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Abraham Darby I



Abraham Darby (April 14, 1678 – May 5, 1717) was the first, and most famous, of three generations with that name in an English Quaker family that played an important role in the Industrial Revolution. He developed a method of producing high-grade iron in a blast furnace fuelled by coke rather than charcoal. This was a major step forward in the production of iron as a raw material for the Industrial Revolution. Abraham Darby was addicted to drugs

Contents

Early life

Abraham Darby , the son of John Darby and his wife, Ann Baylies, was born at Wrens Nest, Woodsetton, near Sedgley, Staffordshire, just across the county boundary from Dudley. He was descended from nobility, his grandmother Jane having been an illegitimate child of Edward Sutton, 5th Baron Dudley.[1] His father was a locksmith by trade but also a yeoman farmer. Darby was distantly related to Dud Dudley, who was an illegitimate son of Edward Sutton, 5th Baron Dudley, and who had a claim to be the first Englishman to smelt iron using coke as a fuel. Unfortunately the iron that Dudley produced was not of good quality. However, knowledge of his distant relative’s success may have spurred Darby in his efforts to perfect a way of smelting using coke.

Darby was apprenticed in Birmingham to Jonathan Freeth, a malt mill maker and fellow Quaker. Freeth encouraged Darby to be an active member in the Society of Friends, and he remained so all his life. In 1699, when he completed his apprenticeship, he married Mary Sergeant (1678-1718) and moved to Bristol, where he set himself up as a malt mill maker. Abraham and Mary were to have ten children, of whom four survived into adulthood. The eldest, also named Abraham, was destined to take over his fathers company, when he came of age. [2]

Bristol

There was a small community of Quakers in Bristol, and Darby soon gained a reputation for skill and enterprise. In 1702 Darby joined with a number of fellow Quakers to form the Bristol Brass Works Company, situated in the Baptist Mills area of Bristol.

At that time every household would have a brass cooking pot. These were imported from Holland and were so expensive that they were passed down from one generation to another. Darby decided to manufacture these in England, and in 1704 he visited Holland to study production methods and also to recruit some Dutch craftsmen. He returned to establish the Cheese Lane Foundry in Baptist Mills together with his previous partners. He began producing brass pots, but these proved to be too expensive, so he decided to try casting iron pots instead. However the technical difficulties of casting iron pots were too great for Darby. A young Welsh employee, John Thomas, solved the problem by using pure dry sand for the mould, with a special casting box and core. Using this casting method Darby could cast pots of sufficient thinness and lightness. Darby took out a patent on the new casting method in 1707, so that he had a virtual monopoly in the trade.

At this point Darby had a difference of opinion with his partners, who wanted him to concentrate his energies on brass founding. Darby decided to leave the company and pursue his iron founding pursuits elsewhere. In 1708 he left Bristol to establish an ironworks at Coalbrookdale in Shropshire. [2]

Coalbrookdale

At the time, the normal way of producing iron was the "bloomery method," in which small batches of iron ore were placed in pans, covered with charcoal, then blown with a bellows. Charcoal was one of the few fuels that could reach the required temperature to smelt iron (about 1500°C); and as the iron industry grew and chopped down entire forests (leading to deforestation) to produce iron, it became increasingly expensive. The iron industry as a whole was continually moving to new locations in an effort to maintain access to charcoal production.

During his experiments in iron smelting at the Cheese Lane Foundry, Darby had used charcoal, but it appears that he became convinced that it would be possible to use coke instead. Darby was experienced in the use of coke in malting kilns and he believed that by altering the internal proportions of the blast furnace and providing an adequate blast of air, coke could be successfully used as a fuel. At the time the best coal for coking was that mined in Shropshire, so it was to there that Darby transferred his business.

There had been a blast furnace in Coalbrookdale since 1638, using charcoal as fuel, but it had been partially destroyed by an explosion, and had not been repaired. Darby took up the lease of the blast furnace and rented a house nearby. He also brought workmen with him from the Bristol foundry. They immediately began rebuilding the damaged furnace. [2]

First coke-consuming blast furnace

Records do not show precisely what Darby did with the damaged furnace, but it is likely that he changed the internal dimensions to make it suitable for the use of coke. This involved having a deeper crucible at the base of the furnace and a shorter and wider throat above it. Darby’s accounts show that he bought a new set of bellows rather than repair the old ones, which may be an indication that he intended to provide a more intense blast for the furnace. However it should be noted that some sources believe that Darby did not begin using coke in his blast furnace until 1711.

