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'''Ebbw Vale Steelworks''' was an integrated [[steel mill]] locted in [[Ebbw Vale]], [[South Wales]]
'''Ebbw Vale Steelworks''' was an integrated [[steel mill]] locted in [[Ebbw Vale]], [[South Wales]]


==Development==
<!--- ==Development== In 1789, [[Walter Watkins]] was the owner of a [[forge]] at [[Glangrwney]], which lacked an adequate supply of [[pig iron]]. In agreement with two business parters, his son-in-law [[Charles Cracroft]] and iron master [[Jeremiah Homfray]] of the [[Penydarren Ironworks]] at [[Merthyr Tydfil]], the three lease land at Pen y cae farm, [[Ebbw Fawr]] in the parish of [[Aberystruth]] from John Miles. Siutated on the northern tip of the [[South Wales coalfield]], with [[iron ore]] obtainable from patch working, and located next to the [[River Ebbw]], they had easy access to the basic iron making materials. [[Limestone]] was transported by [[mule]] train from Llanelly Hill, [[Blaenavon]]. The partnership errected a single [[blast furnace]] and casting shop against the hillside, which created a weekly output of between 25tons of pig iron per week. Called "Pen y cae" after the original far by the locals, the partners anglicanised the rivers name to the '''Ebbw Vale Furnace,''' hence naming both the works and the developing township. In 1793 Homfray bought out his partners with help from the [[Bristol]]-based [[Quaker]] family the Harfords, who in 1796 bought out Homfray himself to take complete ownership. --->
In 1789, [[Walter Watkins]] was the owner of a [[forge]] at [[Glangrwney]], which lacked an adequate supply of [[pig iron]]. In agreement with two business parters, his son-in-law [[Charles Cracroft]] and iron master [[Jeremiah Homfray]] of the [[Penydarren Ironworks]] at [[Merthyr Tydfil]], the three leased land at Pen y cae farm, [[Ebbw Fawr]] in the parish of [[Aberystruth]] from John Miles. Siutated on the northern tip of the [[South Wales coalfield]], with [[iron ore]] obtainable from patch working, and located next to the [[River Ebbw]], they had easy access to the basic iron making materials. [[Limestone]] was transported by [[mule]] train from Llanelly Hill, [[Blaenavon]]. The partnership errected a single [[blast furnace]] and casting shop against the hillside, which created a weekly output of between 25tons of pig iron per week. Called "Pen y cae" after the original far by the locals, the partners anglicanised the rivers name to the '''Ebbw Vale Furnace Company Ltd (EVC),''' hence naming both the works and the developing township. In 1793 Homfray bought out his partners with help from the [[Bristol]]-based [[Quaker]] family the Harfords, who in 1796 bought out Homfray himself to take complete ownership.


