Construction of the shop limite XVIIIe siècle - XIXe siècle (≈ 1865)
Workshop occupied by a serger from the beginning.
vers 1870
Acquisition by the Cocu family
Acquisition by the Cocu family vers 1870 (≈ 1870)
Transition from craft to tabletry.
vers 1914
Dropping the tablet shop
Dropping the tablet shop vers 1914 (≈ 1914)
Opening of a grocery beverage outlet.
milieu du XIXe siècle
Decline of local weaving
Decline of local weaving milieu du XIXe siècle (≈ 1950)
Transition to other economic activities.
22 avril 1992
Registration for Historic Monuments
Registration for Historic Monuments 22 avril 1992 (≈ 1992)
Protection of the workshop and its buildings.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Weaver workshop, on rue des Jardins; a building adjacent to it, on Rue des Jardins; house in the backyard (cad. AC 89): registration by order of 22 April 1992
Key figures
Famille Cocu - Owners from ~1870
Illustrate the evolution of local economic activities.
Origin and history
The weaver shop of Hardivillers, located in the Hauts-de-France, is an emblematic example of the textile workshops that marked the rural economy of the picard plateau at the hinge of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. This type of monument, called "shop", referred to small workshops where artisanal weaving was carried out, a central activity for the villages of the region. Hardivillers, in particular, played a key role in this industry, housing even in the eighteenth century the seat of a factory office comprising about 20 parishes and 450 weaving looms, specialized in the production of serges, very popular cross wool fabrics.
Originally, this shop was occupied by a serger, a weaver specialized in wool fabrics, reflecting the importance of this profession in local life. Over time, economic activity evolved, as evidenced by the history of the Cescu family, who owned the premises from around 1870. Their descendants illustrate this transition: from textile handicrafts to tablet-making (making small wooden or horn objects), then to rural shops such as a grocery-drinking facility installed in the house at the shop. This micro-historic example reveals the economic and social changes that affected the Picardy countryside between the 19th and early 20th centuries.
The shop, located at 15 rue des Jardins, includes a weaver's workshop, a adjacent building and a house in the backyard. These elements, inscribed in the Historical Monuments by decree of 22 April 1992, testify to the spatial and functional organization of the textile workshops of the time. Their preservation offers a concrete overview of the working and living conditions of rural artisans, as well as the adaptation of families to economic changes, such as the gradual abandonment of weaving to other activities from the mid-19th century onwards.
Hardivillers, like other villages on the picard plateau, experienced a decline in its textile industry in the face of mechanization and urban competition. The weaver shop, now protected, is thus a precious vestige of this time when the local handicrafts structured community life. Its history, linked to that of the Cescu family, highlights the economic survival strategies of rural populations, oscillating between tradition and innovation to adapt to industrial and social upheavals.