My books on manufacturing

My books on manufacturing
My books on manufacturing history

Saturday, February 15, 2025

Northampton manufacturing history

 In my perambulation around the manufacturing towns of Britain, I have normally found the presence of raw materials and water, ideally navigable. Northampton had no coal nearby and its river, the Nene, was only navigable some miles toward the sea. It was, though, on road routes from London to the north and so enjoyed the trade from passing coaches, much like Stamford. Unlike Stamford, it was the shire town and carried on all the administrative functions. It was in the middle of livestock farming country and so had a market, but also access to hides, of which more later.



Poor communications were hard to address. The Grand Junction Canal passed the town by as did the north-south railway. Anyone visiting Northampton by canal boat will know well the reason: the link from the Nene to the Grand Junction Canal demands some seventeen locks to descend one hundred and twenty feet. This link to the canal system completed in 1815 did open the town to more trade and that is where hides come in.

It was of course the shoe making industry that provided the economic growth that Northampton needed. It was a cottage industry, but quite substantial. Boots and shoes were made for the local market, but also further afield including the plantations of the West Indies. The Peninsula war created a strong demand for boots for Wellington's army. A strike by London boot makers added significantly to Northampton's business since wage rates were much lower. It wasn't only boots, it was said the Northampton lace was superior to that made in Nottingham.

The railways were a bone of contention. Land owners hated them; townsfolk knew they would be good for business. They were also not very good on steep inclines like that up from Northampton. For this reason Robert Stephenson chose to route the London Birmingham railway around the town. Nevertheless, the town did get a railway in 1845, linking it both to Peterborough and to the London Birmingham line. This enabled the cheaper import of coal and export of agricultural produce and footwear.

The footwear industry did take off, but still in small cottage units except for a very few factory employers such as William Parker and John Groom each producing 80,000 pairs of footwear a year with 800 employees. Moses Philip Manfield was not far behind. Their employees were said to be better off than their home working counterparts, given the opportunities the factories had for better ventilation of noxious fumes. Child labour was more prevalent in smaller businesses, indeed schools tried to include work based learning in their timetables.

The mid-point of the century brought to Northampton, as elsewhere, the issue of mechanisation. With footwear production it was the American invention of a sewing machine for shoes. The fear, as elsewhere, was the loss of jobs, particularly for men since the view was that women could manage sewing machines. A little later, machines for riveting soles were on offer, but not enthusiastically welcomed by masters for in the beginning they proved slower and less reliable than hand work. Finally machines to stitch soles to uppers came along and the battle was lost; the industry had become mechanised. Interestingly it seems that home working continued, but with machines in the home. It seems also that this was the case in Wellingborough and Kettering as well as Northampton and its surrounding villages.

The turn of the twentieth century witnessed a great change. Home working was nearly a thing of the past. Manfield, run by Moses's sons, employed 1,000 men and women in a single story building. Crocket & Jones and Truform (part of Sears & So) employed about the same number. Charles and Edward Lewis employed nearer 1,500, whilst Barratts were still comparatively new but distinctly ambitious. Church & Co boasted 'every conceivable style and material'. William Wren made shoe polish and Horton and Arlidge, cardboard boxes. Some seven manufacturers had come together to form Northampton Shoe Machinery Co first supplying American machines but then manufacturing them under licence. Machinery also came from the International Goodyear Shoe Machinery Company.

Other businesses made cycles and motor cars. Mulliner made the bespoke car bodies for manufacturers to add to their engine and chassis. Bassett-Loake made beautiful model trains and yachts. Importantly for the future, Smith, Major and Stevens made lifts.

The First World War saw Mulliner's factory producing munitions and military vehicles. Of far more significance, the Northampton shoe companies produced 23 million pairs of footwear for British, French and Belgian forces including infantry boots, flying boots, ski boots and canvas shoes. The other shoe manufacturers in the county topped this production at 24 million and together they made up two thirds of the British footwear output between 1914-1918.

The 1930s saw Express Lifts of Leicester buy Smith, Major and Stevens but to continue to manufacture in Northampton. Other arrivals included Rest Assured with beds and Mettoy which later manufactured Corgi toys. Mettoy was encouraged to come to Northampton by Bassett-Loake whose owners played a major role in the civic community which was keen to reduce the town's dependence on shoe making.

The Second World War saw shoe factories producing an ever increasing range of footwear, including shoes designed for deception, so flying boots which could have their uppers removed to reveal ordinary well worn shoes should their wearer be shot down in enemy territory. The Birmingham British Timken company set up a shadow factory near Northampton and this reverted to peacetime work after the war.

