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 162,237 pages of information and 244,492 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.

Difference between revisions of "Stanley Co"

From Graces Guide
Line 1: Line 1:
1772 Thomas Patten (which one?) established the Stanley Copper Works at St. Helens, on land 'adjacent to the Gerrard Coal wharf'. Apparently 30 tons per week were cast into brass and copper ingots.
By 1785 the copper works was under the ownership of a new consortium headed by [[Thomas Williams (2)|Thomas Williams]] with Michael Hughes as manager, though Alexander Chorley was responsible for day to day operation. Corley died in 1803 and management of the copper works was taken over by William Morgan.<ref>[http://www.stanleymill.org.uk/documents/2009-Excavation-StanleyBank.pdf] 'An Archaeological Excavation at Stanley Bank, St Helens, Merseyside'. NGR SJ 538 972 March 2009, by M. Adams</ref>
[[Thomas Williams (2)|Thomas Williams]] set up the [[Stanley Co]] as a separate company from the [[Mona Mine Co]] to smelt the ore from the mine. The works were near St Helens and also Middle bank works in Swansea.
[[Thomas Williams (2)|Thomas Williams]] set up the [[Stanley Co]] as a separate company from the [[Mona Mine Co]] to smelt the ore from the mine. The works were near St Helens and also Middle bank works in Swansea.


A subsidiary manufacturing company called the [[Greenfield Copper and Brass Co]] was set up in Flintshire. This company took the copper from the Stanley works and reacted it with calamine to make brass. This was then used to make a wide variety of articles.  
A subsidiary manufacturing company called the [[Greenfield Copper and Brass Co]] was set up in Flintshire. This company took the copper from the Stanley works and reacted it with calamine to make brass. This was then used to make a wide variety of articles.  


1785 Stanley Copper Works became the [[Stanley Co|Stanley Smelting Co]]. The exact location of the copper works is not known, but it was close to the iron slitting mill and may have been situated on the track to Stanley Bank Farm. The copper ore is thought to have been the [[Parys Mountain]] in Anglesey.  Copper production had ceased by 1815. Note: The iron slitting mill was established in 1773 by  a partnership of Alexander Chorley, Thomas Leech, John Postlethwaite and John Rigby, slitting iron from the furnaces at Carr Mill to the north of Stanley Bank.<ref>[http://www.stanleymill.org.uk/history.htm] Stanley Mill website</ref>
1785 Stanley Copper Works became the [[Stanley Co|Stanley Smelting Co]]. The exact location of the copper works is not known, but it was close to the iron slitting mill and may have been situated on the track to Stanley Bank Farm. The source of the copper ore is thought to have been the [[Parys Mountain]] in Anglesey.  Copper production had ceased by 1815. Note: The iron slitting mill was established in 1773 by  a partnership of Alexander Chorley, Thomas Leech, John Postlethwaite and John Rigby, slitting iron from the furnaces at Carr Mill to the north of Stanley Bank.<ref>[http://www.stanleymill.org.uk/history.htm] Stanley Mill website</ref>


1787 The '''Stanley Co.''' operated the Middle Bank (or Plas Canol) Copper Works in Swansea from 1787 onwards<ref>Morgannwg, Vol. 23 1979 Enterprise and capital for non-ferrous metal smelting in Glamorgan, 1694-1924 [http://welshjournals.llgc.org.uk/browse/viewpage/llgc-id:1169834/llgc-id:1172253/llgc-id:1172308/getText]</ref>.
1787 The '''Stanley Co.''' operated the Middle Bank (or Plas Canol) Copper Works in Swansea from 1787 onwards<ref>Morgannwg, Vol. 23 1979 Enterprise and capital for non-ferrous metal smelting in Glamorgan, 1694-1924 [http://welshjournals.llgc.org.uk/browse/viewpage/llgc-id:1169834/llgc-id:1172253/llgc-id:1172308/getText]</ref>.

Revision as of 18:30, 29 August 2016

1772 Thomas Patten (which one?) established the Stanley Copper Works at St. Helens, on land 'adjacent to the Gerrard Coal wharf'. Apparently 30 tons per week were cast into brass and copper ingots.

By 1785 the copper works was under the ownership of a new consortium headed by Thomas Williams with Michael Hughes as manager, though Alexander Chorley was responsible for day to day operation. Corley died in 1803 and management of the copper works was taken over by William Morgan.[1]

Thomas Williams set up the Stanley Co as a separate company from the Mona Mine Co to smelt the ore from the mine. The works were near St Helens and also Middle bank works in Swansea.

A subsidiary manufacturing company called the Greenfield Copper and Brass Co was set up in Flintshire. This company took the copper from the Stanley works and reacted it with calamine to make brass. This was then used to make a wide variety of articles.

1785 Stanley Copper Works became the Stanley Smelting Co. The exact location of the copper works is not known, but it was close to the iron slitting mill and may have been situated on the track to Stanley Bank Farm. The source of the copper ore is thought to have been the Parys Mountain in Anglesey. Copper production had ceased by 1815. Note: The iron slitting mill was established in 1773 by a partnership of Alexander Chorley, Thomas Leech, John Postlethwaite and John Rigby, slitting iron from the furnaces at Carr Mill to the north of Stanley Bank.[2]

1787 The Stanley Co. operated the Middle Bank (or Plas Canol) Copper Works in Swansea from 1787 onwards[3].

1790 Copper ore had been mined at Ecton in the Manifold Valley from the mid-18th century. In 1790 Thomas Patten bought a tin-plate factory alongside the river at Oakamoor and developed a large copper works (Cheadle Copper and Brass Co). The Froghall to Uttoxeter canal was built in 1799-1811, linking Oakamoor to the Caldon Canal. The Cheadle Copper Co. thrived in the 19th century, specialising in copper wire. It finally closed in the 1960s.[4]

1802 Pascoe Grenfell was admitted as a shareholder of the Stanley smelting company


See Also

Loading...

Sources of Information

  1. [1] 'An Archaeological Excavation at Stanley Bank, St Helens, Merseyside'. NGR SJ 538 972 March 2009, by M. Adams
  2. [2] Stanley Mill website
  3. Morgannwg, Vol. 23 1979 Enterprise and capital for non-ferrous metal smelting in Glamorgan, 1694-1924 [3]
  4. [4] Peak District Information - Oakamoor, Staffordshire
  • Parys Underground Group [5]