fbpx
Wikipedia

Coalbrookdale

Coalbrookdale is a village in the Ironbridge Gorge in Shropshire, England, containing a settlement of great significance in the history of iron ore smelting. It lies within the civil parish called the Gorge.

Coalbrookdale
Abraham Darby's blast furnace, Coalbrookdale
Coalbrookdale
Location within Shropshire
OS grid referenceSJ668047
Civil parish
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townTELFORD
Postcode districtTF8
Dialling code01952
PoliceWest Mercia
FireShropshire
AmbulanceWest Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Shropshire
52°38′20″N 2°29′31″W / 52.639°N 2.492°W / 52.639; -2.492

This is where iron ore was first smelted by Abraham Darby using easily mined "coking coal". The coal was drawn from drift mines in the sides of the valley. As it contained far fewer impurities than normal coal, the iron it produced was of a superior quality. Along with many other industrial developments that were going on in other parts of the country, this discovery was a major factor in the growing industrialisation of Britain, which was to become known as the Industrial Revolution. Today, Coalbrookdale is home to the Ironbridge Institute, a partnership between the University of Birmingham and the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust offering postgraduate and professional development courses in heritage.

Before Abraham Darby edit

Before the Dissolution of the Monasteries, Madeley and the adjacent Little Wenlock belonged to Much Wenlock Priory. At the Dissolution there was a bloomsmithy called "Caldebroke Smithy". The manor passed about 1572 to John Brooke, who developed coal mining in his manor on a substantial scale. His son Sir Basil Brooke was a significant industrialist, and invested in ironworks elsewhere. It is probable that he also had ironworks at Coalbrookdale, but evidence is lacking. He also acquired an interest in the patent for the cementation process of making steel in about 1615. Though forced to surrender the patent in 1619, he continued making iron and steel until his estate was sequestrated during the Civil War, but the works continued in use.

In 1651, the manor was leased to Francis Wolfe, the clerk of the ironworks, and he and his son operated them as tenant of (or possibly manager for) Brooke's heirs. The surviving old blast furnace contains a cast-iron lintel bearing a date, which is currently painted as 1638, but an archive photograph has been found showing it as 1658. What ironworks existed at Coalbrookdale and from precisely what dates thus remains obscure. By 1688, the ironworks were operated by Lawrence Wellington, but a few years after the furnace was occupied by Shadrach Fox. He renewed the lease in 1696, letting the Great Forge and Plate Forge to Wellington.[1] Some evidence may suggest that Shadrach Fox smelted iron with mineral coal, though this remains controversial. Fox was evidently an iron founder, as he supplied round shot and grenade shells to the Board of Ordnance during the Nine Years War, but not later than April 1703, the furnace blew up. It remained derelict until the arrival of Abraham Darby the Elder in 1709. However the forges remained in use. A brass works was built sometime before 1712 (possibly as early as 1706), but closed in 1714.[2]

Industrial Revolution edit

 
Coalbrookdale in 1758
 
Coalbrookdale by Night, painted 1801 by Philip James de Loutherbourg, The Madeley wood furnaces, Madeley Wood Company

In 1709, the first Abraham Darby rebuilt Coalbrookdale Furnace,[3] and eventually used coke as his fuel. His business was that of an ironfounder,[3] making cast-iron pots and other goods, an activity in which he was particularly successful because of his patented foundry method, which enabled him to produce cheaper pots than his rivals. Coalbrookdale has been claimed as the home of the world's first coke-fired blast furnace; this is not strictly correct, but it was the first in Europe to operate successfully for more than a few years.[4]

Darby renewed his lease of the works in 1714, forming a new partnership with John Chamberlain and Thomas Baylies. They built a second furnace in about 1715, which was intended to be followed up with a furnace in Wales at Dolgûn near Dolgellau and in Cheshire taking over Vale Royal Furnace in 1718. However, Darby died prematurely at Madeley Court in 1717 – the same year as he began the house Dale End which became home to succeeding generations of the family in Coalbrookdale – followed quickly by his widow Mary. The partnership was dissolved before Mary's death, Baylies taking over Vale Royal. After Mary's death, Baylies had difficulty extracting his capital. The works then passed to a company led by his fellow Quaker Thomas Goldney II of Bristol and managed by Richard Ford (also a Quaker). Darby's son Abraham Darby the Younger was brought into the business as an assistant manager when old enough.

