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James Foster (ironmaster)

James Foster (9 May 1786 – 12 April 1853) was a prominent Worcestershire ironmaster, coalmaster and senior partner in the important iron company of John Bradley & Co, Stourbridge, which was founded by his elder half-brother but greatly enlarged under his direction.[1] As well as the Stourbridge ironworks, the business owned a number of coal and ironstone mines, furnaces, forges and other works in the Black Country and near Ironbridge. The business continued long after James Foster's death, ultimately being incorporated as John Bradley (Stourbridge) Ltd in the early 20th century. In the late 19th century, the company was a member of the Marked Bar Association, whose members were the makers of the highest quality bar iron of the time. Foster was also a partner in other companies including the engineering firm Foster, Rastrick and Company, which built the first steam locomotive to run on rails in the USA. He was also a banker and landowner as well as being elected Member of Parliament and appointed as Improvement Commissioner for Stourbridge, and High Sheriff of Worcestershire.[2]

James Foster
Born(1786-05-09)9 May 1786
Died12 April 1853(1853-04-12) (aged 66)
Resting placeFamily vault, St Mary's, Oldswinford
NationalityEnglish
Occupations
Organizations

Biography edit

 
The Bradley and Foster family home, Lower High Street, Stourbridge

James Foster was the son of Henry and Mary Foster (née Haden). He was born on 9 May 1786[3] and baptised on 11 May 1786.[4] The family house, which still exists, was in an area of Stourbridge then called Digbeth, now numbered 7 and 8 Lower High Street.[5][6] Mary's first husband, Gabriel Bradley from Stourbridge, had left her his iron business on his death in 1771. John Bradley, Mary's son by her first husband, founded the company John Bradley & Co., in 1800 taking a lease on land near the canal at Stourbridge with the aim of developing an ironworks.[7] The deed of partnership for the company was drawn up in 1802 which granted a share in the company to Bradley's six half-brothers and sisters (which included James Foster). By 1813 only John Bradley and James Foster had shares in the company and on Bradley's death in 1816, James Foster took control of the enterprise, which included the Stourbridge Iron Works.

In 1818, Foster leased mines at Wombridge, Shropshire with an agreement to build blast furnaces there within 18 months.[8]

Foster formed a subsidiary partnership with John Urpeth Rastrick in Stourbridge which traded as Foster, Rastrick and Company. The company was in existence from 1819 to 1831, and at the leading edge of iron technology; producing a wide range of products such as blast furnaces and rolling mill equipment, sugar mills for export to the West Indies, iron 'bearers' (beams) for important buildings of the age, wrought iron rails, and four early steam locomotives.

Of these 'The Agenoria' worked on the Kingswinford Railway, near Stourbridge and is now in the National Railway Museum, York. The other three were ordered by the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company and exported to the United States. The 'Stourbridge Lion' became the first steam locomotive to run on a commercial railway at Honesdale, Pennsylvania. Unfortunately it proved too heavy for the wooden track and after a few trial runs was removed. A few components remain in the Smithsonian Museum, Washington D.C.

The 'New Foundry' built in 1821, with a magnificent iron roof structure spanning 150 by 50 feet (46 m × 15 m), produced components for the company and continued working as a foundry until early in the 21st century. For many years standing semi-derelict, the building has now been intelligently restored and is in use again as a medical centre for Stourbridge people.[1]

Foster formed a partnership with Thomas Jukes Collier (Thomas Jukes Collier & Co), which carried out mining in the Hadley area from around 1820.[9]

On 20 February 1821, Foster obtained a patent for "certain improvements in the manufacture of wrought malleable iron".[10]

In 1820s, Foster entered into a partnership with George Jones and John Barker, both of Wolverhampton, to construct the Chillington Ironworks.[11] The three partners patented an improved method of producing malleable iron in 1832.[12] They invented a method of conveying the molten iron produced in a blast furnace into the puddling furnace without the intermediate stage of producing solid pig iron.[13]

Foster's first entry into politics was in 1825 when he was appointed an Improvement Commissioner for the town of Stourbridge. He lobbied for a new Improvement Act, passed in 1825, which enabled the Commissioners to construct a market hall for the town.[14] James Foster later became a member of parliament, as a Whig, for Bridgnorth (1831–1832),[15] although he rarely took part in debates.[4] He served as High Sheriff of Worcestershire in 1840.

