Background
He was born in Macclesfield, the eldest son of Joshua Wardle, who in 1830 had opened a silk dyeing business near Leek, Staffordshire (a few miles south of Macclesfield). Aged about 16 Thomas joined his father"s business.
He was born in Macclesfield, the eldest son of Joshua Wardle, who in 1830 had opened a silk dyeing business near Leek, Staffordshire (a few miles south of Macclesfield). Aged about 16 Thomas joined his father"s business.
Silk weaving had begun in Leek in the late 17th century and silk dyeing began during the 18th century. In 1872 he bought two dyeworks in the town (Hencroft and Mill Street dyeworks) from Samuel Tatton, a local businessman. Wardle was interested in making tussar silk commercially successful, after George Birdwood, a doctor and naturalist in India, who became known for his book Economic Vegetable Products of the Bombay Presidency, pointed out in 1860 the commercial potential of this silk.
There was a great supply of tussar silk but it was resistant to dyeing.
After much experimentation, Wardle in 1867 was able to treat the fibre, to overcome its resistance to dyes. From 1875 to 1877 William Morris, of the Arts and Crafts movement, visited Wardle"s dyeworks to experiment with indigo dyeing, and printing with this sort of dye.
They became good friends, and remained southern Their aim was to produce a depth of colour with natural dyes, such as they found in Indian textiles.
They succeeded in making vegetable dyeing important in the dyeing industry.
By 1876 Wardle was printing a range of Morris"s designs. At Morris & Company at Merton Abbey Mills, Morris established his own textile printing while Wardle continued to print Morris"s early designs. In 1885, Wardle accepted a Government invitation to visit Bengal Province (part of the then British Raj in India), to investigate the state there of sericulture.
The quality of silk from there was not as good as silk from producers in other countries.
He found that a great proportion the silkworms were dying of preventible diseases, and that reeling from cocoons was not done well. He set up training courses for local silk farmers, and for local technicians, and got the dyestuffs more organized.
These changes much improved the silk industry in Bengal. On the same visit he went in 1886 to Kashmir, where silk production was in a poor state.
He had ideas for its revival, which on his return home he presented to the government.
Eventually in 1897 he purchased in Europe large amounts of silk-worm eggs and cocoon-reeling machinery for Kashmir, which revived the silk industry there. He was interested in geology, and became a fellow of the Geological Society of London. He had a collection of Carboniferous Limestone fossils, and wrote about geology, particularly of his local area.
Oscar Wilde, in a lecture he gave in Leek in 1884, paid tribute to Thomas Wardle"s work.
In 1887 he helped to found the Silk Association of Great Britain and Ireland, of which he was president during his lifetime. He was a fellow of the Chemical Society.
He wrote several monographs about silk, and he received a knighthood in 1897 for services to the silk industry. The businesses developed by Wardle in his lifetime continued in Leek, with changes of name, in the twentieth century.
He died in Leek in 1909 and was buried in Cheddleton churchyard.