The company's main business was producing cast-iron goods. Molten iron for this foundry work was not only produced from the blast furnaces, but also by remelting pig iron in air furnaces, a variant of the reverberatory furnace. The Company also became early suppliers of steam engine cylinders in this period.[citation needed]

From 1720, the Company operated a forge at Coalbrookdale but this was not profitable. In about 1754, renewed experiments took place with the application of coke pig iron to the production of bar iron in charcoal finery forges. This proved to be a success, and led to the partners building new furnaces at Horsehay and Ketley. This was the beginning of a great expansion in coke ironmaking.

In 1767, the Company began to produce the first cast-iron rails for railways. In 1778, Abraham Darby III[3] undertook the building of the world's first cast-iron bridge, the iconic Iron Bridge, opened 1 January 1781. The fame of this bridge leads many people today to associate the iron-making part of the Industrial Revolution with the neighbouring village of Ironbridge, but in fact most of the work was done at Coalbrookdale, as there was no settlement at Ironbridge in the eighteenth century. Expansion of Coalbrookdale's industrial facilities continued, with the development of sophisticated ponds and culverts to provide water power, and even Resolution, a water-returning beam engine to recirculate this water.

In 1795, the first porcelain factory near Coalbrookdale was founded at Coalport, east of the Iron Bridge, by William Reynolds and John Rose,[5] producing Coalport porcelain.

 
Coalbrookdale Company auction poster, issued in 1910

In 1802, the Coalbrookdale Company built a rail locomotive for Richard Trevethick,[6] but little is known about it, including whether or not it actually ran. The death of a company workman in an accident involving the engine is said to have caused the company to not proceed to running it on their existing railway.[7] To date, the only known information about it comes from a drawing preserved at the Science Museum, London, together with a letter written by Trevithick to his friend Davies Giddy. The design incorporated a single horizontal cylinder enclosed in a return-flue boiler. A flywheel drove the wheels on one side through spur gears, and the axles were mounted directly on the boiler, with no frame.[8] The drawing indicates that the locomotive ran on a plateway with a track gauge of 3 ft (914 mm). This was two years before Trevethick's first engine to tow a train was run at Penydarren in south Wales.[7]

In the 19th century, Coalbrookdale was noted for its decorative ironwork.[9] It is here (for example) that the gates of London's Hyde Park were built. Other examples include the Coalbrookdale verandah at St John's in Monmouth, Wales,[10] and as far away as the Peacock Fountain in Christchurch, New Zealand.[11] The blast furnaces were closed down, perhaps as early as the 1820s, but the foundries remained in use. The Coalbrookdale Company became part of an alliance of ironfounding companies called Light Castings Limited. This was absorbed by Allied Ironfounders Limited in 1929.[12] This was in turn taken over by Glynwed which has since become Aga Foodservice. The Coalbrookdale foundry closed in November 2017.[13]

Several of Coalbrookdale's industrial heritage sites are to be found on the local trail: including: Coalbrookdale railway station, the Quaker Burial Ground, the Darby Houses, Tea Kettle Row and the Great Western Railway Viaduct.

Museum edit

In the century after the Old Blast Furnace closed, it became buried. There was a proposal for the site to be cleared and the furnace dismantled, but instead, it was decided to excavate and preserve it. It and a small museum were opened to celebrate 250 years of the Company in 1959. This became part of a larger project, the Ironbridge Gorge Museums. Its Museum of Iron is based in the Great Warehouse constructed in 1838 and Ironbridge Institute is based in the Long Warehouse, these two form the sides of an open space. On another side of which is the Old Blast Furnace, now under a building (erected in 1981) to protect it from the weather. The fourth side is a viaduct carrying the railway that delivers coal to the Ironbridge Power Station. One of the two tracks is due to be taken over by Telford Steam Railway as part of its southern extension from Horsehay. The Museum's continues to investigate the earlier history of Coalbrookdale, and has recently excavated the remains of the 17th century cementation furnaces, near the site of the Upper (formerly Middle) Forge.

