My books on manufacturing

My books on manufacturing
My books on manufacturing history

Friday, August 1, 2025

Plymouth manufacturing history

 Set on the western approaches, Plymouth was in many ways Britain's door to the wider world. It was from Plymouth that so many of our adventurers sailed: Sir Francis Drake to the Pacific, the Pilgrim Fathers to America, James Cook to Australia and Charles Darwin to the Galapagos. I have written separately about our adventurers and explore in How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World their role in the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution.

In the later seventeenth century the city became home to a Royal Dock known now as Devonport. The docks built many hundreds of ships and maintained the fleet. In the nineteenth century it was subject to a major extension to allow for larger ships, also the Royal William Victualling Yard was built. The Great Western Railway was linked to the docks. A regular domestic service to Brittany began. The Royal Dockyard in 1912 employed 12,000 civilians. The biggest vessel ever constructed in Devonport was the 30,600 ton Warspite launched in 1913.

Other industries arrived. Isaac Reckitt took over a Plymouth factory in 1905 and made Robin starch and washing powders. Bryant and May experimented making lucifer matches. Their factory burnt down and they moved to London to make Swan Vestas. Lever Brothers developed a presence in the city by buying soap companies.

War time bombing left Plymouth with gaping wounds and the great task of reconstruction began as early as 1942. Reckitts had been bombed and decided to concentrate their activity in Hull. Companies were encouraged to set up: C&J Clark, Slumberland mattresses and Browne & Sharpe machine tools arrived in the fifties. Tecalemit were in production by 1948 as were Berketex dress makers.

Plymouth attracted electronics companies. It is home to Plessey Semiconductors. Bush Television built a factory in Plymouth to expand on its west London premises. BAE Systems have a Systems and Equipment establishment in the city.

A good number of American owned companies have bases in Plymouth and work in life sciences, composites and other technologies. Mars Wrigley make gum in the original Wrigley factory. You can read more detail in this link to research carried out by students in Plymouth.

Burts Crisps was founded in 1999 by Richard and Linda Burt with premises in Kingsbridge. They moved to a bigger factory in Plymouth in 2006.

Kawasaki Precision Machinery has been making hydraulic equipment in Plymouth for 25 years.

The work of the former Royal Dockyard has now been passed to Babcock International at Devonport and Rosyth. Princess Yachts were founded in 1965 and manufacture high class yachts sailed the world over

Further reading:

Crispin Gill, Plymouth - A New History (Devon Books, 1993)

I wanted to explore British manufacturing history geographically, having looked at it chronologically and by sector in my books How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World and Vehicles to Vaccines

Follow this link to a list of the places I have explored to date.

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Taunton manufacturing history

In a sense this is a story about the most simple manufacturing process, the turning of apples into cider. Yet it draws in strands of the commercial world which are common to a great many manufacturing businesses.

Apples grow well in a number of areas of the country and from early times local people have found the benefit of extracting their juice and allowing it to ferment. Being a simple industry, anyone can do it - to a degree. It is also a local industry with lovers of cider fiercely loyal to the taste of the apples they know. The same is true of breweries, except that cider can be made on a very small scale.

R.W. Holder traces the story of Taunton cider back to the Rectors of Heathfield in the early nineteenth century. Rural areas were suffering in what became known as the hungry forties, but land owners generally escaped and it was the poor who suffered. A Rector was in sense a land owner since he lived off the rents of the Glebe and the proceeds of the Tithe. The Rector of Heathfield lived in cider country and was in the financial position to exploit his product and he did so by supplying the rich and famous.

As was the case in many places it was the railway that unleashed the business of Taunton which was not served by decent roads nor by easily navigable rivers. Railways, the GWR, proved ideal to transport hogsheads of cider to London and all parts of the country. The railways also expanded the market for local food producers and Holder tells the story of Mrs Langdon who built a business supplying eggs, chicken and rabbit to the London market.

The Taunton cider business grew by building relationships with brewers and their tied houses. Slowly the number of brewers increased each having a shareholding in Taunton Cider. Mrs Langdon's business, now run by her sons, recognised the role of logistics in their business and realised that they were at heart hauliers and could compete well with the stuck-in-the-mud railways. Langdons grew and Taunton grew and eventually the former was transporting the cider of the latter in large quantities.

The cider market was tough. H.P. Bulmer of Hereford was in the lead, with also Whiteways of Whimple in Devon and Gaymers of Attleborough in Norfolk close behind. The drinks market was also changing. Britvic of Chelmsford and Showerings of Shepton Mallet were transforming the image of the drink. With this background Taunton Cider was sold first to management, then floated on the London Stock Exchange until it became part of Matthew Clark plc and in turn C&C (Cantrell and Cochrane) founded in Belfast but then based in Dublin. C&C already owned Gaymers and Matthew Clark the Irish firm of Magners. The original Taunton Cider moved production elsewhere, but Heritage Cider has taken its place in the town.

