- Bringewood Ironworks
Bringewood Ironworks was a
charcoal ironworks in northHerefordshire . It was powered by theriver Teme , with ablast furnace , afinery forge and latterly arolling mill for blackplate (to betin ned intotinplate ).It was probably built for
Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester in the 1590s, but reverted to the Crown on his attainder, and was then let to Sir Henry Wallop. However, he evidently sublet it to workingironmaster s. By1623 , it was run by Francis Walker, and continued to be operated by his descendants until the bankruptcy of Job Walker in1695 . They were also concerned in a number of other ironworks in southern and centralShropshire .About 1695, the ironworks, consisting of a
blast furnace and aforge , was acquired by Richard Knight. He and then his sons gradually expanded their activities, acquiring ironworks in the valley of the Stour. Richard Knight retired in about1733 , after which the works were managed by his son Ralph Knight for a family partership with his brother Edward. After his death, the works passed to Edward, who ran them in partnership with his sons John and James, managed by the latter. Their interest in the works ceased on Edward's death in1778 .The works were put into repair in
1782 and run by William Downing ofPembridge with a various partners, passing to ultimately Samuel George. The 1782 lease expired in 1815. This coincided with a depression in the iron industry at the end of theNapoleonic War . This seems to mark its closure. The furnace had probably closed in the 1790s, when Samuel George built at furnace atKnowbury close to Titterstone Clee.From about 1740, in addition to the furnace and forge, there was a rolling mill further downstream, which produced blackplate, which was sent to a tinmill at Mitton (now in
Stourport ) to be made into tinplate. The name of a nearby wood suggests that tinplate may have been produced at Bringewood. However, this can only have been after period of the Knights' occupation of the works, as the surviving accounts (for 1733-78) show only blackplate being produced.Wood (for charcoal) came from the nearby chases of Bringewood, Mocktree and Darvel. Though the possibility of mining locally is mentioned in some leases, it is probable that the main source of ore was
Titterstone Clee Hill .Pig iron , bar iron and blackplate, made in the works were carried by land toBewdley for sale, so far as not sold locally. Bringewood bar iron enjoyed a high reputation as being tough.References
* Dr Bull, 'Some account of Bringewood furnace and forge' "Trans. Woolhope Nat. Field Club" 1869, 54-60.
*Maj. Stewart Robinson, 'The forests and woodland areas of Herefordshire' "Trans. Woolhope Nat. Fld Club 1921-3" (1925), 193-220.
*Robert Page, 'Richard and Edward Knight: ironmasters of Bringewood and Wolverley' "Trans. Woolhope Nat. Field Club" 43(1) (1979), 7-17.
*L. Ince, "The Knight Family and the British iron industry" (1991).
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