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Industrial Change
in Wolverhampton and District
Bilston Steel Works
- History
In 1873 Bilston's involvement
in the metal trade was aptly summarised in the Guide to the Iron
Trade of Great Britain:
" Bilston is surrounded
on all sides by Ironworks,
collieries,
Iron foundries,
and coal mines. The famous iron foundry of T Perry and Sons of
Highfields is near here, where
steam engines,
chilled and soft
rolls, and everything appertaining to an iron
works is made
Messrs Thompson and Hatton's Tin
Plate Works: Grocott's Bradley Bridge; Messrs Hampton, Brierton
and Cole, the Bilston Sheet Iron Company, George Hickman's works,
Mr Alfred Hickman's furnaces and Mr G Merriman's Lanesfield Iron
Works are all in a group, beneath the curtain of black smoke which
forms the normal canopy of Bilston"

Click on the
image to enlarge
Ordnance
Survey Maps 1887 - 1938 showing how the site of Bilston Steelworks
changed over time (sheet No. LXII.15)
Bilston
Steel Works was situated at Spring Vale, Bilston. With the opening
of the Birmingham to Wolverhampton Canal in 1770 industrial activity
in the area increased, and by 1780 the first blast
furnaces were in use.
In 1866 the Hickman family
acquired the works then known as the Springvale Furnaces Ltd. At
the time there were three square old type brick furnaces known locally
as "The Hot Holes" on the site. Between 1866 and 1883
six new blast furnaces were built at Springvale. The furnaces were
hand-fed and the molten iron was
run off into pig
beds. Despite the crude nature of production the furnaces produced
iron of good quality and in large quantities. By the early 1880s
five blast furnaces on the site produced 24,944 tons of iron a year.

Blast
Furnace, Bilston Steel Works c.1940's (L6/BIL/ E/27) Note the diagonal
ramp for filling or charging the furnace. The two hot-blast
stoves are to either side of the furnace: The hot-blast furnaces
operated in groups of three, two providing the heat and a third
providing the blast for the furnace. On the top of the furnace is
a small "bleeder" chimney. This "bleeder" draws
off any surplus gas.

Casting
Pig Iron Alfred Hickman Ltd c.1900 (L6/BIL/I/3)
In 1897
the Springvale Furnaces and the Staffordshire Steel & Ingot
Iron Co were amalgamated to become Alfred Hickman Ltd.
The site
continued to expand. In 1907 the first mills powered by electricity
were installed, an open-hearth
furnace was built in 1911, followed by additional furnaces during
the First World War.

Bilston
Steel Works c 1920 (L6/BIL/E/28a)
The Bilston
works were a major industrial site. During the Second World War
the company was an important shell-making centre. In the early 1950's
a £16million development scheme was put into place.
In 1954 "Elisabeth",
a new blast furnace, was lit replacing three smaller blast
furnaces. Elisabeth alone produced 275,000 tons of steel a year.
In her lifetime she produced more than 5.5 million tons of pig
iron.
The furnace was named
Elisabeth after the daughter of the chairman of Stewarts & Lloyds
Ltd, the owners.

Blast
Furnace "Elisabeth", Bilston Steel Works (L6/BIL/E/41)
However the workmen who
worked the new blast furnace called it " Big Lizzy"!
Bilston
Steel Production 1950-1961
Ingot Tons Made
| 1950
|
224,477 Tons |
| 1955 |
282,907 Tons |
| 1961 |
449,709 Tons |
Extract
from Stewarts & Lloyds Bilston Iron and Steel Works (DX-231/4)
With the completion of
major redevelopments the Bilston works became one of the most modern
integrated works of its kind in the country. However by the late
1970s the works had become uncompetitive and expensive to run. On
12th April 1979 the last steel
billet was cast at Bilston so ending more than 200 years of
iron and steel production on the site.18 months later, on 5th October
1980 Elisabeth was demolished. It was the end of an era and a major
blow to the economy of the area.
For a selection of photographs
from Bilston Steel Works click on the gallery button below.

Click on the image
to enlarge
Bilston
and other steel works - accidents and explosions
The work was heavy and
dangerous. There was a constant risk of explosion. One such incident
took place on 5th November 1884 when a boiler exploded.

Click on the image
to enlarge
Extract
from Midland Evening News 12th November 1884 (DX-482/2/35)
The explosion caused
the deaths of three workmen, all young men in their twenties. This
memorial card was produced at the time:

Click on the image
to enlarge
Memorial
Card Springvale Boiler Explosion (DX482/2/6)
The verse reads:
On November's eve
- the fifth,
In the year of '84,
Three hardy sons of Staffordshire
To labour went once more
'Mid the furnace light and glare,
'Twas indeed a busy scene;
Those sons of toil they little knew
Of the danger - then unseen
A sudden crash!
A peal like cannon's roar!
Good God! What can it mean?
Alas, their earthly toil is o'er!
While destruction reigns supreme.
They wrought and toiled as Englishmen
Know only how to do.
And at the post of duty fell,
Mourned by all who knew.
This explosion was not
the first in the area. On 15th April 1862 an explosion at the Millfields
Ironworks catapulted around 8 tons of molten metal 200 feet into
the air. Twenty seven workers were killed. The explosion also destroyed
ten furnaces and wrecked a forge.

Click on the image
to enlarge
Extract
from the Illustrated London News 26th April 1862 (W3/BOI/4)

Wreckage
from the boiler explosion, 15th April 1862 (W3/BOI/1)
The Millfields Ironworks
had also experienced tragedy a few years earlier. An accident on
5th May 1857 caused the death of five workers including Thomas Fletcher,
listed as a moulder and aged just 9 years.
Alfred
Hickman
Alfred Hickman began
his commercial career with his father GB Hickman, the managing partner
in the Moat Colliery Tipton.
In 1866 the Hickman family
acquired the works then known as the Springvale Furnaces Ltd. At
the time there were three square old type brick furnaces known locally
as "The Hot Holes" on the site.

Alfred
Hickman 1880 (DX-634/122)
Hickman became a prominent
figure. For some years Alfred Hickman was President of the British
Iron Trades Council and president of Wolverhampton Chamber of Commerce.
In 1880 he stood as a
Conservative Party candidate in the general election, but was unsuccessful.
Though five years later he was elected Member of Parliament for
Wolverhampton.

Hickman
Election Poem 1885 (DX-88/1)


Hickman
Election Postcard 1885 (DX-479/1)
In 1882 Alfred Hickman
formed the Staffordshire Steel Ingot & Iron Company Ltd to produce
steel using the Bessemer process.

Sir Alfred
Hickman (Y1/HICK A/5)
In October 1902 Sir Alfred
Hickman (he had been knighted ten years earlier) was given the honorary
freedom of the borough.

Click on the image
to enlarge
Citation
for Sir Alfred Hickman, Freeman of the Borough, 1902 (CMB-WOL-C)
In the Liberal Landslide
elections of 1906 Sir Alfred Hickman again lost his seat in Parliament,
not by a Liberal candidate but by Fred Richards, one of the first
Labour Members of Parliament in the Midlands.
On his death in 1910
Sir Alfred bequeathed parkland - Hickman Park - to the people of
Bilston.

Hickman Park
c.1930 (M1/HIC/12)


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