Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 164,290 pages of information and 246,083 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.

Walter Macfarlane and Co

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Caversham Public Convenience. Exhibit at Chiltern Open Air Museum.
Caversham Public Convenience. Exhibit at Chiltern Open Air Museum.
Eldon Street Bridge, Glasgow.
Eldon Street Bridge, Glasgow.
Eldon Street Bridge, Glasgow (detail).
January 1880.
January 1888.
August 1899.
Foot bridge at Cark station in Cumbria.
Photographed in Falkland Islands.
Photographed in Falkland Islands.
1868. Door for the warehouses in Cannon Street, London.
Public Convenience. Exhibit at Crich Tramway Museum.
Public Convenience. Exhibit at Crich Tramway Museum.
Public Convenience (detail). Exhibit at Crich Tramway Museum.
December 1907.
May 1928.

of Saracen Foundry, Possilpark, Glasgow, N. Telephone: Douglas 1070/1/2/3. Telegraphic Address: "Saracen, Glasgow". (1937)

1850-1967 Ironworkers

1849-50 Walter Macfarlane went into partnership with Thomas Russell, his brother-in-law, and his friend James Marshall who was a Glasgow businessman.

1851 The company took over an old disused brass foundry in Saracen Lane in the Gallowgate, adopting the street name for the foundry.

1861 Employed 120 persons. It is unclear what products the company was manufacturing at this time.

1862 The company relocated to Washington Street, to a building designed by the architect James Boucher, who developed a close association with the firm.

It is generally accepted that having no children of his own, Walter MacFarlane 'adopted' his nephew Walter Macfarlane (1853-1932) as his own son.

The success of the company was such that a decision was made to move to what was, at that time, a green field site on the outskirts of the city, in the north-west suburb of Possilpark; the site of the Mansion House and grounds of Sheriff Alison were acquired. This was to be the third and final site for Saracen Foundry, built and expanded to a vast scale.

The new foundry building was designed by architect James Boucher who had previously designed the Washington Street Foundry in Anderston. This symbiotic relationship also saw Boucher using and designing Saracen Foundry castings in his own projects at 79 Nelson Mandela Place, and 20 St Enoch Square (Teacher's), both 1875. Boucher was also involved in the design of the villa at Coulport for John Kibble (1861), whose conservatory (by Cousland) was enlarged and re-erected in Glasgow's Botanic Gardens as the Kibble Palace (1871-3). Recent research has identified that the components were made by Saracen Foundry.

The Possilpark Saracen foundry itself covered 80 acres, the remainder laid out as streets and dwelling homes, including those owned by the company in Barloch, Denmark and Hawthorn Streets.

The foundry utilised the railway for the delivery and export of goods and materials.

1872 Relocated to Possilpark

1872 Walter Macfarlane (1853-1932) joined the company.

1875 Sir William Stirling Maxwell visited the site, an extract from his diary of November eleventh stating:

  • I was struck with the immense growth of Glasgow on its North side……..we stopped at Walter MacFarlane's Saracen Foundry newly built on the Possil Estate of which he fued 100 acres - a speculation likely to make a great return. The establishment employs from 70 - 80 Clerks, and almost 1400 workmen, and the workshops extend over 8 acres, all under cover. It is a very interesting and picturesque site. Home by the 4.20pm train…….

The pollution associated with such a massive scale of ironfounding did not go unnoticed however, Walter MacFarlane was nicknamed 'The Laird of Fossiltown'.

Whilst Walter MacFarlane remained the figurehead of the company, his partners, Thomas Russell and James Marshall, were intimately involved in the development and running of the business. Each became wealthy men in their own right.

1879 The processes patented by the firm, which were used in the moulding and casting of rain-water pipes, involved a simple but efficient method of keeping the greensand cores down, and then expelling the cores using bottled-up steam generated inside the casting.

1879 An advertisement was placed in the London/Edinburgh Gazette to the effect noting that Walter MacFarlane Snr, James Marshall and Thomas Russell were to retire as of 31 December. The debts etc. of the company transferred to Walter MacFarlane Jnr and Robert Fulton, both of whom were 'long connected with the business.

By 1880 Walter Macfarlane (1853-1932) had become a partner in the company.

1890 The Trustees of Walter MacFarlane noted in March, that large extensions had been made to the factory, and the tenements owned by the same were in need of repair.

By the 1890s the Saracen Foundry was a major employer, providing work for around 1,200 people. In this period Walter Macfarlane (1853-1932) became president of the Ironfounders of Scotland.

1909 Following in his Uncle's philanthropic footsteps, he gifted land for the construction of Possilpark Library.

The foundry continued in operation in the 20th Century, but saw a decline in the industry and demand for such ornamental cast ironwork.

1914 Ironfounders. Specialities: plain, ornamental and sanitary castings and ornamental wrought iron work of every description. [1]

1937 Listed Exhibitor - British Industries Fair. Architectural and Ornamental Ironwork, including Building Front Panels, Lamp-pillars, Coat-of-Arms, Illuminated Bollards, Railings, Rainwater Pipes, heads and gutters, Soil Drain and Hot Water Pipes and Connections. (Stand Nos. B.909 and B.810) [2]

1965 The company became part of Allied Ironfounders.

1966/9 Absorbed into Glynwed.

1967 The foundry at Possilpark closed.

1993 The company name was bought by Glasgow firm Heritage Engineering. With an extensive archive, this company specialises in the conservation and restoration of architectural ironwork, and continues to manufacture many of the original designs of Saracen Foundry.


Notes
Mr John Winstanley has advised us that he is a descendant of Walter MacFarlane through his daughter Mary who was disowned by her father for marrying a turner. No mention of this daughter is made in any legal documents.

Northern Ireland Railways - Images at right - At least two footbridges built by this firm survive on Northern Ireland Railways; one at Whitehead Station.[3]

See Also

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Sources of Information

  • [1] Scottish Iron Work