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 167,699 pages of information and 247,077 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.

Tipton Old Church Iron and Tinplate Works: Difference between revisions

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1841 Sale notice (brief extract): 'EXTENSIVE FREEHOLD IRON WORKS, In the Mining District of Staffordshire. <br>TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, by E. & C. ROBINS & Co. ... All that very extensive and valuable FREEHOLD PROPERTY, called Tipton Old Church Iron and Tin-plate Works, situate at Tipton, in the county of Stafford, the whole comprising a site of upwards of 8,000 yards of land.<br>The Buildings are substantial and in good repair, comprising two very large Forges, Sheet Mill, Foundry, Workshops, Warehouses, Clerk's and Workmen’s Dwellings, &c. and will be sold in the following or in such other lots as may be agreed upon at the time: <br>— LOT 1,—The very convenient and extensive Iron Works, called the New Forge, warehouses, a superior steam engine of eighty-horse power, with three boilers, six mid or heating furnaces, and eight smelting furnaces. This lot has a considerable frontage to the private basin, and an entrance from Prince End Road. ......'<ref>Shrewsbury Chronicle - Friday 23 April 1841</ref>
1832 Partnership dissolved. '...the Partnership or joint trade subsisting and carried on by and between the undersigned, John Round and Isaac Caddick of Tipton Old Church Iron-Works, Tipton, in the County of Stafford, Iron and Tin-Plate-Manufacturers, was this day dissolved by mutual consent...'<ref>[https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/18913/page/538 The London Gazette Publication date:9 March 1832 Issue:18913 Page:538]</ref>
 
1841 Sale notice (brief extract): 'EXTENSIVE FREEHOLD IRON WORKS, In the Mining District of Staffordshire. <br>TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, by E. & C. ROBINS & Co. ... All that very extensive and valuable FREEHOLD PROPERTY, called Tipton Old Church Iron and Tin-plate Works, situate at Tipton, in the county of Stafford, the whole comprising a site of upwards of 8,000 yards of land.<br>The Buildings are substantial and in good repair, comprising two very large Forges, Sheet Mill, Foundry, Workshops, Warehouses, Clerk's and Workmen’s Dwellings, &c. and will be sold in the following or in such other lots as may be agreed upon at the time: <br>— LOT 1,—The very convenient and extensive Iron Works, called the New Forge, warehouses, a superior steam engine of eighty-horse power, with three boilers, six mid or heating furnaces, and eight smelting furnaces. This lot has a considerable frontage to the private basin, and an entrance from Prince End Road....'<ref>Shrewsbury Chronicle - Friday 23 April 1841</ref>


== See Also ==
== See Also ==

Latest revision as of 13:20, 3 June 2024

of Tipton

1832 Partnership dissolved. '...the Partnership or joint trade subsisting and carried on by and between the undersigned, John Round and Isaac Caddick of Tipton Old Church Iron-Works, Tipton, in the County of Stafford, Iron and Tin-Plate-Manufacturers, was this day dissolved by mutual consent...'[1]

1841 Sale notice (brief extract): 'EXTENSIVE FREEHOLD IRON WORKS, In the Mining District of Staffordshire.
TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION, by E. & C. ROBINS & Co. ... All that very extensive and valuable FREEHOLD PROPERTY, called Tipton Old Church Iron and Tin-plate Works, situate at Tipton, in the county of Stafford, the whole comprising a site of upwards of 8,000 yards of land.
The Buildings are substantial and in good repair, comprising two very large Forges, Sheet Mill, Foundry, Workshops, Warehouses, Clerk's and Workmen’s Dwellings, &c. and will be sold in the following or in such other lots as may be agreed upon at the time:
— LOT 1,—The very convenient and extensive Iron Works, called the New Forge, warehouses, a superior steam engine of eighty-horse power, with three boilers, six mid or heating furnaces, and eight smelting furnaces. This lot has a considerable frontage to the private basin, and an entrance from Prince End Road....'[2]

See Also

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