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 162,257 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.

W. G. Armstrong and Co

From Graces Guide
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1856. Apparatus for Lifting and Hauling.
1866. Water Pressure Engine.

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1868. Field Artillery.
1868.
1868.
1868. Hydraulic Machinery.
1868.
1869.
1870. Corn warehousing machinery at the Liverpool Docks.
1876. 120-ton sheer legs at Elswick.
Steam-driven hydraulic pumping engine at the National Waterways Museum.
1887.
1887.
1890.
1890. Gun. Exhibit at Queensland Maritime Museum.
1890. Gun. (Detail). Exhibit at Queensland Maritime Museum.
1896.
1897.
1898.
1898. Wire winding machine.
1902. Plan of Works.
1902. Plan of Works (Key).

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150-ton Hydraulic Luffing Crane. 1907.
W. G. Armstrong and Co steam pump which originally powered the Tyne swing bridge. Exhibit at the Discovery Museum, Newcastle
W. G. Armstrong and Co Gun at Tangeres. No. 1796.

Sir W. G. Armstrong of Elswick Ordnance Works, Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

1847 William Armstrong established W. G. Armstrong and Co at Elswick Engine Works with a capital of £19,500 plus Armstrong's patents valued at £3,000, to manufacture new hydraulic devices, cranes and bridges, soon to be followed by artillery, notably the Armstrong breech-loading gun, which re-equipped the British Army after the Crimean War. The founding partners were Armstrong, A. Donkin, the solicitor that he was articled to and George Cruddas, his life-long business partner. [1]

The company's first buildings were erected on a narrow strip of land, between the Newcastle and Carlisle Railway and the Tyne, at Elswick, just over a mile to the west of the town. Production commenced in the autumn and some twenty or thirty men being employed.

1847 Built their first railway locomotive

1851 Manufacturing Engineers employing 400 men [2]

1851 Award at the 1851 Great Exhibition. See details at 1851 Great Exhibition: Reports of the Juries: Class V.

1852 Armstrong's Hydraulic Crane. Drawing. Mentions G. W. Armstrong.

c.1863 Armstrong's Hydraulic Works were partnered with the nearby Elswick Ordnance factory, merging the two as Sir W. G. Armstrong and Co

1860-64 Around fifty railway locomotives built in this period

1876 The 100-ton gun, the largest gun in the world [3]

1876 120-ton sheer legs at Elswick featured in The Engineer, 17th March 1876. See illustration. These featured a hydraulic ram for lifting the load, worked by water pressure at 900 psi from the works' hydraulic mains. The sheers were used in shipping 100-ton gun barrels to Italy.

1881 The Elswick Works were described in 'The Engineer', 22nd July 1881. Work in progress included a 45-ton crane for Valparaiso and a lighthouse for Brazil. Some special machine tools are mentioned, including a Whitworth lathe of 36" centre height and 44 ft 6" between centres, another by Fairbairn, Kennedy and Naylor, modified at Elswick, which could swing work 20 ft dia and 4 ft 6" long or 8 ft dia and 34 ft long

1882 W. G. Armstrong and Co merged with Charles Mitchell and Co to form Armstrong, Mitchell and Co. The company was launched with a capital of £1.575M.

1915 Collaborated with the works at A. and J. Main and Co.[4]

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Times, Tuesday, May 16, 1911
  2. 1851 Census
  3. The Engineer of 11th August 1876 p102
  4. The Engineer 1915/04/09, p 368.