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Filling factories in the United Kingdom

A filling factory was a manufacturing plant that specialised in filling various munitions, such as bombs, shells, cartridges, pyrotechnics, and screening smokes. In the United Kingdom, during both world wars of the 20th century, the majority of the employees were women.

In World War I, a filling factory belonging to the Ministry of Munitions was known as a National Filling Factory.

In World War II, a filling factory belonging to the Ministry of Supply was known as a Royal Filling Factory (RFF), or a Royal Ordnance Factory (ROF). These were all part of the Royal Ordnance Factory organisation, owned by the MoS.

The filling of smoke screen canisters and other pyrotechnic devices was also carried out by fireworks manufacturers, particularly in World War II, but these are not specifically covered by this article.

Raw materials edit

The filling factories' raw materials, such as TNT, RDX, or propellants, such as cordite, were manufactured in National Explosives Factories (World War I) or Explosive ROFs (World War II) and transported, by railway trains, to the filling factories for filling into munitions, produced at other plants.

High-explosives, such as TNT, had to be heated to melt them and the liquid was poured hot into heated shell cases. Care had to be taken to ensure that there were no voids in the poured explosive charge as this could lead to the shell detonating in the gun barrel during firing.

Shells and gun cartridges were manufactured in the UK, in World War II, by both the Engineering ROFs and private steel works / forging companies. It is believed that the empty brass cartridge cases for small arms were made at the Small Arms Ammunition Factories.

The filling factories produced their own pyrotechnics, such as fuses and screening smokes, as many of these were sensitive materials. They were then filled or assembled directly into the munitions.

They also would have sewn cotton bags for filling with primer composition or cordite charges.

Filling groups edit

Filling factories had a large number of buildings. Buildings were needed on the various groups for filling of munitions. Explosives magazines were required by each group to store the incoming explosive materials and to store the outgoing filled shells or gun cartridges, usually packed in ammunition boxes. Storage buildings were also needed on each group to store the incoming empty shells and the empty ammunition boxes.

For safety purposes, munitions were segregated into different compatibility groups. A World War II filling factory would generally fill several different groups of munitions; and these groups would be located in different geographical areas within the danger area of the filling factory.

The World War II groups were:

  • Group 1: Initiators, such as caps and detonators for primers and fuzes.
  • Group 2: Fuze pellets, exploder pellets, exploder bags.
  • Group 3: Filling of fuzes.
  • Group 4: Blending of gunpowders for time fuzes.
  • Group 5: Filling of cartridges, such as filling cordite into cloth bags or into brass cartridge cases.
  • Group 6: Manufacture of smoke producing compositions.
  • Group 7: Small arms filling.
  • Group 8: Filling of shells or bombs.
  • Group 9: Large magazines, filled ammunition awaiting dispatch.

In addition, a filling factory would have provision for limited proofing and testing of its munitions; and burning grounds for disposal of waste explosive material.

Outside of this danger area, but still within the factory site, would be located:

  • administration offices;
  • pay offices;
  • workshops;
  • a medical centre;
  • changing rooms;
  • contraband storage (for items prohibited in the danger areas, e.g. matches, tobacco, etc.);
  • search rooms;
  • canteens (as many as 40 in some of the large factories).

UK World War I National Filling Factories edit

At the start of the War munition filling was carried out at Woolwich Arsenal, however it was soon realised that a massive increase in production of munitions was required. A 2015 study by Historic England looked into the 170 National Factories created in England by the Ministry of Munitions in the early part of WW1 (covering 174 locations), among these were the National Filling Factories, including a National Fuse Factory, 5 Trench Warfare Filling Factories, and 3 National Factories for Filling and Assembling Chemical Shells.[WW1 1] Filling of small bore ammunition was increased by the creation of 4 government cartridge factories. Most of the national filling factories followed similar designs with large sites with small lightweight buildings well separated and connected by raised walkways which had lightweight rail lines so materials could be wheeled between buildings on trolleys. Shells, fuses, packing cases, and explosives were brought in by rail to the edge of the factory, and completed munitions left by rail. All the filling work was carried out within the large 'clean area' by a large, mainly female, workforce. People entering the clean area had to change clothes and leave behind anything that could strike a spark, not just matches and lighters but all metal, even hairclips - one male worker being fined £5 for being in possession of 2 nails that he had used to replace a lost button on his trousers.[WW1 2]