Old Furnace edit

The Old Furnace began life as a typical blast furnace, but went over to coke in 1709. Abraham Darby I used it to cast pots, kettles and other goods. His grandson Abraham Darby III smelted the iron here for the first Ironbridge, the world's first iron bridge.

 
The lintels of the Old Furnace, with inscriptions

The lintels of the furnace bear dated inscriptions. The uppermost reads "Abraham Darby 1777", probably recording its enlargement for casting the Iron Bridge. It is unclear whether the date on one of the lower ones should be 1638 (as it is now painted) or 1658 (as shown on an old photo). The interior profile of the furnace is typical of its period, bulging around the middle, below which the boshes taper in again so that the charge descends into a narrower and hotter hearth, where the iron was molten. When Abraham Darby III enlarged the furnace, he only made the boshes wider on the front and left sides, but not on the right where doing so would have entailed moving the water wheel. The mouth of the furnace is thus off-centre.

Iron was now being made in large quantities for many customers. In the 1720s and 1730s, its main products were cast-iron cooking pots, kettles and other domestic articles. It also cast the cylinders for steam engines, and pig iron for use by other foundries. In the late 18th century, it sometimes produced structural ironwork, including for Buildwas Bridge. This was built in 1795, 2 miles up the river from the original Ironbridge. Due to advances in technology, it used only half as much cast iron despite being 30 feet (9 m) wider than the Ironbridge. The year after that, in 1796, Thomas Telford began a new project, Longdon-on-Tern Aqueduct. It carried the Shrewsbury Canal over the River Tern and was supported by cast-iron columns. Charles Bage designed and built the world's first multi-storey cast-iron-framed mill. It used only brick and iron, with no wood, to improve its fire-resistance. In the 19th century ornamental ironwork became a speciality.

Notable residents edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Baugh (1985), pp. 45–49.
  2. ^ King (2002), pp. 40–41; Cox (1990), pp. 130–311.
  3. ^ a b c Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Coalbrookdale" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 593.
  4. ^ King (2009), p. 56.
  5. ^ Trinder (2000), p. 88.
  6. ^ Trevithick, Francis (1872). Life of Richard Trevithick: With an Account of His Inventions, Volume 1. E. & F.N. Spon.
  7. ^ a b Shropshire. Shropshire County Council. 1980. p. 335. ISBN 0903802-14-7.Article 'Shropshire Railways' by John Denton.
  8. ^ Westcott, G. F. (1958). The British railway locomotive 1803–1853. London: HMSO. pp. 3 & 11.
  9. ^ Trinder (1996), p. 130.
  10. ^ "St Johns Garden, Monmouth". coflein.gov.uk. Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  11. ^ "Public Art in Central Christchurch" (PDF). Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  12. ^ Cox (1990), pp. 131–144; Raistrick (1989); Thomas (1999); Trinder (1978).
  13. ^ "Coalbrookdale Aga foundry to close by end of November". BBC. 21 November 2017. Retrieved 23 November 2017.

References edit

  • Baugh, G.C. (Ed.) (1985) A History of Shropshire, Vol. XI: Telford, the Liberty & Borough of Wenlock (part), Bradford hundred, Victoria history of the counties of England, Oxford University Press ; London : Institute of Historical Research, ISBN 0-19-722763-5
  • Cox, N. (1990) "Imagination and Innovation of an Industrial Pioneer: the First Abraham Darby", Industrial Archaeology Review, XII (1), pp. 127–144.
  • King, P. W. (2002) "Sir Clement Clerke and the Adoption of Coal in Metallurgy[permanent dead link]", Trans. Newcomen Soc., 73A, pp. 33–52.
  • King, P. W. "Technological Advance in the Severn Gorge", in P. Belford et al., Footprints of Industry: papers from the 300th anniversary conference at Coalbrookdale, 3–7 June 2009 (BAR British Series 523, 2010).
  • Labouchere, Rachel – Deborah Darby of Coalbrookdale – Sessions: York, 1993.
  • Labouchere, Rachel – Abiah Darby of Coalbrookdale, 1716–93, Wife of Agraham Darby II – Sessions : York, 1988.
  • Raistrick, Arthur (1989) Dynasty of iron founders: the Darbys and Coalbrookdale, 2nd rev. ed., Coalbrookdale : Sessions Book Trust/Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust, ISBN 1-85072-058-4
  • Thomas, E. (1999) Coalbrookdale and the Darby family: the story of the world's first industrial dynasty, York : Sessions/Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust, ISBN 1-85072-217-X
  • Trinder, B. (1978) The Darbys of Coalbrookdale, Rev. imp., London : Phillimore/Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust, ISBN 0-85033-305-9
  • Trinder, B. (1996) The Industrial Archaeology of Shropshire, Chichester : Phillimore, ISBN 0-85033-989-8
  • Trinder, B. (2000) The Industrial Revolution in Shropshire, 3rd rev. ed., Chichester : Phillimore, ISBN 1-86077-133-5
  • Geordan Hammond and Peter S. Forsaith (eds), Religion, Gender, and Industry: Exploring Church and Methodism in a Local Setting (Eugene, OR, Pickwick Publications, 2011).

