Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 115342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 164,585 pages of information and 246,144 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Barrow Hematite Steel Co

From Graces Guide
1865 Bessemer Converter at the London Science Museum
1870.
1880.
August 1900. The Boiler Shop. Harry Rees is the 4th from left in the back row
1901.
1901.

Iron and Steel makers of Barrow-in-Furness.

In the year 1859 an event took place which set the seal on the future prosperity of the Furness Railway. This was the establishment at Barrow of the Ironworks of Schneider, Hannay and Co. In the previous year (1858) this firm had bought land from the Furness at Hindpool on which to build their plant.

With the setting up of the smelting plant at Hindpool the Furness Railway lost most of the shipment traffic in iron ore, as the bulk of this was now smelted locally, but this loss was more than offset by the pig iron and coke traffic which resulted from the establishment of Messrs. Schneider and Hannay's works [1]

In 1863 it was determined to erect steelworks at Barrow, the principal shareholders of which were the Duke of Devonshire, Mr. Schneider, Mr. Hannay, Mr. James Ramsden, and the Duke of Buccleuch.

1864 The Barrow Haematite Steel company was incorporated with the (7th) Duke of Devonshire as Chairman, Sir James Ramsden as MD and Josiah T. Smith as General Manager. The company was registered on the 1 April[2]

1864 Small experimental Bessemer Converter installed.This is now preserved in the London Science Museum.

The Company had hardly got to work before it was found that the interests of the Ironworks (belonging exclusively to Messrs. Schneider, Hannay and Co.) clashed with the interests of the Steel Company; and, moreover, that a large increase in the number of furnaces was desirable, and that the Steelworks, to be successful, should be enlarged. This led to an amalgamation of the interests of the two Companies.[3]

1865 Premises erected alongside iron works of Schneider and Hannay which were bought by the company. Ten blast furnaces gave an output of 5,000-5,500 tons a week - recognised as largest ironworks in world.

1866 Steel works commenced operations with 18 5-ton Bessemer converters.

The ironworks and the steelworks formed 2 physically separate units, separated by the Furness Railway main line of the early 1860s.

1872 14 furnace tops were enclosed to make use of waste gases.

The company controlled some local iron ore mines, including Park (output 375,000 tons in 1872) and Stank.

1870s This company was thought to have the largest turn-over of any manufacturing concern in Great Britain.[4]

1879 Reduced capacity to 11 larger converters, and to 8 larger converters from a later date. Steel poured in 2-ton ingot moulds. Converters fed from 250-ton metal mixer sited between blast furnaces and converters.

Large proportion of output used for rolling steel rails. Mills originally of the three-high-type driven by beam engines with 42 1/2 ins. diam x 6-ft stroke at 55 lbs pressure, 28 strokes per minute.

Up to 1880 11 steam hammers, when replaced by cogging mills.

The Bessemer process was eventually supplanted by Siemens furnaces at Barrow though rails continued to be rolled.

1880? Two Siemens 12-ton open hearth furnaces installed.

In 1900 the rail mill consisted of a 36 inch cogging mill driven by a pair of 40x60 horizontal reversing engines, with a 28 inch roughing mill with a pair of 48x54 inch direct-acting horizontal reversing engines, and a 28 inch finishing mill with similar 50x54 engines.

By 1903 four 18-ton converters were in use making 70 casts every 24 hours - or a capacity of 7,000 tons a week.

c.1914 Built three locomotives[5]

1920 W. F. A. Wadham - Director. [6]

By 1930s, 70-ton furnaces were in use.

WW2 By the beginning of WW2 the steelworks had been closed and was 'mothballed', but the ironworks continued to operate using the title of Barrow Hematite Steel Co Ltd.

1942 The steelworks was acquired by the Ministry of Supply and put back into production.

In 1948 the iron works was acquired by Barrow Ironworks Ltd, although Barrow Hematite Steel Co continued to exist as a 'holding' company for the former subsidiaries who operated the Stainton Limestone Quarries and the Pennington Ore Mill.

1959 Darwen and Mostyn Iron Co was sold to Barrow Hematite Steel Co by the Holding and Realization Agency[7].

1959 Acquired by Arusha Industries[8]

1960 There were three furnaces in blast at the beginning of 1960[9]

About 1961, the blast furnaces were finally blown out. No 'new' steel was then produced, the works depending entirely on the remelting of scrap.

Barrow Ironworks Ltd was acquired by the Millom concern (i.e. Millom and Askam Hematite Iron Co Ltd until 1959, then Millom Hematite Ore and Iron Co Ltd).

1963 The Barrow works, still using its Barrow Ironworks name, closed on 31/3/1963.

1964 Barrow Haematite Steel, which was a subsidiary of General and Engineering Industries called in the receivers[10]

Barrow Steelworks later became part of British Steel.

Barrow Steelworks operated until 1983, and the site is now partly occupied by an industrial estate.

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. [1] Barrow Steel Web Site
  2. The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908
  3. Obituary of Henry William Schneider
  4. Obituary of Josiah Timmis Smith
  5. British Steam Locomotive Builders by James W. Lowe. Published in 1975. ISBN 0-905100-816
  6. The Engineer 1920/09/17
  7. The Times, 2 April 1959
  8. The Times, Feb 04, 1960
  9. [2] Barrow Steel Web Site
  10. The Times, Feb 12, 1964