 
James Foster's home from 1833 was Stourton Castle

In 1828, Foster acquired the Madeley Court estate.[16] Here he commenced mining operations, sinking 17 pits in total.[17] Later (in 1843), Foster had blast furnaces constructed nearby. In 1833, Foster acquired a lease of Stourton Castle for £10,000.[4] He subsequently modernised and added to the building, employing the architect Sir Robert Smirke to provide the designs.

In 1834 Foster met with a number of industrialists to found the Stourbridge and Kidderminster Banking Co. James Foster became the chairman of the bank, an office he held until 1850.[14] The first branch of the bank was sited at Park House just off Stourbridge High Street, which had been Foster's previous home.[14]

In 1844, James Foster was listed as being on the Committee of Management of the company that proposed to build the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway.[18]

In 1865, Foster partnered with Canadian industrialist Hugh Ryan and contractor Alphonse Brooks as subcontractors on the Pictou branch of the Nova Scotia Railway.[19]

 
James Foster was buried in the family vault at St Mary's, Oldswinford

A brief profile of Foster in Griffiths' Guide to the Iron Trade of Great Britain, describes him as: "a most able and far seeing man, divested entirely of consequential airs and assumed superiority, endowed in a very remarkable degree with common sense; being afflicted with deafness, his manner sometimes appeared brusque, owing to his prompt and decisive answers. He was a decided Liberal in politics, and a truly good, kind-hearted gentleman".[20]

After his death, aged 66, which occurred on 12 April 1853,[4] it was reported that one thousand of his workers paraded after the funeral cortege. He was interred in the family vault at St Mary's, Oldswinford.

He was unmarried, and his iron business and estates were inherited by his nephew, William Orme Foster.[4] His portrait was famously painted by Henry Spurrier Parkman (1814-1864).[21]

Businesses of James Foster edit

  • John Bradley & Co. Founded by his half brother, John Bradley, Foster was a partner from 1807 and sole owner from 1836.
  • Foster, Rastrick & Co. The partnership with John Urpeth Rastrick was formed in 1819 and dissolved in 1831 with assets being absorbed by John Bradley & Co.
  • Thomas Jukes Collier & Co. Partnership formed in 1818 and lasted until 1837.
  • Madley Court. Bought by Foster in 1828 who developed mines and furnaces on the site.
  • Chillington Coal & Iron Co. Partnership formed in 1825 with George Jones, who was the active partner.
  • Stourbridge and Kidderminster Banking Co. Foster was chairman from 1834 until 1850.
  • Brooks, Foster, Ryan & Co. In 1865, Foster joined Canadian industrialist Hugh Ryan and contractor Alphonse Brooks as subcontractors on the Nova Scotia Railway.[19]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "John Bradley & Co., Ironfounders - Archives Hub". archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk. Senate House Library Archives, University of London. 1830.
  2. ^ "FOSTER, James (1786-1853), of Coton Hall, nr. Stourbridge, Worcs. | History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org. History of Parliament UK.
  3. ^ Peacock, Roy (2006). Roy Peacock (ed.). James Foster of Stourbridge. Black Country Society. p. 48. ISBN 0904015785.
  4. ^ a b c d e Escott, Margaret. "FOSTER, James (1786–1853), of Coton Hall, nr. Stourbridge, Worcs". The History of Parliament. The History of Parliament Trust. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
  5. ^ "Stourbidge Urban Historic Landscape Characterisation". www.dudley.gov.uk. Dudley MBC. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  6. ^ Peacock, Roy (2006). Roy Peacock (ed.). James Foster of Stourbridge. Black Country Society. pp. 14–22. ISBN 0904015785.
  7. ^ Cockeram, Tom (1989). Paul Collins (ed.). Stourbridge and its Historic Locomotives. Dudley, UK: Dudley Leisure Services. pp. 8–18. ISBN 0900911255.
  8. ^ "Wombridge: Economic history | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
  9. ^ "Hadley and Horton: Economic history | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  10. ^ The Repertory of Patent Inventions. London: Alexander Macintosh. 1846. p. 149.
  11. ^ "Chillington Co". gracesguide.co.uk/. Grace's Guide. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  12. ^ W. Newton, ed. (1832). The London Journal of Arts and Sciences, and Repertory of Patent Inventions. London: Sherwood, Gilbert and Piper. p. 321.
  13. ^ W. Newton, ed. (1837). The London Journal of Arts and Sciences, and Repertory of Patent Inventions. London: Sherwood, Gilbert and Piper. pp. 356–357.
  14. ^ a b c Peacock, Roy (2006). Roy Peacock (ed.). James Foster of Stourbridge. Black Country Society. pp. 40–48. ISBN 0904015785.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 June 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. ^ "Madeley: Manor and other estates | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  17. ^ "Court Works". gracesguide.co.uk. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  18. ^ The Railway Chronicle. London: J. Francis. 1844. p. 616.
  19. ^ a b Halpenny, Francess G. (1990). Dictionaire Biographique Du Canada: Volume XII, 1891 - 1900. Vol. XII. Springer Science & Business Media, University of Toronto. p. 934. ISBN 978-0-8020-3460-1.
  20. ^ Griffiths, Samuel (1873). Griffiths' Guide to the Iron Trade of Great Britain. London. p. 53. ISBN 9780715341674.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  21. ^ Art UK (2001). "James Foster (1786–1853), Ironmaster of Stourton Castle, Stourbridge by Henry Spurrier Parkman | Art UK". artuk.org.