Further reading edit

  • Belford, P. (2007). (PDF). Industrial Archaeology Review. 29 (2): 133–148. doi:10.1179/174581907X234027. S2CID 110369508. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 February 2012.
  • Berg, Torsten and Berg, Peter (transl.) (2001) R.R. Angerstein's illustrated travel diary, 1753–1755: industry in England and Wales from a Swedish perspective, London : Science Museum, ISBN 1-900747-24-3
  • Hammond, Geordan and Forsaith, Peter S. (eds). Religion, Gender, and Industry: Exploring Church and Methodism in a Local Setting 21 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine, James Clarke & Co. (2012), ISBN 9780227173879.
  • Scarfe, Norman (1995) Innocent espionage: the La Rochefoucauld Brothers' tour of England in 1785, Woodbridge : Boydell Press, ISBN 0-85115-596-0
  • Trinder, Barrie Stuart (1988) The Most extraordinary district in the world: Ironbridge and Coalbrookdale: an anthology of visitors' impressions of Ironbridge, Coalbrookdale and the Shropshire coalfield, 2nd ed., Chichester : Phillimore/Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust, ISBN 0-85033-685-6

External links edit

  • Coalbrookdale Interactive Census, 1851
  • There was a subsidiary foundry at Liverpool which existed for over 200 years and supplied the engines and cannon for many warships out of the Mersey [dead link]


