Hird, Dawson and Hardy: Difference between revisions
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See [[Hird, Dawson, Hardy and Field]] | See [[Hird, Dawson, Hardy and Field]] | ||
Originally [[Hird, Jarratt, Dawson and Hardy]] ([[Richard Hird]], [[John Jarratt]], [[Joseph Dawson|Rev Joseph Dawson]], and [[John Hardy]]). The partners established the famous blast furnaces at Low Moor, near Bradford in 1790. Jarratt left the business in 1813. <ref>'The Low Moor Ironworks, Bradford' by Charles Dodsworth, Industrial Archaeology, The Journal of the History of Industry and Technology, Vol 8, No. 2, May 1971</ref> | Originally [[Hird, Jarratt, Dawson and Hardy]] ([[Richard Hird]], [[John Jarratt]], [[Joseph Dawson|Rev Joseph Dawson]], and [[John Hardy (Leeds)|John Hardy]]). The partners established the famous blast furnaces at Low Moor, near Bradford in 1790. Jarratt left the business in 1813. <ref>'The Low Moor Ironworks, Bradford' by Charles Dodsworth, Industrial Archaeology, The Journal of the History of Industry and Technology, Vol 8, No. 2, May 1971</ref> | ||
1856 of [[Low Moor Co|Low Moor Iron Works]] | 1856 of [[Low Moor Co|Low Moor Iron Works]] |
Revision as of 16:55, 1 July 2014
See Hird, Dawson, Hardy and Field
Originally Hird, Jarratt, Dawson and Hardy (Richard Hird, John Jarratt, Rev Joseph Dawson, and John Hardy). The partners established the famous blast furnaces at Low Moor, near Bradford in 1790. Jarratt left the business in 1813. [1]
1856 of Low Moor Iron Works
See Also
Sources of Information
- ↑ 'The Low Moor Ironworks, Bradford' by Charles Dodsworth, Industrial Archaeology, The Journal of the History of Industry and Technology, Vol 8, No. 2, May 1971