Baldwins: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
* 1919 the [[British Steel Corporation]] was acquired by [[Baldwins]] which then would have more productive capacity than any similar undertaking in the U.K.; Baldwins was also said to be planning to move into the manufacturing side of the steel business<ref>The Times, 21 January 1919</ref>. | * 1919 the [[British Steel Corporation]] was acquired by [[Baldwins]] which then would have more productive capacity than any similar undertaking in the U.K.; Baldwins was also said to be planning to move into the manufacturing side of the steel business<ref>The Times, 21 January 1919</ref>. | ||
* 1927 | * By 1927 [[Baldwins]] had acquired the [[Brymbo Steel Co]], the [[Coytrahen Park Colliery Co]], the [[Cribbwr Fawr Collieries]], the [[Taff Rhondda Steam Navigation Coal Co]], and the [[Ton Phillip Rhondda Colliery Co]] in South Wales, as well as other metallurgical and allied companies<ref>[[The Basic Industries of Great Britain by Aberconway: Chapter XVII|Aberconway Chapter 17]]</ref>. | ||
* 1927 See for information on the company and its history. | |||
* 1930 Amalgamation of South Wales Steel works with those of [[GKN]] to form [[British (Guest Keen, Baldwins) Iron and Steel Co|British Iron and Steel Co]]. | * 1930 Amalgamation of South Wales Steel works with those of [[GKN]] to form [[British (Guest Keen, Baldwins) Iron and Steel Co|British Iron and Steel Co]]. |
Revision as of 17:49, 1 November 2010













of Wind Street, Swansea. Works: King's Dock, Swansea; Mansel, Port Talbot; Wern, Briton Ferry
- 1902 The company was established and registered on 7 April, to acquire the businesses of iron and steel manufacturers, and colliery and iron proprietors, of E. P. and W. Baldwin, Wright, Butler and Co, Alfred Baldwin and Co, the Bryn Navigation Colliery Co and the Blackwall Galvanised Iron Co. [1]
- 1914 Iron masters and colliery proprietors. Specialities: round, square and hoop iron; bar, angle and tee steel; black and galvanized sheets, tinned sheets, tinplates etc. The company has its own blast furnaces and steel works and numerous factories where steel bars are converted into a variety of metal sheets. Employees 6,000. The following brands are important features of the company's output:
- In galvanized sheets: "Phoenix" corrugated, plain and best sheets for seaming and working-up; "Lion and Crown" best dead flat galvanized sheets.
- In black sheets: "Vale", "Shield" and "Lion and Crown" dead flat and suitable for trunks, pipes etc., "Plough", a cheaper brand for ordinary use.
- In tinned sheets: "Baldwin-Wilden", "Cookley K" and "Lion and "Crown" made in best coke finish and heavily-coated charcoal finish for dairy work, gas meters etc.
- In tinplates: "Cookley K", "Cookley CSS" or "Wilden", "Wolverley", "Unicorn", "Cookley Coke" and "Stour"; and for Welsh tinplates "Kemys", "Kama", "Keblah", "Kaolin", "Karoo", "King's Dock, Swansea" and "Galles". [2]
- 1918 New private steel company formed by Baldwins, their bankers and associates; it was called the British Steel Corporation; it had acquired the Briton Ferry Works and extensive land between the Swansea docks and the Neath River to host blast furnaces and coke ovens[3].
- 1919 the British Steel Corporation was acquired by Baldwins which then would have more productive capacity than any similar undertaking in the U.K.; Baldwins was also said to be planning to move into the manufacturing side of the steel business[4].
- By 1927 Baldwins had acquired the Brymbo Steel Co, the Coytrahen Park Colliery Co, the Cribbwr Fawr Collieries, the Taff Rhondda Steam Navigation Coal Co, and the Ton Phillip Rhondda Colliery Co in South Wales, as well as other metallurgical and allied companies[5].
- 1927 See for information on the company and its history.
- 1930 Amalgamation of South Wales Steel works with those of GKN to form British Iron and Steel Co.
- 1934 See Baldwins: 1934 Review
- 1937 British Industries Fair Advert for Welsh Tinplate Works. (Engineering/Metals/Quarry, Roads and Mining/Transport Section - Stand No. D.328). [6]
- 1937 Steel sheet manufacturers[7].
- In 1945 Baldwins and Richard Thomas and Co merged creating Richard Thomas and Baldwins, an organisation of some 27,000 employees.
See Also
Sources of Information
- ↑ The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908
- ↑ 1914 Whitakers Red Book
- ↑ The Times, 30 October 1918
- ↑ The Times, 21 January 1919
- ↑ Aberconway Chapter 17
- ↑ 1937 British Industries Fair Advert pp666 and 667; and p331
- ↑ 1937 The Aeroplane Directory of the Aviation and Allied Industries
[[Category: Town - Swansea