coalbrookdale, village, ironbridge, gorge, shropshire, england, containing, settlement, great, significance, history, iron, smelting, lies, within, civil, parish, called, gorge, abraham, darby, blast, furnace, location, within, shropshireos, grid, referencesj6. Coalbrookdale is a village in the Ironbridge Gorge in Shropshire England containing a settlement of great significance in the history of iron ore smelting It lies within the civil parish called the Gorge CoalbrookdaleAbraham Darby s blast furnace CoalbrookdaleCoalbrookdaleLocation within ShropshireOS grid referenceSJ668047Civil parishThe GorgeUnitary authorityTelford and WrekinCeremonial countyShropshireRegionWest MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townTELFORDPostcode districtTF8Dialling code01952PoliceWest MerciaFireShropshireAmbulanceWest MidlandsUK ParliamentTelfordList of places UK England Shropshire 52 38 20 N 2 29 31 W 52 639 N 2 492 W 52 639 2 492This is where iron ore was first smelted by Abraham Darby using easily mined coking coal The coal was drawn from drift mines in the sides of the valley As it contained far fewer impurities than normal coal the iron it produced was of a superior quality Along with many other industrial developments that were going on in other parts of the country this discovery was a major factor in the growing industrialisation of Britain which was to become known as the Industrial Revolution Today Coalbrookdale is home to the Ironbridge Institute a partnership between the University of Birmingham and the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust offering postgraduate and professional development courses in heritage Contents 1 Before Abraham Darby 2 Industrial Revolution 3 Museum 4 Old Furnace 5 Notable residents 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBefore Abraham Darby editBefore the Dissolution of the Monasteries Madeley and the adjacent Little Wenlock belonged to Much Wenlock Priory At the Dissolution there was a bloomsmithy called Caldebroke Smithy The manor passed about 1572 to John Brooke who developed coal mining in his manor on a substantial scale His son Sir Basil Brooke was a significant industrialist and invested in ironworks elsewhere It is probable that he also had ironworks at Coalbrookdale but evidence is lacking He also acquired an interest in the patent for the cementation process of making steel in about 1615 Though forced to surrender the patent in 1619 he continued making iron and steel until his estate was sequestrated during the Civil War but the works continued in use In 1651 the manor was leased to Francis Wolfe the clerk of the ironworks and he and his son operated them as tenant of or possibly manager for Brooke s heirs The surviving old blast furnace contains a cast iron lintel bearing a date which is currently painted as 1638 but an archive photograph has been found showing it as 1658 What ironworks existed at Coalbrookdale and from precisely what dates thus remains obscure By 1688 the ironworks were operated by Lawrence Wellington but a few years after the furnace was occupied by Shadrach Fox He renewed the lease in 1696 letting the Great Forge and Plate Forge to Wellington 1 Some evidence may suggest that Shadrach Fox smelted iron with mineral coal though this remains controversial Fox was evidently an iron founder as he supplied round shot and grenade shells to the Board of Ordnance during the Nine Years War but not later than April 1703 the furnace blew up It remained derelict until the arrival of Abraham Darby the Elder in 1709 However the forges remained in use A brass works was built sometime before 1712 possibly as early as 1706 but closed in 1714 2 Industrial Revolution edit nbsp Coalbrookdale in 1758 nbsp Coalbrookdale by Night painted 1801 by Philip James de Loutherbourg The Madeley wood furnaces Madeley Wood CompanyIn 1709 the first Abraham Darby rebuilt Coalbrookdale Furnace 3 and eventually used coke as his fuel His business was that of an ironfounder 3 making cast iron pots and other goods an activity in which he was particularly successful because of his patented foundry method which enabled him to produce cheaper pots than his rivals Coalbrookdale has been claimed as the home of the world s first coke fired blast furnace this is not strictly correct but it was the first in Europe to operate successfully for more than a few years 4 Darby renewed his lease of the works in 1714 forming a new partnership with John Chamberlain and Thomas Baylies They built a second furnace in about 1715 which was intended to be followed up with a furnace in Wales at Dolgun near Dolgellau and in Cheshire taking over Vale Royal Furnace in 1718 However Darby died prematurely at Madeley Court in 1717 the same year as he began the house Dale End which became home to succeeding generations of the family in Coalbrookdale followed quickly by his widow Mary The partnership was dissolved before Mary s death Baylies taking over Vale Royal After Mary s death Baylies had difficulty extracting his capital The works then passed to a company led by his fellow Quaker Thomas Goldney II of Bristol and managed by Richard Ford also a Quaker Darby s son Abraham Darby the Younger was brought into the business as an assistant manager when old enough The company s main business was producing cast iron goods Molten iron for this foundry work was not only produced from the blast furnaces but also by remelting pig iron in air furnaces a variant of the reverberatory