Further readings:

R.W. Holder, Taunton Cider and Langdons - a West Country Story of Industrial Development (Midsummer Norton: Bookcraft, 2000)

I wanted to explore British manufacturing history geographically, having looked at it chronologically and by sector in my books How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World and Vehicles to Vaccines

Follow this link to a list of the places I have explored to date.

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Cheltenham & Gloucester manufacturing history

 In the fifteenth century Gloucester was another centre for the wool and cloth industry. Work with iron was if anything more important with smelting from the Forest of Dean and foundries in the city. There is evidence then of further metal trades: cutlers, bladesmiths, coopers, farriers and pinners. In the thirteenth century, more towns had come to be known for their product: Lincoln for cloth (dyed green or scarlet), Grimsby for fish, Corfe for marble and Gloucester for iron.

In the sixteenth century the wool trade declined, but the city was appointed a port which went some way to increase trade, although Bristol continued to dominate. Cheltenham made its name as a Spa Town. The eighteenth century also saw Gloucester run more by the gentry, but the coming of the canals and railways, as elsewhere, brought manufacturing industry to the city.

This was in the shape of one remarkable company, the Gloucester Carriage and Wagon Company formed in 1860. Its traditional business had been fine carriages for the gentry, but the need to transport coal brought in the coal wagon for use on railways of which the company manufactured a great many. The design of wagons was developed and a greater use was made of iron and steel. Passenger carriages were produced mainly for overseas customers. The London Underground became a major customers with carriages produced for a number of lines. The company worked with English Electric on rolling stock for electrified railways. The company ceased manufacture in 1986.

In Cheltenham in 1888, Herbert Henry Martyn founded a company of wood, stone and plaster carvers, metal and glass workers. The company gained a national reputation for the excellence of their work. During the First World War, Hugh Burroughs of the Aircraft Manufacturing Company of Hendon (Airco) was looking for subcontractors to make wooden DH2 Scout aircraft. He was advised to visit Alfred Martyn who had taken over from his father. Burroughs was impressed and gave the order. Clearly a good relationship developed because Burroughs and Martyn set up a new company, the Gloucestershire Aircraft Company, owned by their respective companies.

The Gloucestershire Aircraft Company or Gloster Aircraft as it became, began by building large numbers of Bristol Fighters and Nieuport Nighthawks and, after the war ended, set about using large quantities of surplus Nighthawk parts to produce a series of planes derived from the Nighthawk which they named the Sparrowhawk and many of which were bought by the Japanese Navy. The Schneider Trophy beckoned and the company made a number of racing seaplanes. The interwar years were spent in experimentation as designs were tried out moving from wood to metal construction. This cost dear and Gloster became part of the much larger Hawker Siddeley which drew the company into the Hawker fold. A large number of aircraft were built including the Gladiator, the last bi-plane fighter.

Gloster had the distinction of being the first aircraft manufacturer in the UK or US to design, build and fly an aircraft fitted with a jet engine. I write about the development of the jet in How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World. The company went on to produce the highly successful Meteor.

Gloucester was home to Rotol, formed by Bristol aircraft and Rolls-Royce to manufacture propellers. Dowty Aviation with which Rotol later merged was based in Cheltenham specialising in undercarriages. The Dowty Heritage site has much more excellent detail. George Dowty, the founder of the company in 1930, had been a draughtsman at Gloster Aircraft designing internally sprung aircraft wheels in his spare time. Joe Bowstead and John Dexter joined him on their first contract for struts for the de Havilland autogyro. Soon they went full time and began building a company that would provide vital parts for the growing aircraft industry. George Dowty was a great believer in subcontracting, both to hold steady the company's employee numbers and to drawn on more specialist skills. I write more of the post war British aircraft industry in Vehicles to Vaccines.

With thanks to the Dowty Heritage Trust - Original photo in the Dowty archive at the Gloucestershire Heritage Hub

Unilever set up their Walls ice cream factory in Gloucester. In nearby Coleford, Lucazade and Ribena are produced. Ribena was produce by H.C Carter and was bought by Beecham and joined by Lucazade. They were sold by GSK to Suntori in 2013.

Further reading:

  • Carolyn Heighway, Gloucester - A History and Guide (Gloucester: Alan Sutton, 1985)
  • Peter Dancy, British Aircraft Manufacturers since 1909, (Fonthill Media, 2014).
  • The Engineer 7 October 1971

I wanted to explore British manufacturing history geographically, having looked at it chronologically and by sector in my books How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World and Vehicles to Vaccines

Follow this link to a list of the places I have explored to date.

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...