Downtown
Liverpool's bohemian
RopeWalks district takes its name from this practice and consists of the lanes where this work once took place.
Cable Street in
London started as a straight path along which hemp ropes were twisted into ships' cables (i.e. ropes). is less than 4 metres (13 ft) wide yet some 380 metres (1,250 ft) in length. The ropewalk at
Chatham Dockyard (as part of the Ropery or Ropehouse) is still producing rope commercially and has an internal length of . When it was constructed in 1790, it was the longest brick building in Europe. Before
steam power was introduced in 1836, it took over 200 men to form and close a cable laid rope of
circumference. The rope walk is used to form and close the rope, these being the final stages in rope making. Before this the raw
hemp,
manila hemp or
sisal has to be
hatchelled, spun into
yarn, and
tarred. In the early 17th century, Peter Appleby constructed a ropewalk (for the dockyard) in the
Christianshavn neighbourhood of
Copenhagen,
Denmark. From the late 17th century, the
ropewalk on the Swedish island of
Lindholmen was a key component of the
Karlskrona Naval Base producing rope up to 300 metres in length for the cordage of
warships. Although production ceased in 1960, the elaborately designed facility is now open to the public with exhibitions and demonstrations of ropemaking. A similarly scaled facility in
Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France, called the
Corderie Royale, is also maintained as a museum within the
Centre International de la Mer. In the 18th Century,
Malta and
Port Mahon, on the island of
Menorca, both had open-air ropewalks. In
Boston in the
Massachusetts Colony, some early rope making businesses were called 'ropewalks'. An important industry in an active port city, documentation of many of their locations can be found on maps of the period. A granite structure formerly used for
US Navy lines remains in the
Charlestown Navy Yard, but has been converted to housing. The
Charlestown Ropewalk is claimed to be the only standing ropewalk in the United States. A relocated partial ropewalk originally from
Plymouth is on display at the
Mystic Seaport Museum. Jalan Pintal Tali, which is in one of the older, central parts of
George Town, Penang,
Malaysia, literally means "rope-twisting street". In
Toronto, a ropewalk appears on municipal maps from as early as the 1860s and operated for at least 40 years. The ropewalk ran to the east of Lansdowne Avenue (formerly Jameson Avenue, then North Lansdowne Avenue). An 1884 Insurance Plan shows the factory going from lot 42 at the south end to lot 35 at the north. The
Reeperbahn (English: "ropewalk") in
Hamburg is now the center of the famous amusement and red-light district
St. Pauli. The Ropewalk in
Nottingham passes over
Park Tunnel. ==See also==