While some of the factories were entirely built and managed by the Ministry of Munitions, others had local management. For instance NFF 10 was built on 109 acres of land owned by White and Poppe Ltd who had changed from engine production to manufacturing fuse bodies and 18pdr shell sockets. White and Poppe was given the contract for building the fuse filling plant in September 1915, and when completed in September 1916 it ran under their management. Unfortunately a problem with fuse failures caused a cessation of production in December 1916. The fault identified and the factory reorganised it restarted production in February 1917 as NFF 21, but still under White and Poppe management.[WW1 3]

When the Armistice came in November 1918, production was rapidly terminated and the female workforce laid off. A few sites, with much reduced male staff levels, were used for decommissioning unwanted ammunition. After clean up, most of the buildings, equipment, and stores were sold off by public auctions in the early 1920s.

Name Location From Peak Workforce Products Notes
Royal Arsenal Woolwich 17th Century 80000 Varied The only filling factory in UK in 1914, eventually closing in 1967. Covering 1285 acres.
National Filling Factory No. 1 Barnbow, Leeds April 1916 16000 Quick Fire Ammunition (18pdr to 6 inch) 296 acres. Of the 13315 employees in Mar 1917, 12150 were women. Produced 50,000 shells per week by August 1918. An explosion in December 1916 killed 34 women. Since 2016 it is a scheduled monument (No 1415057) as the most complete surviving filling factory.
National Filling Factory No. 2 Aintree, Liverpool Jan 1916 8599 Quick Fire Ammunition (18pdr to 6 inch) 175 acres. Partly built to complete 18pdr shells shipped in from USA via Liverpool
National Filling Factory No. 3 Willesden Lane, Perivale Dec 1915 Components (fuses, detonators, gaines and primers) 120 acres. In August 1917 a central experimental unit was setup to study methods for filling and assembling for all the NFFs.[WW1 4] An explosion in Sept 1919 (when being used for decommissioning munitions) caused damage but didn't escalate, but raised questions about the safety of munitions in London suburbs.[WW1 5]
National Filling Factory No. 4 Georgetown, Glasgow Jan 1916 11088 Quick Fire Ammunition (13pdr, 18pdr, 3.4 inch, 12 inch shells) Area 250 acres, then second factory increased it to 540 acres.
National Filling Factory No. 5 Quedgeley, Gloucester Mar 1916 6364 18pdr, 4.5 inch, 60pdr shells, cartridges and primers 308 acres. Site cleared in mis 1920s, but was reused in 1939 as RAF Quedgeley
National Filling Factory No. 6 Long Eaton, Chilwell Feb 1916 7500 High explosive shells (4.5 inch to 15 inch shells) 208 acres. Suffered serious explosion 1 July 1918, 134 killed, 250 injured. Work restarted the next day. Chilwell produced over 19 million artillery shells by the end of the war.
National Filling Factory No. 7 Hayes Oct 1915 12500 Components (fuses, Gaines) plus 18pdr shells also 4.5 and 6 in howitzer Also known as Emergency Factory No.2. 200 acres. Had a separate 93acre explosives magazine at Northolt. This had a capacity of 2000 tons of explosive, and about 100 tons a day were delivered to Hayes by rail.
National Filling Factory No. 8 Sumner St, Southwark Sept 1915 Components (101-103 fuses, Gaines) 60,000 sq feet factory also known as Emergency Factory No. 1
National Filling Factory No. 9 Banbury Apr 1916 1463 Mainly high explosive shells (over 4.5 inch), some naval mines and chemical filling (HS) 142 acres. Used until 1924 for breaking down unwanted ammunition.
National Filling Factory No. 10 Whitmore Park, Coventry Mar 1916 3864 Components (fuses, Gaines) for 18 pdr shells 109 acres. Managed by White and Poppe Ltd. Due to a number of fuse failures in late 1916, once remedied this was renamed as NFF 21
