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Entries / Vereteno Spinning Factory

Vereteno Spinning Factory


Categories / Economy/Industry

VERETENO (223-225 Obvodny Canal Embankment), open joint-stock company, one of the oldest enterprises of spinning production. It was founded as Kalininskaya (later Russian) cotton-spinning manufactory in 1835. It ran on imported (American) cotton, was nationalised in 1918, and in 1922 was renamed Vereteno. The enterprise stood idle until 1925, and then renewed spinning output using locally-produced (Uzbek) cotton. The production was stopped in 1941-45. The factory continued cotton-spinning production for knitted and small-ware goods in the post-war years. Voluminous yarn production was mastered there for the first time in the country in 1961. The factory was reincorporated as a joint-stock company in 1992, and lost most of its raw material stock because export relations were deteriorated; the reduction of textile production resulted in falling demand for spinning products, however, the company avoided bankruptcy and now produces mainly voluminous yarn for knitwear manufacturing. The factory building is a monument of industrial architecture (1837, architect N.Y. Anisimov, engineer A.Y. Wilson, rebuilt in 1857, architect R.R. Genrichsen, 1858, engineer N.P. Grebenka, 1883, architect L.F. Sperer and 1894-98, architect K.K. Zigler von Schafgausen).

V. S. Solomko.

Persons
Anisimov Nikolay Yakovlevich
Grebenka Nikolay Pavlovich
Henrichsen Roman Romanovich
Sperer Ludwig Frantsevich
Wilson Alexander Yakovlevich
Ziegler von Schaffhausen Karl Karlovich

Addresses
Obvodny Canal Embankment/Saint Petersburg, city, house 223
Obvodny Canal Embankment/Saint Petersburg, city, house 225


Petersburg Industrial War 1896

PETERSBURG INDUSTRIAL WAR 1896, the name given by Lenin to the Petersburg textile-workers' strike prepared by the Petersburg League of the Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working Class

Wilson A. Y. (1776-1866), engineer, manager of Izhorsky Plants

WILSON Alexander Yakovlevich (1776-1866), production manager, general engineer (1853). Native of Scotland, he and his father Yakov Wilson, a blacksmith, came to Russia in 1784