==Early 19th century==
<!--- ==19th century== The plant was developed as a specialist forge, and needing addition supplies of iron the company, now owned by the Hardfords family trust, bought and integrated the [[Sirhowy Ironworks]] and colliery. The company then ult four new [[cupola furnace]]s. This enabled the company to supply [[railway line]], inclduing the pioneering [[Liverpool and Manchester Railway|Liverpool & Manchester]] and the [[Stockton & Darlington Railway]]. These contracts required additiona integration, resulting in the driving of a {{convert|1|mi|km}} tunnel between the Sirhowy site and Ebbw Vale, which itself was then equipped by steam driven locomotives. After some commercial failures in the [[United States]], in 1844 the Hardfords family trust sold the works to partners [[Abraham Darby]], Henry Dickenson, Joseph Robinson and J Tothill of [[Coalbrookdale]], with partner Thomas Brown designated managing director. This change started a period of expansion via acquisition, including: the three balst furnaces of the [[Victoria Ironworks]] from [[Lord Llanover]], originally built for the Monmouthshire Iron & Coal Company; the Abersychan Ironworks, consisting of six blast furnaces; iron ore fields in the [[Brendon Hills]], [[Somerset]], [[Bilbao]], [[Spain]] and the [[Forest of Dean]], [[Gloucestershire]]; production facilities in [[Pontypool]] comprising of four furnaces, a forge, tinplate works and coal collieries. In 1850, the companys chemist [[George Parry]] achieved a great economy in blast furnace practice, the first to adopt the cup and cone successfully on blast furnaces. He then conducted experiments in converting iron into [[steel]], but the company was eventualy forced to adopt the patented process of [[Henry Bessemer]]. By 1863, the company was producing 100,000 tons of rail and merchant bars per annum, with production facilities at: Ebbw Vale; Sirhowy; Victoria; [[Abersychan]]; Pontypool; [[Abercarn]]; totalling 19 blast furnaces, 192 puddling furnaces, and 99 heating furnaces. It also had six wharfs at [[Newport Docks]], the [[hematite]] mine in the Forest of Dean and [[spathic iron]] ore mines in the Brendon Hills and Spain. --->
The plant was developed as a specialist forge, and needing addition supplies of iron the company, now owned by the Hardfords family trust, bought and integrated the [[Sirhowy Ironworks]] and colliery. The company then built four new [[cupola furnace]]s. This enabled the company to supply [[railway line]], including the pioneering [[Liverpool and Manchester Railway|Liverpool & Manchester]] and the [[Stockton & Darlington Railway]]. These contracts required additiona integration, resulting in the driving of a {{convert|1|mi|km}} tunnel between the Sirhowy site and Ebbw Vale, which itself was then equipped by steam driven locomotives.


===Transport===
<!--- ==Ebbw Vale Steel Iron and Coal Company== In 1871, Darby converted the partnership into a limited company, under the eventual title of the '''Ebbw Vale Steel Iron and Coal Company (EVSICC),''' headquartered in [[Manchester]]. The capital injection allowed investment in the most powerful blowing engine in the world to serve four of the Ebbw Vale furnaces, new rolling mills and a Bessemer converter shop which produced the first steel ingots, including high carbon [[Spiegeleisen|''spiegel-eisen'' (mirror iron)]]. --->
The [[Tredegar Iron Company]] had need to transport raw materials to and products from its various iron works in the upper Ebbw Valley. Developments included:
*[[Rassa Railroad]]: a tramway built in 1794 to connect the [[Sirhowy Ironworks]] to the [[Beaufort Ironworks]], and connected them to several limestone quarries at [[Trevil]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.railbrit.co.uk/Rassa_Railroad/frame.htm|title=Rassa Railroad|publisher=RailBrit.co.uk|accessdate=23 September 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bioeddie.co.uk/ebbw-vale/history.htm|title=Ebbw Vale history|publisher=bioeddie.co.uk|accessdate=23 September 2011}}</ref>
*[[Llanhiledd Tramroad]]: from Crumlin (low level) north to Ebbw Vale.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.railbrit.co.uk/Beaufort_Ironworks_Tramway/frame.htm|title=Beaufort Ironworks Tramway|publisher=RailBrit.co.uk|accessdate=23 September 2011}}</ref>
*[[Sirhowy Tramroad]]: Newport to Crumlin (low level).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.railbrit.co.uk/Monmouthshire_Canal_Tramway/frame.htm|title=Monmouthshire Canal Tramway|publisher=RailBrit.co.uk|accessdate=23 September 2011}}</ref>

By 1805, a {{convert|24|mi|adj=on}} stretch of tramline had been laid to transport coal and iron ore to [[Newport Docks]], laid jointly by Tredegar Iron Company and the [[Monmouthshire Canal]] Company. Pulled by teams of horses, in 1829 Chief Engineer Thomas Ellis was authorised to purchase a steam locomotive from the Stephenson Company. Built at Tredegar Works, it made its maiden trip on 17 December 1829.