Sources edit

  • Senate House Library, University of London, John Bradley & Co (Stourbridge) Ltd., Ironfounders 14 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 22 April 2005.
  • Collins, Paul (ed.); (1989) Stourbridge and its Historic Locomotives, Dudley, Dudley Leisure Services. ISBN 0-900911-25-5
  • Mutton, Norman, 'The Foster Family: a study of a Midland industrial dynasty 1786–1899' (thesis 1973: copy in Dudley Archives and Local History Centre).

External links edit

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by James Foster

james, foster, ironmaster, other, people, with, same, name, james, foster, disambiguation, james, foster, 1786, april, 1853, prominent, worcestershire, ironmaster, coalmaster, senior, partner, important, iron, company, john, bradley, stourbridge, which, founde. For other people with the same name see James Foster disambiguation James Foster 9 May 1786 12 April 1853 was a prominent Worcestershire ironmaster coalmaster and senior partner in the important iron company of John Bradley amp Co Stourbridge which was founded by his elder half brother but greatly enlarged under his direction 1 As well as the Stourbridge ironworks the business owned a number of coal and ironstone mines furnaces forges and other works in the Black Country and near Ironbridge The business continued long after James Foster s death ultimately being incorporated as John Bradley Stourbridge Ltd in the early 20th century In the late 19th century the company was a member of the Marked Bar Association whose members were the makers of the highest quality bar iron of the time Foster was also a partner in other companies including the engineering firm Foster Rastrick and Company which built the first steam locomotive to run on rails in the USA He was also a banker and landowner as well as being elected Member of Parliament and appointed as Improvement Commissioner for Stourbridge and High Sheriff of Worcestershire 2 James FosterBorn 1786 05 09 9 May 1786Died12 April 1853 1853 04 12 aged 66 Resting placeFamily vault St Mary s OldswinfordNationalityEnglishOccupationsIronmaster BankerOrganizationsJohn Bradley amp Co Foster Rastrick and Company Contents 1 Biography 2 Businesses of James Foster 3 References 4 Sources 5 External linksBiography edit nbsp The Bradley and Foster family home Lower High Street Stourbridge James Foster was the son of Henry and Mary Foster nee Haden He was born on 9 May 1786 3 and baptised on 11 May 1786 4 The family house which still exists was in an area of Stourbridge then called Digbeth now numbered 7 and 8 Lower High Street 5 6 Mary s first husband Gabriel Bradley from Stourbridge had left her his iron business on his death in 1771 John Bradley Mary s son by her first husband founded the company John Bradley amp Co in 1800 taking a lease on land near the canal at Stourbridge with the aim of developing an ironworks 7 The deed of partnership for the company was drawn up in 1802 which granted a share in the company to Bradley s six half brothers and sisters which included James Foster By 1813 only John Bradley and James Foster had shares in the company and on Bradley s death in 1816 James Foster took control of the enterprise which included the Stourbridge Iron Works In 1818 Foster leased mines at Wombridge Shropshire with an agreement to build blast furnaces there within 18 months 8 Foster formed a subsidiary partnership with John Urpeth Rastrick in Stourbridge which traded as Foster Rastrick and Company The company was in existence from 1819 to 1831 and at the leading edge of iron technology producing a wide range of products such as blast furnaces and rolling mill equipment sugar mills for export to the West Indies iron bearers beams for important buildings of the age wrought iron rails and four early steam locomotives Of these The Agenoria worked on the Kingswinford Railway near Stourbridge and is now in the National Railway Museum York The other three were ordered by the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company