|
Founded in 1838 by Ernest Bigelow, the company had a modest beginning with its production of coachlace in a small neglected mill in Lancaster, Mass. Ernest had a talent for making improvements and innovations which allow his business, The Clinton Company, to quickly contract with other mills to increase their manufacture. Eventually, he conceived of and perfected the first power loom, which would revolutionize the weaving of carpets and create an unstoppable monstrous new American industry. To fully understand the development of America's carpet industry, one must research hundreds of books, pamphlets, Not terribly long after the recession that followed the American civil war, Bigelow began a series of mergers and acquisitions of other mills and carpet companies. With ever few years, Bigelow's name changed slightly as it incorporated and/or combined with other companies to increase its market share and strength. In 1899, the Lowell Manufacturing Company and Bigelow Carpet Company merged keeping the name as the new Bigelow Carpet Company. In 1901, the E. S. Higgins Carrpet Company merged with Hartford Company to form the Hartford Carpet Corporation. In 1914, the Hartford Carpet Corporation and Bigelow Carpet Company merged to form the Bigelow-Hartford Carpet Company.
The company survived recessions, two world wars, recessions, and still exists today, though now it is just a small part of the Mohawk Group, which Unlike today's products that carry the Bigelow name, under the Mohawk umbrella, Bigelow's earlier weavings still survive today as a testament to their unyeilding attention to quality. Though the remaining examples are rare, it is still possible to find a Bigelow carpet on the floor of a well kept household.
Very few of these pieces have survived in such wonderful condition. Most are only found in fragments, partial strips, and threadbare with little to no pattern remaining. Here, we have a treasure and an exquisit quality that has more than withstood its test of time. The rug shown herein is of the highest quality wilton weave Bigelow offered. To achieve this level of fineness or density of carpet, each loom wove only twenty-seven or fewer inches of carpet in strips which would be later sown together by hand.
CONDITION: The has an exceptional full consistent pile over the entire rug - as with all velvet rugs, the pile is a short pile. There is some minor loss along one side as shown in the detailed photographs. There are two small areas with old moth damage -- there is no current infestation (please see cleaning notes below). The ends are finished off in the traditional method for this weave -- this rug never had any fringe. CLEANING: This rug has been professionally hand cleaned by our own conservation team with a restorative thorough washing adhering to We are proud to be the only dealers to honestly show our thorough hand washing completed on every rug we offer. You can be assured your getting the only gaurenteed thoroughly hand washed rug on ebay. We gladly show our methods so you know your not being lied to or taken advantage of.
|
||||||||||||||