In 1871 the site of the Newburgh Bleachery was purchased by the Messrs.
The Newburgh Bleachery is owned and managed by Joseph Chadwick & Sons.
It is significant that with all the fun, the standard of efficiency and production in our bleachery was such that out of eighteen like industries in the country, we were one of the only two running full time.
Sunday baseball—that day ourbleachery team played the Keen Kutters—pained Mr. Welsh.
Seven o'clock sees folks on all roads leading to the bleachery gate.
Just before I came the bleachery girls were called into meeting and it was explained to them that Bryn Mawr College was planning a two months' summer school for working girls.
In that case we should have motored sooner or later by the bleachery gate and past numerous company houses.
In between I dropped on a grassy hillside and watched Our Bleachery baseball team play a Sunday afternoon game with the Colored Giants.
Employment conditions at the bleachery were such that it was necessary to make sure of a job by arranging matters ahead of time with the manager.
Most of the workers in the bleachery know no other industrial experience.
The actual number working in the bleachery was about six hundred and twenty men and women.
It was explained that Vassar College and a woman's club were making it possible for two bleachery girls to go, with all expenses paid.
The bleachery folk, or their kind, I saw at the three church services I attended.
It was the bleacheryfolk you saw on the streets, in the shops, at the post office, at the movies.
I can hear a bleacheryoperator grunting, “My Gawd!
A big brown dog guarded the bleachery during the spring and summer months; but in the early fall, when the grapes were ripening, he transferred his attention to the vineyard.
As Mr. Swift neared his home, the linen lying in the bleachery was plainly discernible, and the dog, recognizing the locality, leaped out of the carriage.
This position was accepted, and Mr. Swift transferred his bleachery and vineyard to the care of his eldest son.
They had a Linen bleacheryconvenient to the town, and in a shop in the house in which I was born, we had four looms in which four men were at work.
V The application of Scientific Management to women's work in the Delaware Bleachery was very limited, extending only to about 12 girls, all employed in folding and wrapping cloth.
These establishments are a New Jersey cotton mill, a bleachery in Delaware, and a cloth finishing factory in New England.
In short, he was a nephew whose peer could not be found in all Sweden, and who knows whether the piece of linen he chose from the bleachery was the last he received from his indulgent aunt.
By and by we will go to my bleachery and you may select a piece of linen.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "bleachery" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.