and exported to the United States The Stourbridge Lion became the first steam locomotive to run on a commercial railway at Honesdale Pennsylvania Unfortunately it proved too heavy for the wooden track and after a few trial runs was removed A few components remain in the Smithsonian Museum Washington D C The New Foundry built in 1821 with a magnificent iron roof structure spanning 150 by 50 feet 46 m 15 m produced components for the company and continued working as a foundry until early in the 21st century For many years standing semi derelict the building has now been intelligently restored and is in use again as a medical centre for Stourbridge people 1 Foster formed a partnership with Thomas Jukes Collier Thomas Jukes Collier amp Co which carried out mining in the Hadley area from around 1820 9 On 20 February 1821 Foster obtained a patent for certain improvements in the manufacture of wrought malleable iron 10 In 1820s Foster entered into a partnership with George Jones and John Barker both of Wolverhampton to construct the Chillington Ironworks 11 The three partners patented an improved method of producing malleable iron in 1832 12 They invented a method of conveying the molten iron produced in a blast furnace into the puddling furnace without the intermediate stage of producing solid pig iron 13 Foster s first entry into politics was in 1825 when he was appointed an Improvement Commissioner for the town of Stourbridge He lobbied for a new Improvement Act passed in 1825 which enabled the Commissioners to construct a market hall for the town 14 James Foster later became a member of parliament as a Whig for Bridgnorth 1831 1832 15 although he rarely took part in debates 4 He served as High Sheriff of Worcestershire in 1840 nbsp James Foster s home from 1833 was Stourton Castle In 1828 Foster acquired the Madeley Court estate 16 Here he commenced mining operations sinking 17 pits in total 17 Later in 1843 Foster had blast furnaces constructed nearby In 1833 Foster acquired a lease of Stourton Castle for 10 000 4 He subsequently modernised and added to the building employing the architect Sir Robert Smirke to provide the designs In 1834 Foster met with a number of industrialists to found the Stourbridge and Kidderminster Banking Co James Foster became the chairman of the bank an office he held until 1850 14 The first branch of the bank was sited at Park House just off Stourbridge High Street which had been Foster s previous home 14 In 1844 James Foster was listed as being on the Committee of Management of the company that proposed to build the Oxford Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway 18 In 1865 Foster partnered with Canadian industrialist Hugh Ryan and contractor Alphonse Brooks as subcontractors on the Pictou branch of the Nova Scotia Railway 19 nbsp James Foster was buried in the family vault at St Mary s Oldswinford A brief profile of Foster in Griffiths Guide to the Iron Trade of Great Britain describes him as a most able and far seeing man divested entirely of consequential airs and assumed superiority endowed in a very remarkable degree with common sense being afflicted with deafness his manner sometimes appeared brusque owing to his prompt and decisive answers He was a decided Liberal in politics and a truly good kind hearted gentleman 20 After his death aged 66 which occurred on 12 April 1853 4 it was reported that one thousand of his workers paraded after the funeral cortege He was interred in the family vault at St Mary s Oldswinford He was unmarried and his iron business and estates were inherited by his nephew William Orme Foster 4 His portrait was famously painted by Henry Spurrier Parkman 1814 1864 21 Businesses of James Foster editJohn Bradley amp Co Founded by his half brother John Bradley Foster was a partner from 1807 and sole owner from 1836 Foster Rastrick amp Co The partnership with John Urpeth Rastrick was formed in 1819 and dissolved in 1831 with assets being absorbed by John Bradley amp Co Thomas Jukes