National Filling Factory No. 11 Abbey Wood Jan 1916 Components (fuses, Gaines) Managed by Kings Norton Metal Co, works built adjacent to their factory. Closed cApril 1918.[WW1 4]
National Filling Factory No. 12 Cardonald, Glasgow Jan 1916 Components (detonators, gaines and primers) Near Cardonald railway station. Managed by Nobel's Explosives Ltd.
National Filling Factory No. 13 White Lund, Morecambe Jul 1916 High explosive shells (over 4.5 inch) 250 acres. Managed by Vickers Ltd. Works destroyed by fire and explosion October 1917. A planned rebuild was abandoned in Spring 1916 except for a small portion for chemical gas filling.[WW1 4]
National Filling Factory No. 14 Rotherwas, Hereford Nov 1916 ~8000 High explosive shells (over 4.5 inch) 519 acres. Built to provide backup capacity should Chilwell or Morecambe be out of commission. Changed to breaking down unwanted ammo after the war at least until 1921.
National Filling Factory No. 18 Burry Port, Pembrey Jun 1915 1050 Filling 4.5in, 6in and 8in shells Opened in June 1915, later nationalised. From May 1917 changed to disassembling defective munitions to recover components[WW1 4]
National Filling Factory No. 21 Whitmore Park, Coventry Feb 1917 Components (fuses, Gaines) for 18 pdr shells National Filling Factory no 10 was renumbered 21 after a fault in the production system had been fixed, as front line troops had learned to avoid munitions from NFF 10
National Filling Factory No. 22 Gainsborough, Lincolnshire Feb 1918 Naval mines 143 acres.
National Filling Factory No. 23 Chittening, South Gloucestershire June 1918 1100 Filling shells with chloropicrin, later with dichloroethyl sulphide from the National Smelting Company at Avonmouth Docks[WW1 6] Operated by Nobel Explosives. By November 1918, Chittening had produced 85,424 mustard gas shells; but at a human cost of 1213 cases of associated illness, including two deaths which were later attributed to influenza.[WW1 7]
National Filling Factory No. 24 Balmoral Road, Watford 2in and 3in mortar rounds and rifle grenades 28 acres. Also known as Trench Warfare Filling Factory No 1 at Watford. Listed as NFF 24 in sale details Jan 1919.[WW1 8]
National Filling Factory No. 25[WW1 9] Bushey Mill Lane, Callowland, Watford May 1916 Heavy trench mortar and aerial bombs. Some chemical filling. Watford No 2 Trench Warfare Filling Factory. 40 acres, 26 sheds, 300 ton magazine. Chemical filling moved to Greenford Chemical Shell Assembly Station in Jan 1917.
National Filling Factory No. 28 Greenford Jan 1917 Chemical shell filling Also known as Chemical Shell Assembling Station. Formerly Greenford dye works.
Trench Warfare Filling Factory Slade Green, Erith Oct 1915 2 inch mortars, used after the war for dismantling munitions Probably had an NFF designation. 14 acre site near to the Thames Munition Works
Trench Warfare Filling Factory Denaby, Rotherham Jan 1916 3 inch Stokes mortar bombs Probably had an NFF designation. Built near to (and managed by) British Westfalite's factory
Trench Warfare Filling Factory Stevenage Road, Fulham Aug 1915 3 inch Stokes mortar bombs, ball grenades Prossibly NFF 27. Nationalisation of W.E.Blake Explosives Loading Co factory in Feb 1916. 3 acres with separate explosives magazines at Worm Holt Farm, Shepherd's Bush.
Trench Warfare Filling Factory Barlby Road, Selby 1916 234 3 inch 'Russian' shell Ardol Ltd (who had a carbon monoxide by-product of food manufacture), built and operated a factory to make phosgene and load into shells. Nationalised in June 1916. Shell filling moved elsewhere c1917.[WW1 10]
National Fuse Factory Chaul End, Luton Mid 1917 3000 Fuses 28 acre site built, staffed, and managed by George Kent Ltd who were already making munitions at Biscot Road, Luton