===New owners, expansion===
After some commercial failures in the [[United States]], in 1844 the Hardfords family trust sold the works to partners [[Abraham Darby]], Henry Dickenson, Joseph Robinson and J Tothill of [[Coalbrookdale]], with partner Thomas Brown designated managing director. This change started a period of expansion via acquisition, including:
*Three blast furnaces of the [[Victoria Ironworks]] from [[Lord Llanover]], originally built for the Monmouthshire Iron & Coal Company
*Abersychan Ironworks, consisting of six blast furnaces
*Production facilities in [[Pontypool]] comprising of four furnaces, a forge, tinplate works and coal collieries
*Iron ore fields in the [[Brendon Hills]], [[Somerset]], [[Bilbao]], [[Spain]] and the [[Forest of Dean]], [[Gloucestershire]]

In 1850, the companys chemist [[George Parry]] achieved a great economy in blast furnace practice, the first to adopt the cup and cone successfully on blast furnaces. He then conducted experiments in converting iron into [[steel]], but the company was eventualy forced to adopt the patented process of [[Henry Bessemer]]. By 1863, the company was producing 100,000 tons of rail and merchant bars per annum, from 19 blast furnaces, 192 puddling furnaces, and 99 heating furnaces located at: Ebbw Vale; Sirhowy; Victoria; [[Abersychan]]; Pontypool; [[Abercarn]]. It also had six wharfs at [[Newport Docks]], the [[hematite]] mine in the Forest of Dean, and [[spathic iron]] ore mines in the Brendon Hills and Spain.

==Ebbw Vale Steel Iron and Coal Company==
In 1871, Darby converted the partnership into a limited company, under the eventual title of the '''Ebbw Vale Steel Iron and Coal Company (EVSICC),''' headquartered in [[Manchester]]. The capital injection allowed investment in the most powerful blowing engine in the world to serve four of the Ebbw Vale furnaces, new rolling mills and a Bessemer converter shop which produced the first steel ingots, including high carbon [[Spiegeleisen|''spiegel-eisen'' (mirror iron)]].


==1930s redevelopment==
==1930s redevelopment==

Revision as of 01:51, 20 July 2012

Cleared site of the former Ebbw Vale Steelworks

Ebbw Vale Steelworks was an integrated steel mill locted in Ebbw Vale, South Wales

Development

In 1789, Walter Watkins was the owner of a forge at Glangrwney, which lacked an adequate supply of pig iron. In agreement with two business parters, his son-in-law Charles Cracroft and iron master Jeremiah Homfray of the Penydarren Ironworks at Merthyr Tydfil, the three leased land at Pen y cae farm, Ebbw Fawr in the parish of Aberystruth from John Miles. Siutated on the northern tip of the South Wales coalfield, with iron ore obtainable from patch working, and located next to the River Ebbw, they had easy access to the basic iron making materials. Limestone was transported by mule train from Llanelly Hill, Blaenavon. The partnership errected a single blast furnace and casting shop against the hillside, which created a weekly output of between 25tons of pig iron per week. Called "Pen y cae" after the original far by the locals, the partners anglicanised the rivers name to the Ebbw Vale Furnace Company Ltd (EVC), hence naming both the works and the developing township. In 1793 Homfray bought out his partners with help from the Bristol-based Quaker family the Harfords, who in 1796 bought out Homfray himself to take complete ownership.

Early 19th century

The plant was developed as a specialist forge, and needing addition supplies of iron the company, now owned by the Hardfords family trust, bought and integrated the Sirhowy Ironworks and colliery. The company then built four new cupola furnaces. This enabled the company to supply railway line, including the pioneering Liverpool & Manchester and the Stockton & Darlington Railway. These contracts required additiona integration, resulting in the driving of a 1 mile (1.6 km) tunnel between the Sirhowy site and Ebbw Vale, which itself was then equipped by steam driven locomotives.

Transport

The Tredegar Iron Company had need to transport raw materials to and products from its various iron works in the upper Ebbw Valley. Developments included:

By 1805, a 24-mile (39 km) stretch of tramline had been laid to transport coal and iron ore to Newport Docks, laid jointly by Tredegar Iron Company and the Monmouthshire Canal Company. Pulled by teams of horses, in 1829 Chief Engineer Thomas Ellis was authorised to purchase a steam locomotive from the Stephenson Company. Built at Tredegar Works, it made its maiden trip on 17 December 1829.

