ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT SINCE 1945
By the late 1940s the urban district council acknowledged the need to improve infrastructure and attract
new industries if Witney was not to become largely a
dormitory town, a recurrent theme in the second half of
the 20th century. (fn. 1) The arrival in 1950 of the engineering
firm Smiths' of England, attracting both local employees
and large numbers of incomers, began a fundamental
and long-term shift in the town's social and economic
structure. Such changes were subsequently accelerated,
and often led, by planning decisions to promote
large-scale housing development, partly to reduce
growing pressure on Oxford; that in turn created an
increased need for local employment, particularly
during the national recession of the 1970s and 1980s,
which affected Witney seriously, slowing but not
reversing its industrial and commercial development. (fn. 2)
The break with the town's pre-War economy was
completed by the rapid decline, from the 1970s, of the
blanket industry, already employing fewer people after
technical innovations in the 1950s and 1960s, (fn. 3) and by
the end of the 20th century Witney had been transformed into a substantial and still expanding town of
over 20,000 people, with a diverse range of light industrial and retail firms located, for the most part, in industrial estates established since the 1960s.
The Decline of the Blanket Industry
Technological development in the industry after the
Second World War brought considerable success, and
despite a major crisis in the 1950s all four manufacturing firms continued in the late 1960s, when Early's
alone still employed nearly 600 workers. (fn. 4) From the
1970s, however, collapsing markets for traditional blankets, combined with national recession, led to rapid
decline and to closure of all except Early's, which
following a short-lived recovery in the 1990s was finally
closed in 2002. (fn. 5)
New plant was installed at Smith and Philips' and at
Walkers' factories at their reopening after the Second
World War, when Early's, too, embarked on a muchneeded modernization: in particular peroxide-bleaching
replaced older methods from the late 1940s, and
outdoor tentering was finally abandoned. In 1948
Marriott's became a public limited company, followed
by Early's soon after, (fn. 6) and in the early 1950s all four
Witney firms together accounted for a quarter of the
country's woollen blanket production. (fn. 7)
A post-war boom, fuelled by widespread demand
following wartime austerity, was followed in 1952 by a
catastrophic collapse, caused chiefly by soaring woolprices: Early's was nearly bankrupted, and alone of the
Witney manufacturers was forced onto short time. (fn. 8)
Recovery, made possible only by private funds and by
goodwill both within the trade and amongst employees,
took several years, and was accompanied by further
modernization, undertaken partly with the help of
industrial consultants and with the cooperation of the
Transport and General Workers' Union. New buildings
allowed installation of new machinery and greater integration,
and a new dyehouse and research laboratory
was completed in 1957, the firm pioneering screenprinting of blankets. Cellular blankets were produced in
bulk from the mid 1950s, and electric blankets (made at
Early's West End factory) from 1957. Refitting at
Marriott's Mount Mills followed a serious fire in 1953. (fn. 9)
The merger in 1960 of Early's and Marriott's, forming
the combined company of Charles Early and Marriott
(Witney) Ltd, was followed by further technical innovation, dubbed a 'second industrial revolution' in the mid
1960s. Fiberweaving, invented in the United States in
1959, was introduced at Mount Mills under licence from
1965, three Fiberweaving machines replacing 100
conventional looms and increasing output by 50 per
cent. A fifth Fiberweaver was introduced in 1974, when
the last of Early's traditional shuttle power-looms and
spinning mules were replaced by modern equipment.
German-developed machinery, producing 'knitted'
blankets in man-made fibres at four times the rate of
conventional looms, was introduced in 1966 following a
partnership with Courtaulds Ltd. Before 1967 the
outlying sites at New Mill, Worsham, and West End
were sold to allow further integration at Witney Mills,
where large new offices and warehouses were erected; (fn. 10)
the Newland warehouse was sold in 1973, and demolished after a fire in 1975. (fn. 11)
The new techniques, though commercially successful,
led to redundancies, Early and Marriott's workforce
falling from around 700 in 1960 to 600 by 1965.