furnace The Company also became early suppliers of steam engine cylinders in this period citation needed From 1720 the Company operated a forge at Coalbrookdale but this was not profitable In about 1754 renewed experiments took place with the application of coke pig iron to the production of bar iron in charcoal finery forges This proved to be a success and led to the partners building new furnaces at Horsehay and Ketley This was the beginning of a great expansion in coke ironmaking In 1767 the Company began to produce the first cast iron rails for railways In 1778 Abraham Darby III 3 undertook the building of the world s first cast iron bridge the iconic Iron Bridge opened 1 January 1781 The fame of this bridge leads many people today to associate the iron making part of the Industrial Revolution with the neighbouring village of Ironbridge but in fact most of the work was done at Coalbrookdale as there was no settlement at Ironbridge in the eighteenth century Expansion of Coalbrookdale s industrial facilities continued with the development of sophisticated ponds and culverts to provide water power and even Resolution a water returning beam engine to recirculate this water In 1795 the first porcelain factory near Coalbrookdale was founded at Coalport east of the Iron Bridge by William Reynolds and John Rose 5 producing Coalport porcelain nbsp Coalbrookdale Company auction poster issued in 1910In 1802 the Coalbrookdale Company built a rail locomotive for Richard Trevethick 6 but little is known about it including whether or not it actually ran The death of a company workman in an accident involving the engine is said to have caused the company to not proceed to running it on their existing railway 7 To date the only known information about it comes from a drawing preserved at the Science Museum London together with a letter written by Trevithick to his friend Davies Giddy The design incorporated a single horizontal cylinder enclosed in a return flue boiler A flywheel drove the wheels on one side through spur gears and the axles were mounted directly on the boiler with no frame 8 The drawing indicates that the locomotive ran on a plateway with a track gauge of 3 ft 914 mm This was two years before Trevethick s first engine to tow a train was run at Penydarren in south Wales 7 In the 19th century Coalbrookdale was noted for its decorative ironwork 9 It is here for example that the gates of London s Hyde Park were built Other examples include the Coalbrookdale verandah at St John s in Monmouth Wales 10 and as far away as the Peacock Fountain in Christchurch New Zealand 11 The blast furnaces were closed down perhaps as early as the 1820s but the foundries remained in use The Coalbrookdale Company became part of an alliance of ironfounding companies called Light Castings Limited This was absorbed by Allied Ironfounders Limited in 1929 12 This was in turn taken over by Glynwed which has since become Aga Foodservice The Coalbrookdale foundry closed in November 2017 13 Several of Coalbrookdale s industrial heritage sites are to be found on the local trail including Coalbrookdale railway station the Quaker Burial Ground the Darby Houses Tea Kettle Row and the Great Western Railway Viaduct Museum editFurther information Coalbrookdale Museum of Iron In the century after the Old Blast Furnace closed it became buried There was a proposal for the site to be cleared and the furnace dismantled but instead it was decided to excavate and preserve it It and a small museum were opened to celebrate 250 years of the Company in 1959 This became part of a larger project the Ironbridge Gorge Museums Its Museum of Iron is based in the Great Warehouse constructed in 1838 and Ironbridge Institute is based in the Long Warehouse these two form the sides of an open space On another side of which is the Old Blast Furnace now under a building erected in 1981 to protect it from the weather The fourth side is a viaduct carrying the railway that delivers coal to the Ironbridge Power Station One of the two tracks is due to be taken over by Telford Steam Railway as part of its southern extension from Horsehay The Museum s archaeology unit continues to investigate the earlier history of Coalbrookdale and has recently excavated the remains of the 17th century cementation furnaces near the site of the Upper formerly Middle Forge Old Furnace editThe Old Furnace began life as a typical blast furnace but went over to coke in 1709 Abraham Darby I used it to cast pots kettles and other goods His grandson Abraham Darby III smelted the iron here for the first Ironbridge the world s first iron bridge nbsp The lintels of the Old Furnace with inscriptionsThe lintels of the furnace bear dated inscriptions The uppermost reads Abraham Darby 1777 probably recording its enlargement for casting the Iron Bridge It is unclear whether the date on one of the lower ones should be 1638 as it is now painted or 1658 as shown on an old photo The interior profile of the furnace is typical of its period bulging around the middle below which the boshes taper in again so that the charge descends into a narrower and hotter hearth where the iron was molten When Abraham Darby III enlarged the furnace he only made the boshes wider on the front and left sides but not on the right where doing so would have entailed moving the water wheel The mouth of the furnace is thus off centre Iron was now being made in large quantities for many customers In the 1720s and 1730s its main