Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,713 pages of information and 247,105 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.

Thorncliffe Ironworks and Collieries: Difference between revisions

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1853 [[Thomas Chambers (c.1798-1869)|Thomas Chambers]] and [[John Chambers (1805-1869)|John Chambers]], of The Thorncliffe Iron Works, near Sheffield, in the county of York, gave notice in respect of the invention of " certain improvements in kitchen sinks."<ref>London Gazette 20 September 1853</ref>
1853 [[Thomas Chambers (c.1798-1869)|Thomas Chambers]] and [[John Chambers (1805-1869)|John Chambers]], of The Thorncliffe Iron Works, near Sheffield, in the county of York, gave notice in respect of the invention of " certain improvements in kitchen sinks."<ref>London Gazette 20 September 1853</ref>
1857 And Edmund Edwards and Edward Beacher, of the Thorncliffe and Chapeltown Iron Works, near Sheffield, gave notice in
respect of the invention of "improvements in machinery or apparatus for washing or cleansing mineral and other substances"<ref>London Gazette 18 August 1857</ref>


1873 [[Thomas Chambers Newton]] and [[George Dawson]], both of the Thorncliffe Iron Works, near Sheffield, in the county of York gave  notice in respect of the invention of " improvements in kitchen ranges."<ref>London Gazette 22 April 1873</ref>
1873 [[Thomas Chambers Newton]] and [[George Dawson]], both of the Thorncliffe Iron Works, near Sheffield, in the county of York gave  notice in respect of the invention of " improvements in kitchen ranges."<ref>London Gazette 22 April 1873</ref>

Revision as of 09:08, 9 March 2024

1872.

George Newton and Thomas Chambers formed Newton, Chambers and Co, which started out as an iron works but later expanded into coal and ironstone mining and the chemical byproducts of coal.[1]

1853 Thomas Chambers and John Chambers, of The Thorncliffe Iron Works, near Sheffield, in the county of York, gave notice in respect of the invention of " certain improvements in kitchen sinks."[2]

1857 And Edmund Edwards and Edward Beacher, of the Thorncliffe and Chapeltown Iron Works, near Sheffield, gave notice in respect of the invention of "improvements in machinery or apparatus for washing or cleansing mineral and other substances"[3]

1873 Thomas Chambers Newton and George Dawson, both of the Thorncliffe Iron Works, near Sheffield, in the county of York gave notice in respect of the invention of " improvements in kitchen ranges."[4]

Presumably linked to Thorncliffe and Chapeltown Iron and Coal Co


See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. [1] Chapeltown
  2. London Gazette 20 September 1853
  3. London Gazette 18 August 1857
  4. London Gazette 22 April 1873