Increased production allowed a partial reversal thereafter, but in 1974 the firm still employed under 600,
falling to 450 four years later. (fn. 12) The other firms remained
smaller, Smith and Philips' employing around 350
people in the early 1970s, and Walkers' around 120. (fn. 13)
New practices prompted a strike at Smith and Philips's
in 1970, when women workers claimed loss of earnings
caused by introduction of soft yarns which broke more
frequently, slowing production. (fn. 14)
From the early 1970s there was falling demand for
traditional blankets at home and abroad, combined with
national recession. Smith and Philips' Bridge Street and
Crawley mills were closed in 1975, having been taken
over first by a Halifax-based blanket firm and later by an
international furnishing group, which converted part of
the premises for furniture-making. (fn. 15) The Witney Blanket
Company, also taken over by a larger company and faced
with mounting postal costs, closed its mail-order business in 1976 and its bedding factory at the Leys the
following year, (fn. 16) while James Walker and Sons' Crofts
Mill, on short time in 1980, closed soon after. (fn. 17) Early's
and Marriott's, which although producing Fiberwoven
floor-coverings had decided against manufacturing
duvets, was similarly in difficulty by 1980, and vacated
Mount Mills in 1985, leaving only its Witney Mill
premises. (fn. 18) Despite further small-scale diversification (fn. 19)
annual sales fell from £15 million in 1969 to only £9
million in 1988, when the company, though still
commanding 70 per cent of the shrinking domestic
blanket market, made a loss; attempts to capitalize on its
valuable town-centre land backfired when a company of
property speculators which had acquired an interest in
the firm went bankrupt, putting Early's into receivership. Following a management buy-out in 1991 the firm
continued with a staff of 160, and from 1993 enjoyed a
partial recovery based partly on American markets;
traditional Witney horse-rugs and point-blankets were
still sold, together with other types of bedding. (fn. 20) The
American company Quiltex, one of the firm's chief
customers, took it over in 1999, producing around
5,000 blankets a week compared with 30,000 in the
1960s; sales fell, however, and in 2002 Early's was put
into voluntary liquidation. The Witney factory was
closed in July and production was moved to Derbyshire,
Quiltex having failed to find affordable alternative
premises in Witney; the 72 remaining workers were
offered relocation, though few if any were expected to
accept. (fn. 21)
New Industries
Smiths' of England, attracted in part by easy access to car
factories at Oxford, Coventry, and Birmingham, opened
a motor accessory plant at the former De Havilland
factory west of the town in 1950, manufacturing mostly
car and lorry heaters. Though at first importing
machinery and skilled labour, by the mid 1960s it
employed 1,500 people from the Witney area, including
several hundred women engaged in both clerical and
production work. Many employees were accommodated
on a purpose-built housing estate nearby, and there were
plans to double the workforce. (fn. 22) A hydraulics department, superseding a smaller local firm, opened on the
site in 1957, and a precision-fan department in 1967. By
1980 the firm was the largest single employer in the area
apart from British Leyland in Oxford. (fn. 23)

