messages. His lettering is always coloured red
and the letters are very neat although his spelling is sometimes incorrect,
which may indicate he was not very literate. The bobbins in the image at the
top of this post read from left to right ‘Sarah Ions my D[ear] Mother’, ‘My
dear Father’, ‘George Burt my brother Jan 1856’ and ‘Love don’t forsake me’.
Interestingly the bobbin with the spiral inscription follows a left hand spiral
indicating that William was left handed. It also does not feature the
characteristic domed head but I think the rest of the bobbin is so obviously
William’s work that the head is a replacement, probably made by another bobbin
maker to replace one that became chipped or broken.
The bobbins
with single names in the next image read from left to right Mary, Dan[i]el,
James, John. These are all common names of the time and William would probably
have had a stock of them for sale in contrast to the longer and more
complicated messages above which would have been specifically made to
commission. The name bobbins also have very similar patterns of coloured dots at
the back, which you can see in the image above, using his trademark colours of
red, black and yellow.
William also
made many bobbins inlaid with pewter. They were made by incising the bone or
wood of the shank and then pouring molten pewter into the channels. They are
called tigers, leopards or butterflies depending on the shapes of the pewter. All
the bobbins in the image are tigers, because they have stripes of pewter, but
the one on the right also includes the
name Joseph and a V shape called a butterfly. A leopard bobbin would include pewter
circles. Over the years, the pewter used by several other bobbin makers has
corroded and fallen out of the grooves in the bobbins, but William used a type
of pewter with a low tin content which has survived well and gives a lovely
silvery shine to them. William made a huge number of beautiful bobbins through
his life, many of which survive today in excellent condition and are still used
by contemporary lacemakers so I feel his nickname of Bobbin Brown is well
deserved.
