The recruitment of workers for the factories was specifically aimed at women, and in general the workforce at the filling factories was 80 to 90% women. An advert in the papers in January 1917[WW1 11] was aimed at recruiting 8000 women workers for a munitions filling factory in North-West London (Willesden Employment Exchange). They had to be aged 20 to 40, and live not more than an hour away, though a lodgings register was available. The work was generally 54 hours a week, 'but may be more', and the pay was 27 shillings, day and night shifts had to be undertaken by all workers, a fortnight of each at a time. For more information on women in munitions during WW1 see munitionettes.

WW I references edit

  1. ^ David Kenyon (9 November 2015). "First World War National Factories: An Archaeological, Architectural and Historical review". Historic England.
  2. ^ News Snippet, Londonderry Sentinel, 31 July 1917, p4
  3. ^ Review of the Work of National Filling Factory No 21, Coventry, The National Archive - MUN 5/155/1122/3/66
  4. ^ a b c d Official History of the Ministry of Munitions, Vol X, The supply of munitions, H.M. Stationery Office, 1922
  5. ^ Alarming London Explosion, Sheffield Independent, 19 Sept 1919, p5
  6. ^ Haber L.F. (1986). "10". The Poisonous Cloud. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198581420.
  7. ^ Ian F.W. Beckett (31 December 2013). The Home Front 1914–1918: How Britain Survived the Great War. ISBN 9781472908896. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  8. ^ National Filling Factory (No 24) Watford, Daily News (London), 23 Jan 1919, p2
  9. ^ Watford and South West Herts in the Great War, Eugenia Russell, Quentin Russell, Pen and Sword, 31 Aug 2015, p70
  10. ^ Paul Francis (October 1999). "Selby National Trench Warfare Factory". Ed Dennison Archaeological Services.
  11. ^ More Women Workers - 8000 Wanted for Munitions, Evening Mail, 19 Jan 1917, p8
  • Cocroft, Wayne D. (2000). Dangerous Energy: The archaeology of gunpowder and military explosives manufacture. Swindon: English Heritage. ISBN 1-85074-718-0.

UK World War II Royal Ordnance Factory, filling factories edit

Some of these filling factories were temporary "war duration" only factories and they closed after the end of World War II. Other filling factories were designed to be permanent and to remain open after the War. However, only ROF Glascoed is still open and is now part of BAE Systems.

Twenty World War II filling factories were planned, but only 16 were built. The two largest UK filling factories were:

The other filling factories were:

  • ROF Glascoed (Filling Factory No. 3)
  • ROF Rotherwas (Filling Factory No. 4)[a]
  • ROF Swynnerton (Filling Factory No. 5)
  • ROF Risley (Filling Factory No. 6)
  • ROF Kirkby (Filling Factory No. 7)
  • ROF Aycliffe (Filling Factory No. 8)
  • ROF Thorp Arch (Filling Factory No. 9)
  • ROF Queniborough (Filling Factory No. 10)
  • ROF Brackla (Filling Factory No. 11)
  • ROF Swindon (Wootton Bassett) (Factory No. 12)[b]
  • ROF Macclesfield (Factory No. 13)[b]
  • ROF Ruddington (Filling Factory No. 14)
  • ROF Walsall (Filling Factory No. 15)
  • ROF Elstow (Filling Factory No. 16)
  • ROF Featherstone (Filling Factory No. 17)
  • ROF Burghfield (Filling Factory No. 18)[c]
  • ROF Tutbury (Factory No. 19)[b]
  • ROF Northampton (Factory No. 20)[b]