Collier amp Co Partnership formed in 1818 and lasted until 1837 Madley Court Bought by Foster in 1828 who developed mines and furnaces on the site Chillington Coal amp Iron Co Partnership formed in 1825 with George Jones who was the active partner Stourbridge and Kidderminster Banking Co Foster was chairman from 1834 until 1850 Brooks Foster Ryan amp Co In 1865 Foster joined Canadian industrialist Hugh Ryan and contractor Alphonse Brooks as subcontractors on the Nova Scotia Railway 19 References edit a b John Bradley amp Co Ironfounders Archives Hub archiveshub jisc ac uk Senate House Library Archives University of London 1830 FOSTER James 1786 1853 of Coton Hall nr Stourbridge Worcs History of Parliament Online www historyofparliamentonline org History of Parliament UK Peacock Roy 2006 Roy Peacock ed James Foster of Stourbridge Black Country Society p 48 ISBN 0904015785 a b c d e Escott Margaret FOSTER James 1786 1853 of Coton Hall nr Stourbridge Worcs The History of Parliament The History of Parliament Trust Retrieved 3 March 2016 Stourbidge Urban Historic Landscape Characterisation www dudley gov uk Dudley MBC Retrieved 18 September 2017 Peacock Roy 2006 Roy Peacock ed James Foster of Stourbridge Black Country Society pp 14 22 ISBN 0904015785 Cockeram Tom 1989 Paul Collins ed Stourbridge and its Historic Locomotives Dudley UK Dudley Leisure Services pp 8 18 ISBN 0900911255 Wombridge Economic history British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 24 October 2016 Hadley and Horton Economic history British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 16 November 2016 The Repertory of Patent Inventions London Alexander Macintosh 1846 p 149 Chillington Co gracesguide co uk Grace s Guide Retrieved 11 March 2016 W Newton ed 1832 The London Journal of Arts and Sciences and Repertory of Patent Inventions London Sherwood Gilbert and Piper p 321 W Newton ed 1837 The London Journal of Arts and Sciences and Repertory of Patent Inventions London Sherwood Gilbert and Piper pp 356 357 a b c Peacock Roy 2006 Roy Peacock ed James Foster of Stourbridge Black Country Society pp 40 48 ISBN 0904015785 Archived copy Archived from the original on 25 June 2015 Retrieved 11 January 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CS1 maint unfit URL link Madeley Manor and other estates British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 16 November 2016 Court Works gracesguide co uk Retrieved 16 November 2016 The Railway Chronicle London J Francis 1844 p 616 a b Halpenny Francess G 1990 Dictionaire Biographique Du Canada Volume XII 1891 1900 Vol XII Springer Science amp Business Media University of Toronto p 934 ISBN 978 0 8020 3460 1 Griffiths Samuel 1873 Griffiths Guide to the Iron Trade of Great Britain London p 53 ISBN 9780715341674 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Art UK 2001 James Foster 1786 1853 Ironmaster of Stourton Castle Stourbridge by Henry Spurrier Parkman Art UK artuk org Sources editSenate House Library University of London John Bradley amp Co Stourbridge Ltd Ironfounders Archived 14 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 22 April 2005 Collins Paul ed 1989 Stourbridge and its Historic Locomotives Dudley Dudley Leisure Services ISBN 0 900911 25 5 Mutton Norman The Foster Family a study of a Midland industrial dynasty 1786 1899 thesis 1973 copy in Dudley Archives and Local History Centre External links editHansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by James Foster Parliament of the United Kingdom Preceded byThomas WhitmoreWilliam Wolryche Whitmore Member of Parliament for Bridgnorth1831 1832 With William Wolryche Whitmore Succeeded byRobert Pigot Thomas Charlton Whitmore Honorary titles Preceded byWilliam Congreve Russell High Sheriff of Worcestershire1840 Succeeded byThomas Charles Hornyold Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Foster ironmaster amp oldid 1220922168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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