The post war years saw the growth of earth moving equipment supplier Blackwood Hodge (owned by house builder Bernard Sunley), but the steady decline of the mass production of shoes. Manfield was bought by the British Shoe Corporation of Leicester and I write in my blog on Leicester of the gathering of former brands into this company owned by the property developer, Charles Clore.

Avon Cosmetics was encouraged to the town in the sixties a little before its designation as a 'new town' under the third wave of such towns in the post-war era. A good number of businesses came to the 'new town'. Black & Decker, set up warehousing and distribution, as did MFI; Henry Telfer employed 2,000 in food manufacturing. The Bernard Sunley Charitable Foundation helped to fund the Blackwood Hodge Management Centre at Nene College.

In 1960 Electronics Weekly reported that 'the extended factory of Plessey Nucleonics at Northampton, officially opened in 1959, has doubled facilities for R&D is this rapidly growing field. During the year, Plessey Nucleonics received an order from the UKAEA for the supply of all nuclear instrumentation for the advanced gas-cooled reactor at Windscale.' This business eventually became part of Ultra Energy. Plessey also manufactured Connectors in their subsidiary Plessey Interconnect.

At the time of writing there are shoe factories still manufacturing in Northampton and neighbouring towns. In the town itself there are Church & Co, Crocket & Jones, Trickers, Edward Green and Jeffery-West. Outside Northampton there are Dr Martens in Wollaston, Grenson in Rushden and Barker in Earls Barton all just outside Wellingborough; then Loake in Kettering and Joseph Cheaney in nearby Desborough.

Express Lifts still has a presence in the town through its lift testing tower built in the seventies and shown in the image.

Further reading:

Cynthia Brown, Northampton 1835-1985: Shoe Town, New Town (Chichester: Phillimore, 1990)

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Stamford manufacturing history

Stamford was in sheep country and townsfolk traded in wool and also manufactured woollen cloth and garments. The town, on the river Welland marking the border between Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire, was one of the five boroughs of the Danelaw along with Leicester, Derby, Nottingham and Lincoln. Unlike them it did not become a shire town, that part to the south of the Welland looking to Northampton and that to the north to Lincoln and its cathedral. Its fortunes changed somewhat when the woollen cloth trade moved more to the Cotswolds and Yorkshire. Yet, Stamford remained important being on routes both east-west as well as north-south, having the Great North Road running through it (although no longer).

William Cecil, Queen Elizabeth I's most trusted adviser, was the son and grandson of Stamford burgesses and became the first Baron Burghley. Of central interest to British manufacturing, he master-minded British patent law which provided protection to those who wished to exploit their inventions here. Many chose Britain in preference to their native land for this reason. The law gave British manufacturers vital protection for the early years of their invention. I wrote of this in How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World. The image is of Burghley House, the home of the Cecils.

In the decades following the civil war, Stamford became a fashionable place for the gentry to live, but at the same time a bustling hub for all kinds of trade. Looking at the occupations of freemen at the time, textiles remained the largest but far from dominant.

The nineteenth century almost passed Stamford by. The town failed to get the north-south railway to pass through the town, the railway company choosing the Peterborough to Grantham route instead. Stamford was eventually linked by the Peterborough to Leicester line. With the exception of Blackstones, the town failed to embrace the steam age, once again yielding the advantage to Peterborough. The other downside of the railways was the much reduced coach traffic and associated spending through the town.

In the twentieth century, Blackstones was producing diesel engines, competing with Hornsby of Grantham (later Rustons & Hornsby) and Ransomes of Ipswich. Hayes & Sons manufactured coaches and JH Pick produced motor cars until 1925. In 1969 Blackstones merged with Mirrlees of Stockport keeping production in both towns under the ownership of Hawker Siddelely as Mirrlees Blackstone

Northern Electric Wireless and General Engineering Company was founded in Manchester in 1935 and shortened its name to Newage Engineers. This company bought Stamford Electrical and moved its generator business to Stamford where, in 1967, it manufactured the world's first brushless alternator. In the 1990s the company spun off its transmission business into Newage Transmissions which became an independently quoted company. Newage Engineers eventually became part of Cummins Inc.