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ This was a re-opened WW1 National Filling Factory
  2. ^ a b c d Factory planned and number assigned, but not built
  3. ^ Later part of the Atomic Weapons Establishment (AWE))

WW II references edit

See also edit

References edit

External links edit

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A filling factory was a manufacturing plant that specialised in filling various munitions such as bombs shells cartridges pyrotechnics and screening smokes In the United Kingdom during both world wars of the 20th century the majority of the employees were women In World War I a filling factory belonging to the Ministry of Munitions was known as a National Filling Factory In World War II a filling factory belonging to the Ministry of Supply was known as a Royal Filling Factory RFF or a Royal Ordnance Factory ROF These were all part of the Royal Ordnance Factory organisation owned by the MoS The filling of smoke screen canisters and other pyrotechnic devices was also carried out by fireworks manufacturers particularly in World War II but these are not specifically covered by this article Contents 1 Raw materials 2 Filling groups 3 UK World War I National Filling Factories 3 1 WW I references 4 UK World War II Royal Ordnance Factory filling factories 4 1 Explanatory notes 4 2 WW II references 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRaw materials editThe filling factories raw materials such as TNT RDX or propellants such as cordite were manufactured in National Explosives Factories World War I or Explosive ROFs World War II and transported by railway trains to the filling factories for filling into munitions produced at other plants High explosives such as TNT had to be heated to melt them and the liquid was poured hot into heated shell cases Care had to be taken to ensure that there were no voids in the poured explosive charge as this could lead to the shell detonating in the gun barrel during firing Shells and gun cartridges were manufactured in the UK in World War II by both the Engineering ROFs and private steel works forging companies It is believed that the empty brass cartridge cases for small arms were made at the Small Arms Ammunition Factories The filling factories produced their own pyrotechnics such as fuses and screening smokes as many of these were sensitive materials They were then filled or assembled directly into the munitions They also would have sewn cotton bags for filling with primer composition or cordite charges Filling groups editFilling factories had a large number of buildings Buildings were needed on the various groups for filling of munitions Explosives magazines were required by each group to store the incoming explosive materials and to store the outgoing filled shells or gun cartridges usually packed in ammunition boxes Storage buildings were also needed on each group to store the incoming empty shells and the empty ammunition boxes For safety purposes munitions were segregated into different compatibility groups A World War II filling factory would generally fill several different groups of munitions and these groups would be located in different geographical areas within the danger area of the filling factory The World War II groups were Group 1 Initiators such as caps and detonators for primers and fuzes Group 2 Fuze pellets exploder pellets exploder bags Group 3 Filling of fuzes Group 4 Blending of gunpowders for time fuzes Group 5 Filling of cartridges such as filling cordite into cloth bags or into brass cartridge cases Group 6 Manufacture of smoke producing compositions Group 7 Small arms filling Group 8 Filling of shells or bombs Group 9 Large magazines filled ammunition awaiting dispatch In addition a filling factory would have provision for limited proofing and testing of its munitions and burning grounds for disposal of waste explosive material Outside of this danger area but still within the factory site would be located administration offices pay offices workshops a medical centre changing rooms contraband storage for items prohibited in the danger areas e g matches tobacco etc search rooms canteens as many as 40 in some of the large factories UK World War I National Filling Factories editAt the start of the War munition