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.

Coltness Iron Co

From Graces Guide
1912
1927.

Coltness Iron Works, Newmains, Lanarkshire.

of 138 West George Street, Glasgow.

Manufacturers of the Famous 'Coltness' Brand.

1836 Company established.

1836 Thomas Houldsworth of Farnsfield, M.P. for Nottingham, Henry Houldsworth's brother, bought the Coltness estate

1837 He established the Coltness Iron Works.

1845 'Monster Engine' for blowing ten furnaces erected at Newmains by Murdoch, Aitken and Co. 54-inch bore, 9 ft stroke, 31 ton beam, flywheel 30 ft dia. Designed for 60 psi steam pressure.[1]

1899 The company was registered on 10 July, to take over the business of a private company of the same name. [2]

1914 Iron and coal masters, steel and iron founders, chemical manufacturers, Portland cement manufacturers.[3]

1937 New Tube Works on the Clyde

1951 Coltness Iron Co was renamed Coltness Holdings and would be put into liquidation; a new company also called Coltness Iron Co was incorporated to hold the continuing busineses[4]

1951 Coltness Iron Co Ltd was formed to operate the assets not subject to nationalisation. Coltness Holdings Ltd was put into liquidation[5]

1952 Works at Newmains advertised for sale. Included steel foundry, iron foundry, engineering shop, smithy and colliery hutch department. [6]. Foundries at Newmains acquired by G. and J. Weir who intended to keep them working[7]

1952 Coltness Iron Co was listed as a public company.

1955 Coltness Iron Works closed.

By 1956 was known as a cement and brick manufacturer[8]

1956 Acquired J. and W. Somerville, old established maker of nails[9]

1964 Business became Coltness Industries Ltd. Chairman Lt. Col. J. F. H. Houldsworth.Group headquarters at Clive House, India Street, Glasgow.[10]

1964 Recognition that diversification may have been undertaken too fast; there had been production problems with Webster skirting heating made by J. and W. Somerville, whose main business was making nails; there had also been problems refitting high speed launches; demand for bricks had increased; several enquiries had been received from Eastern Europe for Beckett and Anderson hydrostatic machines[11]

1972 Coltness Group was reorganised into a divisional structure[12]:

  • Coltness Fastenings
  • Coltness Brickworks, with 4 brickworks in Scotland
  • Coltness Securities

1973 Coltness Group acquired Pope and Pearson; transfer of the brickworks, Coltness Brickworks and Ernest Abrams (Brickworks) (acquired recently), to Pope's[13]

1977 Acquired by Aurora Holdings[14]

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. Stirling Observer - Thursday 16 January 1845
  2. The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908
  3. 1914 Whitakers Red Book
  4. The Times Sept. 14, 1951
  5. The Times Dec. 2, 1952
  6. Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Thursday 11 September 1952
  7. The Times Oct. 20, 1952
  8. The Times Feb. 18, 1956
  9. The Times Dec. 6, 1956
  10. Wishaw Press - Friday 22 May 1964
  11. The Times Friday, Jan. 1, 1965
  12. The Times June 1, 1973
  13. The Times Oct. 9, 1973
  14. The Times Aug 06, 1977
  • Glasgow Men [1]