Tinplate
Tinplate in the
Swansea Area
The meeting began with a minute’s silence to mark the Armistice which
brought hostilities to an end on the 11th hour of the 11th day of
the 11th month in 1918.
In recent
years the Swansea Branch of the History Society has provided ‘outreach’
speakers to history groups in the area.
Mr Peter Rees is one of those speakers and following his highly
enjoyable talk last year on the history of copper, the metallurgical theme
continued with a talk on the successful relationship which west Wales has with
tinplate.
Mr Rees
began his talk with explaining that the origins of coating metals with tin for
decorative or non-corrosive purposes was ancient and could well extend to 500
BC. However, in a more modern context the centre of the industry in the 16th
century was Bavaria in modern Germany. Craftsmen there had developed a process
of using a tilt hammer to flatten the metal, this was then placed in a vat of
oatmeal which cleaned the sheet and the process was finished by coating it in
molten tin. England alone imported over two million sheets mostly to make
plates. Pewter was expensive and wood only used by the poor, therefore Bavarian
tinplate was a status symbol in the Tudor home. Henry the Eighth was not happy
with the effect this had on the balance of payments and the search was on for
producing home manufactured tinplate. The imported ware was known as ‘crooked
lane ware’ and providers give us the origin of the name ‘tinker’.
The race was
then on to find to found a home produced industry, after all there was plenty
of valuable tin to be found in Cornwall. In 1667, several entrepreneurs
including John Hanbury visited Dresden. Hanbury needed coal for heat, water for
power and ironstone to begin his works and found that Pontypool was the perfect
location. Capel Hanbury his son had worked in the woollen industry and had
introduced mechanical processes. He in turn invented a ‘mangle’ like device to
flatten the sheet, so creating a nascent ‘rolling mill’, thus getting rid of
the tilt hammers. In 1728, Major John
Hanbury introduced a modified three cylinder mill which was largely the same as
the ‘pack’ mills which remained in use in Wales as late as 1962. There is
evidence that Welsh tinplate was getting to be used widely in that Goya used a
sheet of tinplate from Pontypool as the base of one his paintings in 1781.
Quickly the
industry spread across south Wales and tinworks appeared from as far afield as
Lydney to Carmarthen. By 1843, there were 23 works in Wales, but this had
almost quadrupled by 1891 to 90 works with the locus of the industry very
firmly in the west around Swansea.
Production increased from 4,000 tons in 1801 to 690,000 in 1900, which
made it easily the most productive area in the world for tinplate and the
global price was set in the metal exchange in Swansea Docks. The expansion was
partly due to the evolution of the railway network which made the economic
transportation of the raw materials much easier.
Crucial to
the development of tinplate was the development of the tin can , which enabled
meat and other food to be kept edible.
Initially, canned food had a military purpose since it allowed armies to
move unhindered by the need to forage for food while advancing. The American
Civil war took up to 70% of the British
production and the ‘Wild West’ , wagon
trains were made possible by the fact that the chuck wagon was full of tins and
the plates did not rust. However, the
position was to change dramatically when the USA decided that they wished to
develop their own tinplate industry. The McKinley Tariff of 1890 placed a
tariff of 50% on all imported goods, but on tinplate it was placed at 70% so
causing massive problems to the blossoming Welsh industry (plus ca change.Ed). Ironically,
many Welsh workers emigrated to the US
in order to manage the foreign plants around Pennsylvania and Philadelphia (there
is a house named ‘Scranton ‘in Neath Road .Ed). Some 36 works closed in
Wales, including the famous Dyffryn works in Morriston.
Mr Rees
pointed out that the Welsh industry proved resilient. The plants were largely
revived by the development of a new canning process by Bliss & Williams
which utilised steel from the Elba works and Llangennech tinplate to deform a
tin in a press. The advent of the Bessemer process (Dowlais) and the Siemens
furnace method ( in Swansea) of producing steel efficiently, sped the
development of canning in the area. The main locational pull factor was now the
availability of steel in the west of Wales around Swansea.
The next
innovation in tinplate once more came from America with the advent of the far
larger integrated strip mills, production per man was increased ten-fold and
the days of the smaller works ( such as
Clyne tinworks Ed) slowly came to an end. The area around Llanelli did indeed make “sospans” and the
canning industry had new markets in the corned beef from “Fray Bentos” in
Argentina which fed the the troops in the Great War with “bully beef”. Canned
fruit from South Africa, more exotic peaches from Australia and even pineapples
from Singapore became the regular Sunday tea in Welsh households.
The new and
bigger plants were built in Ebbw Vale , Velindre and Trostre. Today only
Trostre survives but is still improving and produces over 10,000 tons of
tinplate per day.
Following
the lecture, a long question and answer session compared the local aluminium
industry at Rheola with the processes in tinplate.
Mr Gwyn
Thomas thanked Mr Rees for a very interesting talk, and the Society looks
forward to his return next year.
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