Appleby-Frodingham Steel Co









of Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire. Telephone: Scunthorpe 131. Telegraphic Address: "Appfrod, Scunthorpe".
1864 Work began on the Frodingham Ironworks, near the village of the same name and now part of Scunthorpe. The first furnace was blown-in during May 1865. The first casts gave a daily make of five tons; later this was increased to twelve tons.
1876 Appleby Ironworks's first furnaces were ready for blowing.
The output of the early producers in the Scunthorpe was basic pig iron which was suitable for forging but less useful for foundry work because of its relatively high manganese content. Much of the pig iron was therefore sent to the bar, sheet and wire trade of Staffordshire.
1887 Crude steel was first made at Frodingham, but this was considered not to be viable.
1890 Frodingham Iron Co made the first steel in the area by the basic process of Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, after seeking outside specialist help[1].
1912 The Appleby-Frodingham Steel Co was formed by Frodingham Iron Co's take-over of the Appleby Iron Co. These 2 companies, located in villages near Scunthorpe, were amongst the areas oldest iron producers in the area.
1918 Joined Steel, Peech and Tozer and Samuel Fox and Co to form United Steel Companies, providing a source of ore and basic pig iron for the works in Sheffield.
1931 The Frodingham plant absorbed the North Lincolnshire Iron Works and the Trent Iron Works in 1936.
1937 British Industries Fair Advert as part of The United Steel Companies. Steel Constructional Materials, Steel Plates, Steel Sheet Piling. (Engineering/Metals/Quarry, Roads and Mining/Transport Section - Stand Nos. D.713 and D.612) [2]
The Scunthorpe Works of Corus, formerly the Appleby-Frodingham Steel Co, has been producing iron since 1865 and steel since 1890. It remains one of the UK's premier steel plants with a current capacity of 4·8 Mt/year of liquid steel. Today the Works remains as an integrated site with a somewhat unique mix of products including heavy plates, sections, semi-finished billets and slabs, wire rods and fabricated construction products, with rails being introduced from 2007.
See Also
- 1937 British Industries Fair
- 1939 Suppliers to the Aircraft Industry
- 1950 British Industries Fair: Companies A
- 1962 Health and Safety Exemptions
- Appleby Frodingham Ironworks
- Appleby Iron Co
- British Steel
- British Steel: 1986 Constituent Companies
- C. F. Kettleborough
- Engineering 1935 Jul-Dec: Index: Paragraphs
- Engineering 1938 Jul-Dec: Index: General
- Engineering 1938 Jul-Dec: Index: Paragraphs
- Engineering 1942 Jul-Dec: Index: General
- Engineering 1949 Jul-Dec: Index: General
- Engineering 1958 Jul-Dec: Index
- Engineering 1968 Jan-Jun: Index
- Frodingham Iron Co
- Frodingham Iron and Steel Co
- Hugh M. Henderson
- James Henderson
- North Lincolnshire Iron Works
- R. D. Lister
- Steel, Peech and Tozer
- The Engineer 1935 Jul-Dec: Index
- The Engineer 1937 Jan-Jun: Index
- The Engineer 1938 Jan-Jun: Index
- The Engineer 1939 Jan-Jun: Index
- The Engineer 1939 Jul-Dec: Index
- The Engineer 1946 Jul-Dec: Index
- The Engineer 1947 Jul-Dec: Index
- The Engineer 1949 Jul-Dec: Index
- The Engineer 1950 Jul-Dec: Index
- Thomas Thomson
- Trent Iron Works
- United Coke and Chemicals Co
- United Steel Companies
- United Steel Structural Co
- [1] Wikipedia
Sources of Information
- ↑ The Industrial Base of Scunthorpe http://www.visitoruk.com/historydetail.php?id=1099&cid=1207&f=scunthorpe
- ↑ 1937 British Industries Fair Advert p665; and p328