filling was carried out at Woolwich Arsenal however it was soon realised that a massive increase in production of munitions was required A 2015 study by Historic England looked into the 170 National Factories created in England by the Ministry of Munitions in the early part of WW1 covering 174 locations among these were the National Filling Factories including a National Fuse Factory 5 Trench Warfare Filling Factories and 3 National Factories for Filling and Assembling Chemical Shells WW1 1 Filling of small bore ammunition was increased by the creation of 4 government cartridge factories Most of the national filling factories followed similar designs with large sites with small lightweight buildings well separated and connected by raised walkways which had lightweight rail lines so materials could be wheeled between buildings on trolleys Shells fuses packing cases and explosives were brought in by rail to the edge of the factory and completed munitions left by rail All the filling work was carried out within the large clean area by a large mainly female workforce People entering the clean area had to change clothes and leave behind anything that could strike a spark not just matches and lighters but all metal even hairclips one male worker being fined 5 for being in possession of 2 nails that he had used to replace a lost button on his trousers WW1 2 While some of the factories were entirely built and managed by the Ministry of Munitions others had local management For instance NFF 10 was built on 109 acres of land owned by White and Poppe Ltd who had changed from engine production to manufacturing fuse bodies and 18pdr shell sockets White and Poppe was given the contract for building the fuse filling plant in September 1915 and when completed in September 1916 it ran under their management Unfortunately a problem with fuse failures caused a cessation of production in December 1916 The fault identified and the factory reorganised it restarted production in February 1917 as NFF 21 but still under White and Poppe management WW1 3 When the Armistice came in November 1918 production was rapidly terminated and the female workforce laid off A few sites with much reduced male staff levels were used for decommissioning unwanted ammunition After clean up most of the buildings equipment and stores were sold off by public auctions in the early 1920s Name Location From Peak Workforce Products Notes Royal Arsenal Woolwich 17th Century 80000 Varied The only filling factory in UK in 1914 eventually closing in 1967 Covering 1285 acres National Filling Factory No 1 Barnbow Leeds April 1916 16000 Quick Fire Ammunition 18pdr to 6 inch 296 acres Of the 13315 employees in Mar 1917 12150 were women Produced 50 000 shells per week by August 1918 An explosion in December 1916 killed 34 women Since 2016 it is a scheduled monument No 1415057 as the most complete surviving filling factory National Filling Factory No 2 Aintree Liverpool Jan 1916 8599 Quick Fire Ammunition 18pdr to 6 inch 175 acres Partly built to complete 18pdr shells shipped in from USA via Liverpool National Filling Factory No 3 Willesden Lane Perivale Dec 1915 Components fuses detonators gaines and primers 120 acres In August 1917 a central experimental unit was setup to study methods for filling and assembling for all the NFFs WW1 4 An explosion in Sept 1919 when being used for decommissioning munitions caused damage but didn t escalate but raised questions about the safety of munitions in London suburbs WW1 5 National Filling Factory No 4 Georgetown Glasgow Jan 1916 11088 Quick Fire Ammunition 13pdr 18pdr 3 4 inch 12 inch shells Area 250 acres then second factory increased it to 540 acres National Filling Factory No 5 Quedgeley Gloucester Mar 1916 6364 18pdr 4 5 inch 60pdr shells cartridges and primers 308 acres Site cleared in mis 1920s but was reused in 1939 as RAF Quedgeley National Filling Factory No 6 Long Eaton Chilwell Feb 1916 7500 High explosive shells 4 5 inch to 15 inch shells 208 acres Suffered serious explosion 1 July 1918 134 killed 250 injured Work restarted the next day Chilwell produced over 19 million artillery shells by the end of the war National Filling Factory No 7 Hayes Oct 1915 12500 Components fuses Gaines plus 18pdr shells also 4 5 and 6 in howitzer Also known as