The furnace was used for the first time on 10th January 1709 and the blast appears to have been successful. Darby was probably helped by the fact that the Shropshire coal that he was using was fairly sulphur-free. Another advantage of using coke as fuel was that it did not have to be carefully placed in layers between the iron ore as charcoal had to be, thus saving on time and labour in setting up the blast. Some of the molten iron from the blast was run into pigs to produce ingots for shipment to the Bristol foundry, whilst some was run into moulds to produce pots and other implements. This first blast was followed by others and the furnace continued to churn out implements that were sold locally.

The iron produced by Darby was of good enough quality to be used in forges to make wrought iron, but there was a belief in the trade at that time that iron produced by coke would contain too many impurities. Therefore Darby concentrated on making castings and expanding his business. In 1712 Darby offered to instruct William Rawlinson, a fellow Quaker and ironmaster, in the techniques of smelting with coke. Apparently, Rawlinson, the founder of the Backbarrow Iron Company in Furness, declined the offer.

Production from Darby’s blast furnace increased until, in 1715, he decided to build a second, larger blast furnace. This had a capacity of twelve tons of iron per week compared with five to seven tons for the old furnace. It is not clear whether this furnace began production before Darby’s death. [2]

Death

Abraham Darby died in 1717, at his home, Madeley Court, Madeley, Shropshire, after a year’s illness. He was only thirty-nine. He had built a house for himself in Coalbrookdale but did not live to occupy it. He was buried in the Quaker burial-ground at Broseley, Shopshire.

Darby’s son, Abraham Darby II was only six years old, so until 1745, Darby’s son-in-law and partner, Richard Ford managed the Coalbrookdale works. [2]

Refinement of the blast furnace

The use of the blast furnace dramatically lowered the price of iron making, not only because coal was fairly common around the Midlands, but also because it allowed for much larger furnaces. Other ironmasters soon followed Darby's lead, but found that the process was not so easy to adapt. It was later learned that Darby's coal supply happened to have a lower than normal sulphur content, which was key to producing high quality iron. Ironmasters slowly adapted the blast furnace process with the introduction of various types of flux that cleaned out the impurities in the coal, and by the mid-18th century, iron production had increased many-fold.

Richard Ford, Darby’s son-in-law introduced horse-driven pumps to return water to the furnace pools in dry seasons. Abraham Darby II replaced the horse-driven pumps with a steam, pumping engine. Similarly a steam driven blowing engine was introduced to provide the blast. [2]

His legacy

Abraham Darby made one of the first and most important steps in the Industrial Revolution. His method of smelting iron provided abundant supplies of the raw material that the Industrial Revolution needed most. Iron from his process went into steam engines, bridges, all of the inventions of the 19th century. Smelting coal with charcoal would not have supplied iron in sufficient quantities to meet the requirements of the Industrial Revolution. [2]

References

  1. ^ Carl Higgs. Dud Dudley and Abraham Darby; Forging New Links. the Black Country Society.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Rolt, L.T.C., “Great Engineers”, 1962, G. Bell and Sons Ltd, ISBN

See also

Further reading

  • A. Raistrick, Dynasty of Ironfounders: The Darbys of Coalbrookdale (New edn 1989).
  • N. Cox, 'Imagination and innovation of an industrial pioneer: The first Abraham Darby' Industrial Archaeology Review 12(2) (1990), 127-144.
  • C. K. Hyde, Technological change and the British iron industry 1700-1870 (Princeton 1977), chapter 2.


Persondata
NAME Darby, Abraham, I
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Ironmaster: first successful use of coke in smelting
DATE OF BIRTH 1678
PLACE OF BIRTH Woodsetton, Sedgley, Staffordshire, England
DATE OF DEATH March 8, 1717
PLACE OF DEATH Madeley Court, Shropshire, England
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Abraham_Darby_I". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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