New owners, expansion

After some commercial failures in the United States, in 1844 the Hardfords family trust sold the works to partners Abraham Darby, Henry Dickenson, Joseph Robinson and J Tothill of Coalbrookdale, with partner Thomas Brown designated managing director. This change started a period of expansion via acquisition, including:

In 1850, the companys chemist George Parry achieved a great economy in blast furnace practice, the first to adopt the cup and cone successfully on blast furnaces. He then conducted experiments in converting iron into steel, but the company was eventualy forced to adopt the patented process of Henry Bessemer. By 1863, the company was producing 100,000 tons of rail and merchant bars per annum, from 19 blast furnaces, 192 puddling furnaces, and 99 heating furnaces located at: Ebbw Vale; Sirhowy; Victoria; Abersychan; Pontypool; Abercarn. It also had six wharfs at Newport Docks, the hematite mine in the Forest of Dean, and spathic iron ore mines in the Brendon Hills and Spain.

Ebbw Vale Steel Iron and Coal Company

In 1871, Darby converted the partnership into a limited company, under the eventual title of the Ebbw Vale Steel Iron and Coal Company (EVSICC), headquartered in Manchester. The capital injection allowed investment in the most powerful blowing engine in the world to serve four of the Ebbw Vale furnaces, new rolling mills and a Bessemer converter shop which produced the first steel ingots, including high carbon spiegel-eisen (mirror iron).

1930s redevelopment

In 1929, a lack of investment had led to a lack of new orders. The oncoming economic depression lead to a shut-down of the works and resulatnt huge redundancies, with minimal maintenance applied to the infrastructure. The result was that by 1934, unemployment in Ebbw Vale stood at 54% out of a population of 31,000.[5]

In 1935, the UK Government forcibly got the EVSICC to sell the site to tin plate manufacturer Richard Beaumont Thomas. He choose to import the UK's first continuous hot rolling mill from the United States, and totally redevelop a modern steelworks site around this technology.[6] Due to the quality fo steel produced by the mill, Thomas effecitvely started the redevelopment of the entire UK steel industry, with the mill producing hot rolled coils instead of bars, billets and plates.[5]

Two and a half years later, production at the site restarted. This drew former steelworkers back to the valley, and by 1948 the plant was producing 600,000 tons of rolled steel annually. The resultant lack of manpower also drew in migrant workers from all over devastated post-war Europe and the British Empire.[5]

Richard Thomas & Baldwins

In 1948 in post-war Britain, two of the countries largest steel companies: Richard Thomas, which had plants in Ebbw Vale, Gloucester and the Forest of Dean; and Baldwins, with plants in Stourport and South Wales; agreed to a merger. The new company, Richard Thomas and Baldwins was resultantly the UK's largest steel maker by volume.

In 1948 RTB introduced the first continuous tinning line at its Ebbw Vale tinplate works.[7]

In 1951 RTB was nationalised and placed under the Iron and Steel Corporation of Great Britain. Under Conservative rule in 1953 it passed to the Iron and Steel Holding and Realisation Agency in readiness for privatisation. However, its size - it was the UK's largest steel company - inhibited its sale. It was still in public ownership when the industry was re-nationalised under British Steel in 1967.[8]

British Steel

Part of the nationalised British Steel from 1967, it ebacme part of the South Wales group alongside Llanwern and Port Talbot Steelworks.[8]

The original choice for the site was due to it co-location with both iron ore and coal. However by the 1970s the industry had changed to one of shear volume, with supplies drawn from vast mines and pits. If plants were remote from these, then they had to have access to bulk transportation facilities such as deep water ports. Ebbw Vale was neither located near such vast pits, or bulk shipping facilities.[8]

Resultantly, when British Steel announced its 10 integrated production plan for South Wales, it came as no real surprise that it proposed the cessation of iron and steel making operations at the Ebbw Vale works, with the site redeveloped as a specialist tin plate manufacturing site. The closure of the coke ovens in March 1972 allowed work to commence on removing the 19th century "drill ground" tip, which contained 500,000 tons of waste material.[8]

Once the waste removal was complete, British Steel showed plans for the redevelopment of Ebbw Vale. The former waste site was back-filled, and allowed the cold rolling mill to be extended. The was now bale to supply sufficent capacity of steel to a new tinplate complex, which in 1974 commissioned a newly built hydrochloric acid Pickle line.

