My books on manufacturing

My books on manufacturing
My books on manufacturing history

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Fareham manufacturing history

Fareham is a coastal town just about half way between Southampton and Portsmouth and it is to Portsmouth I look for clues to the town's commercial success.

I write in my blog piece on Portsmouth of the key role it had in British naval history. It looked to Fareham for key manufactures at its time of greatest need: the Napoleonic Wars. The Navy needed iron for various uses in its ships and a Gosport blacksmith named Henry Cort had taken on a business of supplying chains. Cort was not satisfied by the then current methods of making iron and through extensive experimentation arrived at his puddling process which produced strong wrought iron. In this venture he took on a foundry in Fareham where he produced iron for the Navy. Cort's methods were adopted widely and he is regarded as the father of the iron industry. I write of him in how Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World.

The second contribution came later when Lord Palmerston ordered the building of defences around Portsmouth and this time Fareham supplied great quantities of high quality bricks. There is evidence of the Romans making bricks from the mud of the estuary mixed with shell fragments. Later rich reserves of clay were discovered to make the London Blue which can be seen in much of the railway infrastructure. Fareham Reds can be seen in the Albert Hall and at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight. As well as bricks, chimney pots and tiles were made and supplied to nearly all western counties.The clay was also used for making pipes when tobacco became more generally available. Cigars and cigarettes later put pay to clay pipes.

The third contribution is probably the oldest and is the production of leather. The tanneries of Fareham date back as far as bricks if not farther. Leather was used as a strong flexible material before the days of plastics, as well as for shoes, clothing, bags etc. Coaches and wagons were comprised largely of leather and of course there were many million saddles and bridles. The Army and Navy were major users and hides came to Fareham from all over the country.

There is no record of whether the fourth contribution was supplied to the Navy, it was however enjoyed by many in the towns and cities: strawberries grown over 2,500 acres.

During the Second World War, Fareham became the location for the construction of the Mulberry Harbours for the D Day landings.

Further reading:

Lesley Burton and Brian Musselwhite, An illustrated History of Fareham (Southampton: Ensign Publications, 1991)

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

75,000 blog views

 I am on a virtual tour of Britain seeking to discover its manufacturing history and I am adding posts twice a week. You can find more on my BritishManufacturingHistory website.  https://britishmanufacturinghistory.uk/


Friday, June 13, 2025

Warwick and Leamington manufacturing history

 Nicholas Paris first made his mark in Warwick in 1670 as a blacksmith and clockmaker. In clockmaking he had been preceded by John Wyse who had learnt his craft as an apprentice in London, but it is the Paris family which would be better known. As well as clocks they made guns with wonderful ornamental designs.

Interestingly in his book on Warwick, Charles Lines notes the Napoleonic wars as kick starting manufacturing in the town, but with the weaving of worsted cloth rather than anything to do with metal. William Parkes factory employed 500 people and a 24 hp steam engine.

Of more enduring impact was William Glover a wheelwright whose Eagle Works went on to manufacture what we used to know as dustbin lorries. Eagle merged with Dennis and still manufacture in Leamington.

Another thriving Leamington business is Rangemaster which manufactures cookers. The iron for its AGA cookers was cast in Coalbrookdale. As with so many British companies, factory sites keep the old alongside the new. (the image taken from the canal)

Thwaites dumper trucks have been made in Leamington since 1937. I recall that a former client Newage Transmissions of Coventry supplied Thwaites.

The University of Warwick was well known for its mechanical engineering focused on the West Midlands motor industry. This focus expanded in 1980 by the formation of the Warwick Manufacturing Group with a mission on developing new technologies, products and skills in collaboration with manufacturing industry.

Further reading

Charles Lines, The Book ofWarwick (Buckingham: Barracuda Books, 1985)

Manufacturing places - the art of re-invention

My exploration of British manufacturing has been sector by sector and chronological. I am now beginning to join up the dots and explore thos...