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Song of the Singer Sewing Machine

4 Extra Debut. Maria Margaronis tells the story of the Singer Corporation, its once great empire and the lives it touched. From 2016.

The song of the Singer has whirred its way through more than 160 years. There is not a town in the world where this machine has not made its presence felt.

Maria Margaronis considers the might of the sewing machine to make empires and change lives for better or worse.

Isaac Singer patented his machine in 1851. That bald fact alone doesn't even begin to describe the individual behind this perfection of technologies and processes. Impresario, inventor, actor and millionaire and father of 22 children with six wives, the last of whom was the model for the Statue of Liberty. There was skulduggery and power play at work in his ability to capture the market - the rise of the first multi-national. As the slogan goes 'Sewing made easy'.

By the late 19th century Singer had 86,000 employees and 5,000 branch offices in 190 countries--a reach second only to the Catholic Church.

But we begin on a busy North London road. The shop simply says SINGER, inside is a nest of sewing machines. It is here that Maria has brought her mother's old machine and it is here she begins her story, unpicking the threads of time. This machine was one of millions made on Glasgow's Clydeside. Singer's European heartland until 1980. A place that produced some 36 million machines.

Maria travels to both Glasgow and to the site of the vast American Singer factory in Elizabethport New Jersey to piece together the story of a once all powerful empire. From the Amazon river where they were traded for emeralds to St Petersburg where the Bolsheviks had the temerity to nationalise the Singer factory. Drawing on oral history, newly recorded interviews and rare gems Maria follows the many threads of Singers presence in the world.

Producer: Mark Burman.

First broadcast on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 in October 2016.

Available now

1 hour

Last on

Fri 16 Sep 2022 12:04

Broadcasts

  • Sat 15 Oct 2016 20:00
  • Fri 14 Apr 2017 21:00
  • Tue 1 Dec 2020 11:00
  • Tue 1 Dec 2020 21:00
  • Sat 10 Sep 2022 20:00
  • Fri 16 Sep 2022 12:04

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