Staveley Coal and Iron Company

Staveley Coal and Iron Company Limited
Industry Mining, Ironworks, Chemicals
Fate Taken over
Successor Stewarts & Lloyd's; BSC
Founded ?
Defunct 1960 t/o
Headquarters Staveley, Derbyshire
Key people
Charles Paxton Markham
Products Pipes, Chemicals
The works was unusual in hiring locomotives for internal shunting work from the Main Line Railways as in 1963
Stanton & Staveley manhole cover

The Staveley Coal and Iron Company Limited was an industrial company based in Staveley, near Chesterfield, North Derbyshire. The company was registered in 1863,[1] appearing in provincial stock exchange reports from 1864.[2] It exploited local ironstone quarried from land owned by the Duke of Devonshire on the outskirts of the village. It developed into coal mining, owning several collieries and also into chemical production, first from those available from coal tar distillation, later to cover a wide and diverse range. Part of the plant at Staveley was a sulphuric acid manufacturing unit making use of the Contact Process.

It was during the years of World War 1 that the company developed its chemical operations beyond coal-tar chemicals and began production of sulphuric and nitric acids. During the war they also made picric acid, TNT and guncotton. Following the end of hostilities the company laid plans to develop a range of chlorinated organics and to this end purchased salt-bearing land near Sandbach, Cheshire. The salt was produced by a new company formed specifically for the purpose and named the British Soda Company. The salt being needed to feed a new installation of mercury cells at the Staveley works. The first cells at Staveley came into operation in 1922 and in 1926 they went into partnership with the Krebs Company of Paris and Berlin to develop a new cell, which was based on lessons learned. This was marketed worldwide as the Krebs-Staveley cell. This installation lasted into the late 1950s when the cellroom at Staveley was replaced with German-made mercury cells.

Another salt-related product was sodium chlorate. Staveley Coal and Iron Company were the first company in Britain to manufacture this chemical,[3] with the plant becoming operational in 1938.[4] In 1950, the Staveley Iron and Chemical Company was named by Imperial Chemical Industries as one of their main competitors in caustic soda production.[5]

In 1960 the Staveley Iron and Chemical Company, which had been taken over by Stewarts & Lloyds Limited was merged with the Ilkeston-based Stanton Iron Works to form Stanton and Staveley Ltd. In 1967 Stewarts and Lloyds became part of the nationalised British Steel Corporation, Stanton and Staveley also being incorporated.

By 1980 BSC sold off sections of the site as they divested themselves of non-core activities and by 2007 most of the former works at Staveley has been shut down and cleared. The only plant remaining now is a p-aminophenol plant that produces active ingredients for paracetamol production. The site ceased production in June 2012, marking over 100 years of chemical production at Staveley. The worldwide brand of Staveley Chemicals has finally been laid to rest. The site has since been demolished.

The former Chesterfield MP Eric Varley was an apprentice with the company in leaving school before he became a trade union man and then latter became Chairman of another local firm Coalite.[6]

References

  1. "Staveley Coal and Iron Co". Gracesguide.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  2. "Provincial Stock-Exchanges." Times [London, England] 23 Aug. 1864: 5. The Times Digital Archive
  3. "Staveley's New Venture." The Daily Mail, 28 September 1935. p2
  4. "Staveley Coal & Iron Company." Times [London, England] 27 Sept. 1938: 20. The Times Digital Archive.
  5. "I.C.I. : THE PARENT COMPANY AND ITS INTERESTS IN THE UNITED KINGDOM" (DOC). Catalyst.org.uk. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  6. "Former Chesterfield MP dies at 75". Derbyshire Times. 2008-07-30. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
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