Thorncliffe and Chapeltown Iron and Coal Co: Difference between revisions
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mineral and other substances."<ref>London Gazette 18 August 1857 </ref> | mineral and other substances."<ref>London Gazette 18 August 1857 </ref> | ||
1868 [[Samuel Plimsoll]] visited Continental ironworks in company with [[John Chambers]] of Newton, Chambers and Co of Thorncliffe and Chapeltown Ironworks and Collieries<ref>The Times Feb. 10, 1868</ref> | 1868 [[Samuel Plimsoll]] visited Continental ironworks in company with [[John Chambers (1805-1869)|John Chambers]] of Newton, Chambers and Co of Thorncliffe and Chapeltown Ironworks and Collieries<ref>The Times Feb. 10, 1868</ref> | ||
1869 One of the blast furnaces was put out of use | 1869 One of the blast furnaces was put out of use |
Latest revision as of 12:53, 9 March 2024

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]
1857 Patent application by Edmund Edwards and Edward Beacher, of the Thorncliffe and Chapeltown Iron Works, near Sheffield, in respect of the invention of "improvements in machinery or apparatus for washing or cleansing mineral and other substances."[2]
1868 Samuel Plimsoll visited Continental ironworks in company with John Chambers of Newton, Chambers and Co of Thorncliffe and Chapeltown Ironworks and Collieries[3]
1869 One of the blast furnaces was put out of use
1920 The Rockingham and Thorncliffe coke oven and by-products works were put into a separate company: Thorncliffe Coal Distillation Ltd[4]