products were cast iron cooking pots kettles and other domestic articles It also cast the cylinders for steam engines and pig iron for use by other foundries In the late 18th century it sometimes produced structural ironwork including for Buildwas Bridge This was built in 1795 2 miles up the river from the original Ironbridge Due to advances in technology it used only half as much cast iron despite being 30 feet 9 m wider than the Ironbridge The year after that in 1796 Thomas Telford began a new project Longdon on Tern Aqueduct It carried the Shrewsbury Canal over the River Tern and was supported by cast iron columns Charles Bage designed and built the world s first multi storey cast iron framed mill It used only brick and iron with no wood to improve its fire resistance In the 19th century ornamental ironwork became a speciality Notable residents editAbraham Darby II 1711 1763 ironmaster and his wife Abiah Darby 1716 1794 Quaker evangelist Abraham Darby III 1750 1794 ironmaster Arthur Charles Fox Davies 1871 1928 writer and heraldic expert See also editIronbridge Gorge Museums Telford new town Green Wood Centre Resolution Listed buildings in The Gorge Holy Trinity Church CoalbrookdaleNotes edit Baugh 1985 pp 45 49 King 2002 pp 40 41 Cox 1990 pp 130 311 a b c Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Coalbrookdale Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 593 King 2009 p 56 Trinder 2000 p 88 Trevithick Francis 1872 Life of Richard Trevithick With an Account of His Inventions Volume 1 E amp F N Spon a b Shropshire Shropshire County Council 1980 p 335 ISBN 0903802 14 7 Article Shropshire Railways by John Denton Westcott G F 1958 The British railway locomotive 1803 1853 London HMSO pp 3 amp 11 Trinder 1996 p 130 St Johns Garden Monmouth coflein gov uk Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales Retrieved 7 June 2012 Public Art in Central Christchurch PDF Retrieved 27 August 2012 Cox 1990 pp 131 144 Raistrick 1989 Thomas 1999 Trinder 1978 Coalbrookdale Aga foundry to close by end of November BBC 21 November 2017 Retrieved 23 November 2017 References editBaugh G C Ed 1985 A History of Shropshire Vol XI Telford the Liberty amp Borough of Wenlock part Bradford hundred Victoria history of the counties of England Oxford University Press London Institute of Historical Research ISBN 0 19 722763 5 Cox N 1990 Imagination and Innovation of an Industrial Pioneer the First Abraham Darby Industrial Archaeology Review XII 1 pp 127 144 King P W 2002 Sir Clement Clerke and the Adoption of Coal in Metallurgy permanent dead link Trans Newcomen Soc 73A pp 33 52 King P W Technological Advance in the Severn Gorge in P Belford et al Footprints of Industry papers from the 300th anniversary conference at Coalbrookdale 3 7 June 2009 BAR British Series 523 2010 Labouchere Rachel Deborah Darby of Coalbrookdale Sessions York 1993 Labouchere Rachel Abiah Darby of Coalbrookdale 1716 93 Wife of Agraham Darby II Sessions York 1988 Raistrick Arthur 1989 Dynasty of iron founders the Darbys and Coalbrookdale 2nd rev ed Coalbrookdale Sessions Book Trust Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust ISBN 1 85072 058 4 Thomas E 1999 Coalbrookdale and the Darby family the story of the world s first industrial dynasty York Sessions Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust ISBN 1 85072 217 X Trinder B 1978 The Darbys of Coalbrookdale Rev imp London Phillimore Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust ISBN 0 85033 305 9 Trinder B 1996 The Industrial Archaeology of Shropshire Chichester Phillimore ISBN 0 85033 989 8 Trinder B 2000 The Industrial Revolution in Shropshire 3rd rev ed Chichester Phillimore ISBN 1 86077 133 5 Geordan Hammond and Peter S Forsaith eds Religion Gender and Industry Exploring Church and Methodism in a Local Setting Eugene OR Pickwick Publications 2011 Further reading editBelford P 2007 Sublime cascades Water and Power in Coalbrookdale PDF Industrial Archaeology Review 29 2 133 148 doi 10 1179 174581907X234027 S2CID 110369508 Archived from the original PDF on 22 February 2012 Berg Torsten and Berg Peter transl 2001 R R Angerstein s illustrated travel diary 1753 1755 industry in England and Wales from a Swedish perspective London Science Museum ISBN 1 900747 24 3 Hammond Geordan and Forsaith Peter S eds Religion Gender and Industry Exploring Church and Methodism in a Local Setting Archived 21 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine James Clarke amp Co 2012 ISBN 9780227173879 Scarfe Norman 1995 Innocent espionage the La Rochefoucauld Brothers tour of England in 1785 Woodbridge Boydell Press ISBN 0 85115 596 0 Trinder Barrie Stuart 1988 The Most extraordinary district in the world Ironbridge and Coalbrookdale an anthology of visitors impressions of Ironbridge Coalbrookdale and the Shropshire coalfield 2nd ed Chichester Phillimore Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust ISBN 0 85033 685 6External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coalbrookdale Coalbrookdale tour The official Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust site Coalbrookdale Interactive Census 1851 Telford Steam Railway There was a subsidiary foundry at Liverpool which existed for over 200 years and supplied the engines and cannon for many warships out of the Mersey dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coalbrookdale amp oldid 1181007222 Industrial Revolution, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.