46. Smiths' of England Engineering works (top) and Curbridge Downs Farm in 1970, looking east along Burford Road.
Some established firms continued as significant
employers until the 1970s or later. In the mid 1960s
Crawford Collets employed 250 people at expanded
premises, Compton and Webb's uniform factory 150,
and Brazil's sausage and pie factory 350; Looker's glove
factory employed 30 cutters and 100 women outworkers, and the West London Optical and Tool
Company employed twenty-five. Many of the principal
firms exported abroad. (fn. 24) Wesley Barrell expanded its
furniture manufacture from the early 1960s, acquiring a
national reputation for hand-crafted beds and other
items; by the 1980s it had 150 employees in Witney,
Charlbury, and elsewhere, and showrooms in several
towns and cities. (fn. 25) Successful smaller companies
included specialist engineering firms, and traditional
companies such as Bartletts' builders, refounded in 1960
as Bartlett Brothers Ltd and Bartlett's Joinery Ltd. (fn. 26) Only
Clinch's Eagle Brewery, too small to compete with the
large commercial breweries emerging in the 1950s,
suffered serious difficulties following a short post-war
boom. In 1962 it was taken over by Courage Ltd and
ceased brewing the following year, serving as a depot
until 1978 when much of it was demolished. (fn. 27) Other
closures in the mid 20th century included most of the
town's remaining blacksmiths, saddlers, and wheelwrights. (fn. 28)
Attempts to attract further new industry followed
Smiths' initial success. An 8-acre site near the station was
scheduled for industrial development in the 1950s,
along with proposed commercial and shopping development east of High Street. By 1964, however, that was
deemed inadequate for the anticipated population-increase, (fn. 29) and although the town's economy,
reflecting national trends, remained buoyant during the
1960s, (fn. 30) no new industries arose to rival either Smiths' or
the blanket companies. In the mid 1970s the blanket
industry, despite recent closures and job losses,
remained marginally the largest single employer, with
just over 3,000 workers compared with around 4,000 in
other manufacturing jobs; the burgeoning service industries employed 6,500, including shop- and officeworkers, lorry drivers, and welfare-workers. The
proportion of inhabitants employed outside the town,
principally in Oxford, rose during the 1960s from 10 to
22 per cent, and continued to grow thereafter. (fn. 31)
National recession during the 1970s and early 1980s
increased the difficulty of attracting and retaining new
industries to serve the growing population. Closure of
most of the blanket firms damaged related local businesses, while Smiths' Engineering and other companies
reduced their workforces, leaving Witney (along with
Carterton and other places in West Oxfordshire) with
far heavier unemployment than the county average.
Firms looking for provincial locations preferred sites
closer to London and to major communication routes,
and Witney also suffered because Oxfordshire, not
considered an unemployment 'black-spot', was not a
priority for central-government aid. Small firms in
particular struggled to find affordable accommodation
in Witney, though by 1978 planning initiatives were
leading to improvement. (fn. 32) In 1982 Smiths' car-heater
section was taken over by a rival company, which further
reduced the workforce and closed all but the hydraulics
section in 1988; the same year the Witney Foods Factory
(formerly Brazil's) closed after takeovers by national
companies, causing the loss of several hundred jobs. (fn. 33)
Witney nevertheless attracted some new industry,
which was essential to provide for its sharply rising
population during the 1980s and 1990s. In the 1980s
West Oxfordshire District Council, in conjunction with
private developers, promoted large industrial estates on
the town's western edge, complementing privately
developed estates around the former station and, from
the early 1990s, on the Mount Mills site, which was
vacated by Early's in 1985. (fn. 34) Vacant industrial buildings
such as Smith's Bridge Street mills were also converted,
mostly by private developers, into industrial units leased
to a variety of small firms, (fn. 35) while part of the former
Clinch's Brewery site was acquired in 1994 by
Wychwood Brewery, a small local firm established (as
the Glenny Brewery) in 1983. Through its subsidiary
Hobgoblinns the firm then owned 33 public houses
nationally, and by 1999 was one of only three independent breweries in Oxfordshire. (fn. 36) In all more than 80
firms moved into the Witney area between 1979 and
1984, and by the mid 1980s unemployment was falling,
many of the job losses from Smiths' and the Food
Factory having been absorbed. (fn. 37) Many incoming companies were small and local, but others were 'high-tech'
firms of national significance, employing large
numbers. (fn. 38) The brief national recession of the early 1990s
caused difficulty in leasing commercial premises, but by
2000 Witney had a shortage of skilled labour, and one of
the lowest unemployment rates in the country. Nevertheless the balance between local jobs, rising population,
and availability of skilled labour remained delicate, with
further housing development planned, while West
Oxfordshire remained disadvantaged by lack of good
motorway or rail links. (fn. 39)
Retailing expanded to meet local needs. By the mid
1970s increasing numbers were using Witney as a
shopping and commercial centre, and from the mid
1980s shopping, leisure, and commercial facilities east of
High street, long delayed by planning disputes, were
finally provided, creating further employment. (fn. 40) A biennial Witney trade fair on Church Green, hosted by the
Witney chamber of trade and commerce, was successfully reinstated in 1972 after a ten-year lapse: in 1990 the
fair was the largest recorded, attracting exhibits from as
far afield as Manchester, Bristol, and Liverpool, and over
a hundred stands in all. (fn. 41)