With staff redeployed to the developing tin plate plant, on 17th July 1975 both the convertor shop and all remaining blast furnaces closed, having produced 16,916,523 tons of iron. The continuous hot strip mill rolled its last hot rolled coil on 29 September 1977, having rolled 23million tons of steel since first being commissioned in 1937. Having slabbed 24 million tons of steel, the final cast was made in the open hearth department in May 1978.[8]

Again, demolition and clearance of these plants allowed the start of construction of phase2 of the tinplate works. This included new: an effluent plant; single stack annealing line; two electrolytic tinning lines (ETL); a cleaning line; and a Hallden Shears plant. Having cost £57 million, the plant was officially opened in June 1978 by Derek Hornby, the President of the Food Manufacturing Federation. It was envisaged in the original plan that phase3 would then be constructed to double production yet again, but it was never authorised for planning by the government.[8]

Ebbw Vale Garden Festival

It took until 1981 before demolition and clearance of the former iron and steel plants was completed, which also moved inwards the residual tinplate works southern boundary. It was on this part of the site that Ebbw Vale council approved a bid for the 1992 National Garden Festival, awarded to the council and site in November 1988. It was billed as the Ebbw Vale Garden Festival, attracting over 2million visitors to South Wales.[8]

Closure

On 6 October 1999, a merger was announced between the Koninklijke Hoogovens steel company of the Netherlands, and British Steel plc to form new company Corus.

Although investment had continued at the Ebbw Vale site over the past two decades, No.2 ETL had been shut down in 1995, and rather than be redeveloped as planned had become a source of spares for the No.1 ETL. Steel production capacity was in excess of the required market in Europe, hence the need for the merger, which would result in the closure of capacity across the newly integrated company. With much tinplate consumption moving to the newly expanding Asian market, it came as little surprise when on 1 Febraury 2001 that Corus announced the complete closure of the Ebbw Vale site, and the resultant loss of 780 jobs.[8]

The plant began a shut-down procedure, with many of the lines within the plant packaged up and transported to other sites in the Corus company (Trostre, Llanelli and Ijmuiden, Holland), while other plants were sold as a package to an Indian-based company.[8]

In July 2002, the Ebbw Vale steel works site officially closed, although a skelton staff deconstructed the remaining sold plants and handled shipping of residual finished product until December 2002.[8]

Redevelopment

From mid-2002, Scottish site clearance and demolition contractors Morton were on site, to assess the land needs to leave the site fit and ready for future development. Demolition commenced in August 2002, and the land was remediated over a period of approximately five years.

In 2007 a £350 million regeneration project was jointly announced by Blaenau Gwent Council and Welsh Government. Outline planning permission was granted in 2007 for a mixed use redevelopment, including: housing; retail & office; wetlands; a Learning campus and many other uses. Wales' first all individual bed hospital Ysbyty Aneurin Bevan opened in 2010, named after the National Health Service founder Aneurin Bevan.[9]

References

  1. ^ "Rassa Railroad". RailBrit.co.uk. Retrieved 23 September 2011.
  2. ^ "Ebbw Vale history". bioeddie.co.uk. Retrieved 23 September 2011.
  3. ^ "Beaufort Ironworks Tramway". RailBrit.co.uk. Retrieved 23 September 2011.
  4. ^ "Monmouthshire Canal Tramway". RailBrit.co.uk. Retrieved 23 September 2011.
  5. ^ a b c Noel Evans. "Steel on film". BBC Wales. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  6. ^ Ebbw Vale History
  7. ^ BBC - South West Wales Eisteddfod - The Old Steelworks
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Ebbw Vale steelsworks". Graces Guide. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  9. ^ "Hospital named after Aneurin Bevan opens in Ebbw Vale". BBC News. 12 October 2010. Retrieved 3 April 2012.

External links