Beginning in 1838, Cheney Brothers built the silk mills that made Manchester famous and drew workers from throughout the
United States and Europe. During the second Industrial Revolution (1860-1890), the Cheney business prospered, and
eventually became the largest silk manufacturer in the country, and the only one to manage all phases of silk production
except raising silkworms. Attempts to grow mulberry trees to nurture silkworms had failed, and the Cheneys imported silk
cocoons from the Orient.
By the early 1920s, the mills employed 4,700 workers, which was 25 percent of the town�s population. The Cheney family
constructed the mill buildings between 1872 and 1917. The Cheneys also built firehouses, electric and gas companies,
schools, reservoirs, and hundreds of worker houses. Cheneys supported the construction of churches and other public
buildings. They provided their employees with insurance, medical care, and retirement benefits. The Cheneys were
entrepreneurs, business executives, inventors, abolitionists, artists, architects, authors, philanthropists, and
influential citizens of the town and state.
After the peak year of 1923, the silk industry began to decline. Cheney Brothers fell on hard times during the
1930s, due in part to the Great Depression, the elimination of protective import tariffs, new fashion trends, and the
arrival of synthetics. Textile production from all over New England moved to the southern states and to the Orient, where
labor was cheaper. After reorganizing in 1935, Cheney Brothers rebounded somewhat during World War II with the development
and production of nylon parachutes (Pioneer Parachute). But in 1955, the family made the painful decision to sell the
company to J.P. Stevens, which immediately discontinued some operations, moved and sold off others. The last surviving
textile operation � the Velvet Mill � closed in 1984. In the 1980s and 1990s, many of the empty mills were renovated and
adapted for use as apartments.
In 1978, the mill area became a National Historic Landmark District. In 2002, the Town of Manchester purchased nine
acres of the Great Lawn for open space to preserve this historic site.
At right is an excerpt from a 1937 edition of the Manchester Evening Herald, with a listing of houses sold during the auction of
Cheney properties. Click the image to see an enlarged version. To access the segment of this website which is devoted to
the auction, please click
Cheney Property Auctions.
Webmaster's note: Former Manchester resident Paul Barrett mentioned that the opening credits to the Warner
Brothers Busby Berkley musicals of the 1930s (for example 42nd Street) contain the acknowledgement: "Silks by Cheney
Brothers." To see enlarged images of this film's title and credit pages, click each icon.