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 162,258 pages of information and 244,499 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.

Pease and Partners

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1926.
1940.

of 92 Northgate, Darlington

1882 Announcement that Joseph Pease and Partners, colliery owners, and J. W. Pease and Co, ironstone and mineral quarry owners, would be amalgamated as Pease Partners Ltd; the ownership would be divided between the existing owners[1]. The name adopted seems to have been Pease and Partners

1887 Gorton and Co built vertical boiler locomotives and supplied them to Pease and Partners for the Normanby Iron Works

1898 Public company registered on 11 October, to take over the collieries, ironstone mines and limestone quarries of Pease and Partners Ltd.

1898 Pease and Partners presented their engine Derwent to the North Eastern Railway. It was placed on a plinth at Darlington's Bank Top station and displayed there for many years[2].

1903 Sir Joseph Whitwell Pease died; Sir David Dale became chairman. Had Acquired Eldon Colliery from South Durham Coal Co[3].

1903 The collieries of the South Durham Coal Co were purchased. [4]

c.1905 Purchased Wilson, Pease and Co's interest (presumably in this company) from Barclay and Co[5]

1914 Coal, ironstone and limestone owners.[6]

1923 Pease and Partners purchased all of the Ordinary shares of William Whitwell and Co; arrangement made that Whitwells would purchase a considerable portion of their mineral supplies from Pease[7].

By 1924 the firm had consolidated several subsidiaries in the parent company - Normanby Iron Works Co, Witton Fire Brick Co, Wilson, Pease and Co, Chilton Colliery[8]

1927 The firm had a controlling interest in several local companies or ironworks: the Skinningrove Iron Co, with its rolling-mills; the Lackenby Iron Co; the Normanby Iron Works; the Tees Iron Works; the Tees-bridge Iron Works; the Thornaby Ironworks; the North Bitchburn Coal Co; W. Stobart and Co and T. and R. W. Bower, a South Yorkshire firm; see Aberconway for further information.

1945 Preparations were being made for the nationalization of the company's coal mines[9].

1951 The Iron and Steel Corporation of Great Britain acquired Pease and Partners's Lingdale Ironstone Mines Ltd and Normanby Iron Works Ltd[10].

1953 Closure of 3 subsidiaries - Henry Stobart and Co, East Hetton Collieries and Cottages Ltd[11]. 1954 The company only had 3 subsidiaries - the small paints company was closed; this left Tees Foundries and Deepwater Wharf Ltd; negotiations were continuing about compensation for the mines[12]

1957 The last remaining subsidiary, Tees Foundries, was absorbed into the parent company[13].

1958 Output of the foundries had been lower than previous year due to reduced demand by British Transport Commission[14].

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Times, 14 August 1882
  2. Railway Heritage [1]
  3. The Times, 7 August 1903
  4. The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908
  5. The Times, Aug 10, 1905
  6. 1914 Whitakers Red Book
  7. The Times, 17 May 1923
  8. The Times , May 29, 1924
  9. The Times 30 June 1945
  10. London Gazette, 23 February 1951
  11. The Times, 20 July 1953
  12. The Times, 2 July 1954
  13. The Times, 11 August 1958
  14. The Times, 25 August 1958