Further reading:

Alan Rogers, The Book of Stamford (Buckingham: Barracuda Books, 1983)

Thursday, February 6, 2025

Grantham manufacturing history

 A good deal of the manufacturing history of this Lincolnshire town revolves round one family and really one man, Richard Hornsby, who on completing his wheelwright apprenticeship at Barnetby-le-Wold joined with blacksmith Richard Seaman of Barrowby. I write of him along with the other pioneering engineers in How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World.

The business manufactured agricultural implements to enable farmers to meet the growing demands for food from England’s increasing urban areas. Importantly, Grantham was linked to Nottingham and the Trent by a canal (in the image) which gave a quicker route to market for agricultural produce and a cheaper way to bring the coal that industry needed. To agricultural implements were added steam engines. It was said of Hornsby that ‘he didn’t invent the portable steam engine, but he developed it so successfully that, for some years, he had a virtual monopoly in its manufacture’. I tell in How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World how oil engines were then embraced through the patent of Akroyd-Stuart.

The business, now based in Spittlegate in Grantham, made a big impression next to the Great Northern Railway which had arrived in 1852. Hornsby steam and oil engines were known across the world. Company reached its peak with 2,000 employees. In the First World War the factory was taken over by the Admiralty for war work.

The aftermath of war saw the end of government work and, as I tell in my blog on Peterborough, a number of companies came together in the Agricultural Engineering Company. Hornsby chose, or were chosen as their partner by, Ruston & Proctor of Lincoln. I write more about Ruston and Hornsby in my blog on Lincoln, not least their role in the development of the tank.

The new company Ruston and Hornsby took on the combined steam and oil engine business. Thirty acres of the Spittlegate site was taken by two companies which had been part of Agricultural Engineering: Aveling & Porter of Rochester and Barford & Perkins of Peterborough. They formed Aveling Barford which also took the Hornsby steam and road roller business. Agricultural implements went to Ransome Sims & Jefferies of Ipswich, another Agricultural Engineering member.

The Hornsby factory, although smaller, remained busy especially during the Second World War when it supplied generators far and wide. Rustons combined with Davey Paxman of Colchester who developed a vertical oil engine. Hornsby took on its manufacture particularly for overseas development projects. The Hornsby factory finally closed in the sixties and Aveling Barford a little later.

Grantham was of course the birthplace of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher under whose watch the manufacturing sector shrank and many famous businesses closed their doors.

Grantham experienced a resurgence with food processing. Fenland Foods was set up by Northern Foods to supply Marks & Spencer. With the ending of the contract, the plant was closed. Other food processing remains in the town.

Further reading:

  • Michael Pointer, Horsbys of Grantham (Bygone Grantham 1978)
  • Michael Pointer, Ruston & Hornsby (Bygone Grantham, 1977)

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

Scunthorpe manufacturing history

 The iron ore fields of north Lincolnshire attracted iron smelting to Frodingham and Appleby, two villages within what became Scunthorpe. Both companies added steel making, but Frodingham's pig iron production from the north Lincolnshire ore greatly exceeded its steel making capacity. This attracted Harry Steel, managing director of the Sheffield firm, Steel, Peech and Tozer, who, in the aftermath of the First World War, anticipated some consolidation in the industry. The two works and others were brought together in what became the United Steel Company. In the thirties both of these Scunthorpe plants were further expanded.

Lincolnshire ore was also exploited by Richard Thomas of South Wales at the Redbourn works. However, a plan to extend this into a major tinplating plant was shelved in preference for renewed investment in South Wales. Scunthorpe received further investment from John Lysaght at its Normanby Park steelworks in order to provide steel supplies for their other metal activities. John Brown of Sheffield had bought the Trent Ironworks in Scunthorpe and after the First World War moved their steel foundry to the town.

The nationalisation of the steel industry brought the Scunthorpe plants under a single umbrella. In 1972 the British Steel Corporation embarked on a ten year plan of modernisation and Scunthorpe was one of the centres identified for further investment.

In 1999 British Steel merged with the Dutch steel maker Koninklijke Hoogovens to form Corus. In 2007 Corus was bought by Tata Steel of India creating one of the world’s largest steel makers. British Steel Scunthorpe was bought from Tata Steel in 2016 and sold on to the Chinese Jingye Group in 2020.

Away from steel, Lebus Furniture built a 250,000 square foot factory in the town. I write about British furniture manufacturers in Vehicles to Vaccines.

Further reading:

J.C. Carr and W. Taplin, History of the British Steel Industry (Oxford: Blackwell, 1962)

York manufacturing history

 A cathedral city second only to Canterbury, York had a university only from 1963, but as I tell below it was a centre of learning. It’s early prosperity was built on the cloth trade, but this declined by the end of the fifteenth century.