Emergency Factory No 2 200 acres Had a separate 93acre explosives magazine at Northolt This had a capacity of 2000 tons of explosive and about 100 tons a day were delivered to Hayes by rail National Filling Factory No 8 Sumner St Southwark Sept 1915 Components 101 103 fuses Gaines 60 000 sq feet factory also known as Emergency Factory No 1 National Filling Factory No 9 Banbury Apr 1916 1463 Mainly high explosive shells over 4 5 inch some naval mines and chemical filling HS 142 acres Used until 1924 for breaking down unwanted ammunition National Filling Factory No 10 Whitmore Park Coventry Mar 1916 3864 Components fuses Gaines for 18 pdr shells 109 acres Managed by White and Poppe Ltd Due to a number of fuse failures in late 1916 once remedied this was renamed as NFF 21 National Filling Factory No 11 Abbey Wood Jan 1916 Components fuses Gaines Managed by Kings Norton Metal Co works built adjacent to their factory Closed cApril 1918 WW1 4 National Filling Factory No 12 Cardonald Glasgow Jan 1916 Components detonators gaines and primers Near Cardonald railway station Managed by Nobel s Explosives Ltd National Filling Factory No 13 White Lund Morecambe Jul 1916 High explosive shells over 4 5 inch 250 acres Managed by Vickers Ltd Works destroyed by fire and explosion October 1917 A planned rebuild was abandoned in Spring 1916 except for a small portion for chemical gas filling WW1 4 National Filling Factory No 14 Rotherwas Hereford Nov 1916 8000 High explosive shells over 4 5 inch 519 acres Built to provide backup capacity should Chilwell or Morecambe be out of commission Changed to breaking down unwanted ammo after the war at least until 1921 National Filling Factory No 18 Burry Port Pembrey Jun 1915 1050 Filling 4 5in 6in and 8in shells Opened in June 1915 later nationalised From May 1917 changed to disassembling defective munitions to recover components WW1 4 National Filling Factory No 21 Whitmore Park Coventry Feb 1917 Components fuses Gaines for 18 pdr shells National Filling Factory no 10 was renumbered 21 after a fault in the production system had been fixed as front line troops had learned to avoid munitions from NFF 10 National Filling Factory No 22 Gainsborough Lincolnshire Feb 1918 Naval mines 143 acres National Filling Factory No 23 Chittening South Gloucestershire June 1918 1100 Filling shells with chloropicrin later with dichloroethyl sulphide from the National Smelting Company at Avonmouth Docks WW1 6 Operated by Nobel Explosives By November 1918 Chittening had produced 85 424 mustard gas shells but at a human cost of 1213 cases of associated illness including two deaths which were later attributed to influenza WW1 7 National Filling Factory No 24 Balmoral Road Watford 2in and 3in mortar rounds and rifle grenades 28 acres Also known as Trench Warfare Filling Factory No 1 at Watford Listed as NFF 24 in sale details Jan 1919 WW1 8 National Filling Factory No 25 WW1 9 Bushey Mill Lane Callowland Watford May 1916 Heavy trench mortar and aerial bombs Some chemical filling Watford No 2 Trench Warfare Filling Factory 40 acres 26 sheds 300 ton magazine Chemical filling moved to Greenford Chemical Shell Assembly Station in Jan 1917 National Filling Factory No 28 Greenford Jan 1917 Chemical shell filling Also known as Chemical Shell Assembling Station Formerly Greenford dye works Trench Warfare Filling Factory Slade Green Erith Oct 1915 2 inch mortars used after the war for dismantling munitions Probably had an NFF designation 14 acre site near to the Thames Munition Works Trench Warfare Filling Factory Denaby Rotherham Jan 1916 3 inch Stokes mortar bombs Probably had an NFF designation Built near to and managed by British Westfalite s factory Trench Warfare Filling Factory Stevenage Road Fulham Aug 1915 3 inch Stokes mortar bombs ball grenades Prossibly NFF 27 Nationalisation of W E Blake Explosives Loading Co factory in Feb 1916 3 acres with separate explosives magazines at Worm Holt Farm Shepherd s Bush Trench Warfare Filling Factory Barlby Road Selby 1916 234 3 inch Russian shell Ardol Ltd who had a carbon monoxide by product of food manufacture built and operated a factory to make phosgene and load into shells Nationalised in June 1916 Shell filling moved elsewhere c1917 WW1 10 National Fuse Factory Chaul End Luton Mid 1917 