Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 115342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,253 pages of information and 244,496 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.

Bradley and Foster

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1920.
1960

of Darlaston Iron Works, Darlaston.

The Darlaston Green site of Darlaston Iron and Steel Co was taken over by Thomas and Isaac Bradley, pig iron manufacturers. The company eventually became Bradley and Foster.

1906 T. and I. Bradley and Sons Ltd was incorporated to acquire the blast furnaces, ironworks, plant, etc. known as the Darlaston Blast Furnaces at Darlaston Green and take-over as going concern the business of pig iron manufacturers; William Henry Smith Bradley was one of the directors; other members of the Bradley family (Bernard Grove Bradley, Barbara Beatrice Bradley) were also shareholders and there were a number of other shareholders.[1]

1909 William Bradley died

By 1911 William James Foster was proprietor of an ironworks - possibly it was this one as he was later recorded as chairman and proprietor of Bradley and Foster

Eventually the firm became Bradley and Foster[2]

c.1923 Incorporated as a public company[3]

1933 Bradley and Foster Ltd. exhibited at Olympia a very wide range of refined pig irons with a variety of compositions suitable for producing cast irons with various properties. Many of the alloy irons were exhibited for the first time. The qualities ranged from low nickel-chrome irons for direct use up to various types of austenitic ingots.[4]

1935 Bradley's (Concrete) had accumulated a small profit but this had not yet been brought into the parent company's accounts[5]

By 1944 R. W. Hale was chairman, G. T. Lunt was managing director, Dr J. E. Hurst was technical director[6]

1945 The company was acquired by Staveley Coal and Iron Co[7]

1950 Opened a new abrasives plant - Bradleys (Darlaston)[8]

1966 National Coal Board took 50 percent stake in Bradley's (Concrete) Ltd with plants at Darlaston and Bilston[9]

1989 Made ferro-chrome castings for coal pulverising equipment for power stations[10]

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. Companies House filing
  2. Companies House filings
  3. The Times July 17, 1944
  4. The Engineer 1933/10/06
  5. The Times June 17, 1935
  6. The Times July 17, 1944
  7. The Times Feb. 14, 1945
  8. The Times, Oct 26, 1950
  9. The Times, Jul 05, 1966
  10. The Times June 16, 1989