It was the home of Rowntree and Terry confectionery and also railway workshops as evidenced by the National Railway Museum. The impact of these industries took off in the 1880s. Terrys were first, being well established by 1851 producing candied peel, jujubes, lozenges and sweets. Rowntree really began in 1879 taking a French invention of crystallised gums, but the business was transformed by Dutch equipment for the processing of cocoa beans which had been taken up first by Frys in Bristol and then by Cadbury in Birmingham. I write about the development of Rowntree in Vehicles to Vaccines.

Railway activity grew alongside that of confectionary with workshops for the repair of locomotives and rolling stock. The locomotive manufacturing work was first undertaken by third parties but then moved to workshops first in York and then in Darlington. York did however take full responsibility for carriages, building state of the art works in the early twentieth century.

It was not a great hub of manufacturing like Sheffield or Birmingham, yet it was chosen as the venue for the first meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science at the invitation of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society. These societies were springing up in towns around the country, often alongside industry, exploring science for its advancement. York then had little industry, but it did have a community passionate about discovery, whether of the city’s history or the world around.

In a volume of papers to mark the 150th anniversary of that first meeting, there is a chapter exploring the path of science and technology in York over that century and a half and it highlights some of the key individuals.

Sir George Cayley (1773-1857) was the inventor of the aeroplane in the first half of the nineteenth century. I wrote about the early days of flight in How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World.

Thomas Cooke (1807-1868) was a maker of fine telescopes applying the skills of mechanical engineering to the work on lenses carried out in his workshops.

Dennis Taylor (1861-1943) was a lens designer taking forward the work of Thomas Cooke whose business diversified into clocks, machine tools, pneumatic pumps, engraving machines and optical instruments.

Henry Hunnings invented a micro-telephone, like many amateurs building on the invention by Alexander Graham Bell. After much legal wrangling, the rights to his transmitter were sold to the United Telephone Company (UK) and the American Bell Telephone Company and the design remained in use for over a century.

Further reading:

York 1831-1981, Charles Feinstein Ed. (York: William Sessions, 1981)

Friday, January 31, 2025

Huddersfield manufacturing history

 Huddersfield provided a commercial centre at its famous Cloth Hall for the many thousands of home working wool weavers in the surrounding district. 

The inventions of which I have written elsewhere slowly changed this settled and quite prosperous scene. In his book The Story of Huddersfield Roy Brook first points to  the error in assuming that wool and cotton were distinct industries. He makes the point that ‘Manchester Goods’ (which incidentally my father traded in East Africa in the early twentieth century and of which I wrote in my book Dunkirk to D Day. The image is of my father on Mombassa railway station in 1911) were a mix of cotton and wool. Similarly the weavers and spinners of Huddersfield almost certainly worked with cotton as well as wool. 

In terms of mechanisation, the first initiatives increased the speed of spinning and thus the weavers had somehow to keep up. I have read elsewhere that exports of thread to the Low Countries balanced the overproduction, but was not welcomed. Mechanisation of weaving had a more dramatic impact, for now factories filled with weaving machines could and did replaced the many thousands of hand weavers. The well known opposition of the Luddites was replicated across the wool weaving areas. Charlotte Bronte’s book Shirley offers a vivid account of what this might have been like. Mechanisation was in fact a gradual process with hand weavers providing cloth along side the much larger mills. 

Huddersfield did have its weaving machine manufacturers, but, for worsted cloth, manufacturers from the west of the Pennines were used, worsted having greater similarities with cotton cloth. In Huddersfield, Haighs were well known for carding engines. Whiteleys became famous for the manufacture of spinning mules and tentering machines. 

Huddersfield developed a chemical industry on the back of dye houses. Read Holliday began with dye but then moved into acids including picric acid which would become essential in the Great War as would lyddite. War also presented a challenge, for German produced materials were key in the supply chain. In time home production took the strain. The company became first part of British Dyestuffs and then of ICI. It is now run by Syngenta.

The introduction of the steam engine, about which Samuel Smiles wrote so engagingly in his Lives of Boulton and Watt, had a dramatic impact on Huddersfield as it had in other textile areas. Broadbents led the field in Huddersfield in steam powered heavy machinery. Hopkinson became well known for their ‘Indicator’ which could tell the operator how a steam engine was performing, highlighting hidden areas where problems may be arising. It was compared to stethoscope for a physician. 

Machinery manufacturers engendered skills applicable in other fields of mechanical engineering, an example being plant for the production of gas.

