Oriental Silk Printing Company
Haledon, New Jersey
By Robert J. Baptista, November 25, 2007
The silk industry of Paterson, New Jersey thrived in the early 1900s and was a major employer in the area.
Many of the workers lived in the neighboring town of Haledon and commuted to work by trolley. Haledon itself
had only a few textile mills of which the largest was the Oriental Silk Printing Company on Belmont Avenue.
The textile operations at this site were preceded by a foundry. In 1825 Benjamin Brunded had a machine shop
in Paterson across the street from the present day City Hall. When the shop burned down around 1832,
Brunded moved to the Haledon site, buying the Hedden Bark Mill on Oldham Brook. The building was a one-
story field stone structure. Two years later Brunded established a foundry and machine shop and named the
community Oldham, after a place in Lancashire, England. He also built his home on the property.
In 1857 Charles and William Hodges purchased the foundry, enlarging the plant and converting it into a woolen
and hosiery mill. The business prospered for some years, but the Hodges met with reverses after the Civil
War and the property was sold in 1865 at a Sheriff’s sale. It became the Oldham Manufacturing Company for a
few years. Later, the mill was sold to M. H. Chapin, a manufacturer of tape and binding until 1876, when
Garnetti & Gazzara operated a silk throwing plant there. Then it became known as the Hoxey Mill until 1879,
when the Jute Print Works of Henry L. Butler (father of Nicholas Murry Butler, educator) was established in part
of the building, using steam and water power. Butler was principally engaged in the printing of jute carpets and
employed eight men. Sloan Tapestry also used the old mill. In the early 1900s, velvets were manufactured
there. The Oriental Silk Printing Company eventually took over, enlarging the mill for a thriving business of
dyeing and printing silk from China.
Image: Silk Manufacturing and Its Problems, 1913
In 1918 the Oriental Silk Printing Company employed 140 people. Percival J. Wood (1880-1963) was the vice
president and general manager from 1913 to 1934. During this period Wood helped form the American
Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists (AATCC), serving as the first chairman of the New York section.
Years of labor strife in the Paterson area textile mills led to the shutdown of some mills and the relocation of
others to the South. In 1936 Harmon Colors purchased the 45 acre Oriental Silk Printing facility including
Oldham Pond in North Haledon. Harmon Colors, later acquired by Bayer, manufactured organic pigments
there until 1993 when operations were shifted to a new plant in Charleston, South Carolina.
References:
1) “Early Industries”, 50th Anniversary History of Haledon, 1908-1958
2) Robert J. Baptista, “Harmon Colors”, website at the link http://colorantshistory.org/HarmonColors.html ,
accessed November 25, 2007
3) James Chittick, Silk Manufacturing and Its Problems, New York, 1916, p. 65a
4) Industrial Directory of New Jersey, Trenton, 1918, p. 234
5) “P. J. Wood Dies at 83”, American Dyestuff Reporter, November 25, 1963, p. 36

Logo of the Oriental Silk Printing Company Haledon, New Jersey
|
Oriental Silk Printing Company Mill, ca. 1900
Photo: 50th Anniversary History of Haledon
1908-1958
A brief description of the company's
business is shown in the 1913 trade ad:
Former Oriental Silk Printing Building in
Haledon, NJ Shortly Before Demolition
Photo: Robert J. Baptista, November 1993
The Master Silk Printer, trade magazine of
the Oriental Silk Printing Company,
published 1922-1927, provided fashion
information on new silk apparel for women.
Photo: Courtesy of the Paul J. Gutman
Library of Philadelphia University.