Samuel Cunliffe Lister, 1st Baron Masham, was an English inventor and industrialist, notable for inventing the Lister nip comb.
Background
He was born in Calverley Old Hall, near Bradford, the son of Ellis Cunliffe Lister (1774–1853), the first Member of Parliament elected for Bradford after the Reform Acting of 1832 and Mary (née Kay) Lister. In 1854 he married Anne Dearden, daughter of John Dearden. They had five daughters.
Career
He started his working life working for a Liverpool firm of merchants. Samuel Lister went on to play a key role in the development of Bradford"s wool industry during the nineteenth century Industrial Revolution. The textile industry transformed Bradford from a small rural town into a rich and famous city.
As well as being a successful mill owner he occasionally diverged to other subjects, such as an air brake for railways.
He was fond of outdoor sports, especially coursing and shooting, and was a keen patron of the fine arts Lister"s Mill (otherwise known as Manningham Mills), and its owner, were particularly well known in the district.
The business eventually made Lister one of Bradford"s most famous fathers, a multi-millionaire and the provider of thousands of jobs in the city. Lister"s Mill changed the identity of the region, and its economy.
Lister himself came to epitomise Victorian enterprise.
However it has been suggested that his capitalist attitude made trade unions necessary. Lister invented the Lister nip comb which separated and straightened raw wool, which has to be done before it can be spun into worsted yarn, and in the nineteenth century it was a hot, dirty and tiring job. By inventing the nip comb, Lister revolutionised the industry.
Around 1855 he began work to find a way of utilising the fibre contained in silk waste.
The task occupied his time for many years and brought him to the verge of bankruptcy, but at last he succeeded in perfecting silk-combing appliances which enabled him to make good quality yarn at a low cost. Another important invention in connection with silk manufacture was his velvet loom for piled fabrics which made him very rich.
He had his portrait painted with a model of one of his inventions. However, the business was seriously affected by the prohibitory duties imposed by the United States, making him an early critic of the British policy of free trade. was donated to the people of Bradford by Lister.
Membership
A statue of him now stands in, in Heaton, Bradford, sculpted by Matthew Noble from a block of white Sicilian marble and unveiled on Saturday 15 May 1875 by West. East. Forster, then Member of Parliament for Bradford.