Karrier trucks were made here and later became part of the Rootes Group.

The introduction of electricity brought about further change and it was Ernest Brook Limited which manufactured electric motors for use in factories. In November 1950, the company produced its millionth engine.

David Brown Gears began in 1860 serving the wool industry and it grew to having fourteen factories with 10,000 employees. I write of its activity with tractors in the Second World War in How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World. It went on to lead Aston Martin Lagonda to great success. It continues to do great engineering as David Brown Defence.

Further reading 

Roy Brook, The Story of Huddersfield (London: MCGibbon & Kee, 1968)

Friday, January 24, 2025

Halifax Manufacturing History

 Halifax was known as a town of an hundred trades, yet its origins were similar to many other Yorkshire wool towns; it was the place that weavers from the large parish of Halifax and beyond would bring their work for sale. The urban area of Halifax was but a small part of a large rural parish in the West Riding. It was in hilly country which offered the advantage of fast running water to power machines but also the disadvantage of making the town less accessible than others by canal and railway.

In 1779 the wool traders built the beautiful Piece Hall which had the capacity to house a significant trade in woollen goods. With accessible water power the new inventions in spinning and weaving could readily be applied in a small but growing number of factories in the town. Coal was expensive to transport and so steam was late in coming to Halifax by which time Bradford had secured a lead in worsted production. Nonetheless the worsted trade prospered in the town as growing urban areas in Britain and abroad sought woollen goods. The Akroyd family stood out in the first part of the nineteenth century. John Holdsworth were noted as providing khaki and navy cloth for the armed forces.

A distinctive trade in the town was the manufacture of carpets. The Crossley family took a lease on Dean Clough Mill in 1801. The business was successful, with many thousands of employees over the years, and continued through to 1987 having joined with two Kidderminster companies to form Carpets International. Production of fine Brussels Wilton carpets continued into the 21st century.

Wool factories needed engineers and Hailfax produced a rather special breed of engineer, the maker of machine tools. I write of machine tools elsewhere in relation to London, Manchester and Coventry. Halifax and Keighley became another centre of the industry. William Asquith was founded in 1865 and became famous for their revolutionary radial drilling machine which replaced the practice of punching in constructional engineering. James Butler, a former apprentice as Crossleys, developed specialist planing machines. Butlers were instrumental in the formation of the British Tool Manufacturers Association in 1917. Cornelius Redman formed another machine tool firm which was bought by the London tool maker Charles Churchill in 1935 to form Churchill Redman.

The fine skills required for machine tool making were equally applicable to jewellery and the firm of Charles Horner became well known. Working with metal extended to boiler making and and heating apparatus. James Royston produced tons of charcoal wire for the first transatlantic cable in 1856.

John Mackintosh left Bowman's cotton mill in 1890 to open a pastrycook business with his popular product, a blend of butterscotch and American caramel. The business grew and soon employed hundreds of women wrapping toffee. Halifax became known as 'toffee town'. In the mid 1920s Mackintosh acquired A.J. Caley chocolate manufacturing business in Norwich, a marriage which produced 'Quality Street'. A fire destroyed the Norwich premises and the whole business moved to Halifax. Mackinstosh joined with Rowntree of York in 1969.

Halifax is perhaps best known now for mortgages. The building society movement began in the nineteenth century and in Halifax two main societies emerged, the Halifax Permanent and the Halifax Equitable which merged in the 1920s. The societies and indeed the local banks which were founded to finance local business attracted to their boards the great and the good of the town and wider parish.

Halifax contributed to the national effort in both world wars. Machine tool companies made all manner of war materiel and textile manufacturers were busy clothing the forces. In the interwar years, Percy Shaw invented 'cats eyes' and founded Reflecting Roadstuds Ltd to manufacture them, enjoying particularly strong demand in the blackout of the war years. In the Second World War Harold Mackinstosh became much involved in National Savings raising money to pay the cost of war. My father was invited by Sir Harold to speak in Halifax in Salute the Soldier Week in June 1944. Here is a link to what he said. The image was taken when he was being introduced.



In the years following the war, textiles enjoyed strong demand for fabric for buses and railway carriage seats. This continues within the Camira Group. Marshalls manufactured paving, but machine tools suffered the decline I described elsewhere with fierce foreign competition which also later decimated the textile industry. Nestle now manufacture Quality Street in Halifax.

Further reading:

John A. Hargreaves, Halifax (Lancaster: Carnegie, 2003)

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...