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 162,240 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.

Dud Dudley

From Graces Guide
1923. Monument in St. Helen's Church, Worcester.

Dud (Dudd) Dudley (1599-1684), was an English metallurgist, who fought on the Royalist side in the English Civil War as a soldier, military engineer, and supplier of cannon. He was the first Englishman to smelt iron ore with coke.

1599 Dudley was the illegitimate son of Edward Sutton, 5th Baron Dudley of Dudley Castle, and grandson of Edward Sutton, 4th Baron Dudley. Dudd was the fourth of Lord Dudley's eleven children by Elizabeth, the daughter of William Tomlinson (she died 3 July 1629). His eldest brother was Robert Dudley of Netherton Hall.

1626 Dud married Eleanor (nee Heaton), (1606-1675), on October 12, 1626, at St. Helen's Church, Worcester.

Lord Dudley, though married in 1586 to Theodosia Harrington and having legitimate heirs at the time, seems to have attended to the up-bringing of his natural children by Elizabeth Tomlinson; educating them carefully, and afterwards employing them in confidential offices connected with the management of his extensive property. When a youth, in his father's iron works near Dudley, Dud begun his study of the various processes of iron manufacture. His speculations with the improvement of iron production were encouraged by his father, who gave him an education intended to enhance his practical abilities. He was raised at Himley Hall.

1618 At the age of 20, Dud left Balliol College, Oxford, to take over his father's furnace and forges on Pensnett Chase. There was little wood left in the area, so he resolved to use coal. First, however, he turned the coal into coke, which is a hard, foam-like mass of almost pure carbon made from bituminous coal. He did this via a process like that used for turning wood into charcoal. He soon claimed to have perfected the use of coal instead of charcoal for the production.

1620 Dudley modified his furnace to accommodate the new process, but the quantity of iron initially produced was reduced to about three tons a week from each furnace. Dudd wrote to his father, then in London, informing him of his success, desiring him to immediately seek a patent from King James. Dudley's patent, dated February 22, 1620, was taken out in the name of Edward, Lord Dudley.

His many competitors saw Dudley making quality iron by his new patent process, undercutting them on price, and they put into circulation disapproving reports about his product, appealing to King James to stop him working, by claiming his product was not merchantable.

Dudley proceeded with the manufacture of iron at Pensnett, and Cradley in Staffordshire, and a year after the patent was granted he was able to send a considerable quantity of the new iron for trial to the Tower of London. Under the King's command, many experiments were made with it: its qualities were fairly tested, and it was pronounced "good merchantable iron."

From Dudley Castle the Sutton lords of Dudley controlled a large area of the West Midlands. The most enduring of their legacies was the market town of Dudley itself. There were about 2,000 smiths and workers in iron of various kinds living within ten miles of Dudley Castle. The town of Dudley was already a centre of iron production, in the main supplying the domestic market with such items as nails, horse-shoes, keys, locks, and essential agricultural implements.

With such an obvious abundance of coal, some places being found in seams up to ten feet thick, and ironstone four feet in depth immediately under the coal, and with limestone adjacent to both, Dudd Dudley was the first ironmaster to abandon charcoal burning in favour of experimenting with coal (coke) for the smelting of iron ore.

The new works had been in successful operation little more than a year, when a flood, long after known as the "Great Mayday Flood," swept away Dudley's principal works at Cradley, and otherwise rendered considerable damage across the region.

"At the market town called Stourbridge," according to Dud, "although the author sent with speed to preserve the people from drowning, and one resolute man was carried from the bridge there in the day time, the nether part of the town was so deep in water that the people had much ado to preserve their lives in the uppermost rooms of their houses."

Dudley himself received very little sympathy for his losses. On the contrary, the iron-smelters of the district celebrated the destruction of his works by the flood, anticipating there might be an end to Dudley's pit-coal iron. Dudd, undaunted and with a passion, set to work repairing his furnaces and forges at some great cost; and in a short time was again back in full production.

Other ironmasters continued to seek his downfall, addressing complaints against Dud and his iron to the King. In order to ascertain the quality of the product by testing it on a large scale, the King commanded Dudd to send to the Tower of London, quantities of all the various sorts of bar iron made by him, fit for the "making of muskets, carbines, and iron for great bolts for shipping; which iron", records Dudd, "being so tried by artists and smiths, the ironmasters and ironmongers were all silenced until the 21st year of King James's reign."

Dud's ill fortune continued to pursue him. The patent had scarcely been secured as the English Civil War broke out. Dud Dudley's innovation of smelting iron with coke made of pit-coal, was ahead of its time. It was unappreciated by the ironmasters and the workmen. All schemes for smelting ore with any other fuel than charcoal made from wood were regarded with incredulity.

Dudley himself does not seem to have been able to make more on an average than five tons a week, with seven tons at the outside. Nor was the iron so good as that made by charcoal; as it is admitted to have been notably liable to deterioration by the sulphurous fumes of the coal during its manufacture.

Dudley's last years are obscure. He seems eventually to have retired to St. Helen's in Worcestershire, where he died in 1684, at age 85. He was buried in the parish church there, and a monument, now destroyed, was erected to his memory.


The History and Progress of Metallurgical Science

by Sir Robert Hadfield, taken from The Engineer 1923/11/02[1]

"The work of Dud Dudley should not be forgotten, for he was the inventor and pioneer of that system of manufacturing cast iron which has helped to make the Midlands great. His life is referred to more fully later on. In 1718 (sic) Darby revived Dudley's invention, which had remained in abeyance for over thirty years after his death. Highly skilled moulders' work was carried out at Coalbrookdale about 1710 and onwards, showing that cast iron could be made, producing not only useful but artistic specimens of the decorative art, such as fire-backs and slabs, which are prized all over the world... Read more.


See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Engineer 1923/11/02