3000 Fuses 28 acre site built staffed and managed by George Kent Ltd who were already making munitions at Biscot Road Luton The recruitment of workers for the factories was specifically aimed at women and in general the workforce at the filling factories was 80 to 90 women An advert in the papers in January 1917 WW1 11 was aimed at recruiting 8000 women workers for a munitions filling factory in North West London Willesden Employment Exchange They had to be aged 20 to 40 and live not more than an hour away though a lodgings register was available The work was generally 54 hours a week but may be more and the pay was 27 shillings day and night shifts had to be undertaken by all workers a fortnight of each at a time For more information on women in munitions during WW1 see munitionettes WW I references edit David Kenyon 9 November 2015 First World War National Factories An Archaeological Architectural and Historical review Historic England News Snippet Londonderry Sentinel 31 July 1917 p4 Review of the Work of National Filling Factory No 21 Coventry The National Archive MUN 5 155 1122 3 66 a b c d Official History of the Ministry of Munitions Vol X The supply of munitions H M Stationery Office 1922 Alarming London Explosion Sheffield Independent 19 Sept 1919 p5 Haber L F 1986 10 The Poisonous Cloud Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198581420 Ian F W Beckett 31 December 2013 The Home Front 1914 1918 How Britain Survived the Great War ISBN 9781472908896 Retrieved 13 May 2014 National Filling Factory No 24 Watford Daily News London 23 Jan 1919 p2 Watford and South West Herts in the Great War Eugenia Russell Quentin Russell Pen and Sword 31 Aug 2015 p70 Paul Francis October 1999 Selby National Trench Warfare Factory Ed Dennison Archaeological Services More Women Workers 8000 Wanted for Munitions Evening Mail 19 Jan 1917 p8 Cocroft Wayne D 2000 Dangerous Energy The archaeology of gunpowder and military explosives manufacture Swindon English Heritage ISBN 1 85074 718 0 UK World War II Royal Ordnance Factory filling factories editSome of these filling factories were temporary war duration only factories and they closed after the end of World War II Other filling factories were designed to be permanent and to remain open after the War However only ROF Glascoed is still open and is now part of BAE Systems Twenty World War II filling factories were planned but only 16 were built The two largest UK filling factories were ROF Chorley Filling Factory No 1 ROF Bridgend Filling Factory No 2 The other filling factories were ROF Glascoed Filling Factory No 3 ROF Rotherwas Filling Factory No 4 a ROF Swynnerton Filling Factory No 5 ROF Risley Filling Factory No 6 ROF Kirkby Filling Factory No 7 ROF Aycliffe Filling Factory No 8 ROF Thorp Arch Filling Factory No 9 ROF Queniborough Filling Factory No 10 ROF Brackla Filling Factory No 11 ROF Swindon Wootton Bassett Factory No 12 b ROF Macclesfield Factory No 13 b ROF Ruddington Filling Factory No 14 ROF Walsall Filling Factory No 15 ROF Elstow Filling Factory No 16 ROF Featherstone Filling Factory No 17 ROF Burghfield Filling Factory No 18 c ROF Tutbury Factory No 19 b ROF Northampton Factory No 20 b Explanatory notes edit This was a re opened WW1 National Filling Factory a b c d Factory planned and number assigned but not built Later part of the Atomic Weapons Establishment AWE WW II references edit Cocroft Wayne D 2000 Dangerous Energy The archaeology of gunpowder and military explosives manufacture Swindon English Heritage ISBN 1 85074 718 0 Hay Ian 1949 R O F The Story of the Royal Ordnance Factories 1939 48 London His Majesty s Stationery Office Hornby William 1958 Factories and Plant History of The Second World War United Kingdom Civil Series London HMSO and Longmans Green and Co Kohan C M 1952 Works and Buildings History of The Second World War United Kingdom Civil Series London HMSO and Longmans Green and Co See also editList of Royal Ordnance Factories MunitionetteReferences editExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Filling factories in the United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Filling factories in the United Kingdom amp oldid 1214683924, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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