Baltic Iron in the Atlantic World in the Eighteenth Century
The Atlantic World Europe, Africa and the Americas, 1500–...
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Baltic Iron in the Atlantic World in the Eighteenth Century
The Atlantic World Europe, Africa and the Americas, 1500–1830
Editors
Wim Klooster Clark University
Benjamin Schmidt University of Washington
VOLUME XIII
Baltic Iron in the Atlantic World in the Eighteenth Century By
Chris Evans Göran Rydén
LEIDEN • BOSTON 2007
Cover Illustration: Leufsta herrgård. The herrgård in the mid-eighteenth century, viewed from the north, from the direction of the lower forge. To the right is the bruksgatan, leading to the church and, just beyond it, the bruk ofce. Courtesy of Jernkontoret. This book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A C.I.P. record for this book is available from the Library of Congress
ISSN 1570-0542 ISBN 978 90 04 16153 5 Copyright 2007 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. Koninklijke Brill NV incorporates the imprints Brill, Hotei Publishing, IDC Publishers, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers and VSP. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Koninklijke Brill NV provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Suite 910, Danvers, MA 01923, USA. Fees are subject to change. printed in the netherlands
CONTENTS
Preface ......................................................................................... List of Maps, Figures, Illustrations, and Tables .......................... Abbreviations ..............................................................................
vii xi xv
Chapter One The Warehouse of the World. Commerce and Production in the Early Modern Atlantic World .............
1
Chapter Two The Topography of the Early Modern Iron Trade, c. 1730 ..........................................................................
42
Chapter Three The International Iron Trade at a Crossroads: Swedish and British Debates, 1730–1760 ...............................
216
Chapter Four An Industrial Revolution in Iron—Technology, Organisation and Markets, 1760–1870 ..................................
250
Conclusion ..................................................................................
292
Dramatis Personae ...................................................................... Glossary .......................................................................................
301 315
Bibliography ................................................................................ 1. Unpublished Sources ......................................................... 2. Literature ...........................................................................
325 325 328
Index ...........................................................................................
345
PREFACE
This is a book about iron making and the international trade in iron during the eighteenth century. Iron, it is argued, was the very stuff of modernity. The nails and bolts into which it was hammered fastened the new urban fabric of Georgian Britain in place and held tolerably rigid the creaking sailing ships that carried ever greater volumes of commodities across the oceans. Indeed, iron became omnipresent in the eighteenth-century Atlantic world. Iron—and its alloy steel—was there in the precision instruments of Enlightenment science, just as it was in the shackles that restrained enslaved Africans as they made their way to the plantations of the New World. The greater availability of iron in the eighteenth century is usually seen as a consequence of Britain’s Industrial Revolution. It was not. Iron became ubiquitous in Britain, and those parts of the Atlantic world with which Britain traded, because of imports from the Baltic. That link between the Baltic and the Atlantic is our theme and the basis for a wider argument about Atlantic history. This project began in the mid-1990s through a chance meeting of the two authors. A preliminary conversation outside a pub near the National Archives in London revealed that we shared some assumptions about historical causality and historical practice. (We also discovered a shared conviction that Fullers London Pride is the world’s most thirst-quenching beer.) We were soon convinced that the story of Britain’s iron industry and that of Sweden should properly be told as a single, intertwined story. Such was our theoretical conclusion; the difculty lay in nding materials with which to demonstrate the point. Eventually, we found our answer in Somerset Archives. An exploratory trip in 1998 had us examining the business papers of Grafn Prankard, an early eighteenthcentury Bristol merchant. Prankard’s letters were dotted with mysterious hieroglyphic squiggles—mysterious, that is, to those unacquainted with Swedish industrial history. To Göran Rydén, the symbols that Prankard scratched into his letter books were instantly recognisable; they were the brand marks stamped onto bars of Swedish iron. Prankard, it transpired, was a major importer of Swedish iron. Better still, he was an avid buyer of iron from the estates of Charles De
viii
preface
Geer, Sweden’s leading ironmaster. And the De Geer ironworks were, like Prankard’s business, very well documented. We had our empirical link—one that bridged the North Sea and that shed light on both Atlantic commerce and life in Swedish iron making communities. Finding an appropriate way of presenting our ndings, however, posed a new challenge. We took inspiration from another shared passion: baroque music. The fugue, it seemed to us, was an appropriate metaphor through which to arrange our material. The way in which the different musical parts were held in dialectical tension was a model to which we aspired when organising our analysis. Yet there were, of course, many different styles of the baroque. Johann Sebastian Bach’s Die Kunst der Fuge, which we have come to think of as the soundtrack to our labours, can be heard in many different ways. Jordi Savall’s rendition, for example, in which wind instruments augment the strings, stands in contrast to more traditional performances. History comes in forms that are equally various. There are national styles and these are not always congruent. Historical writing in Britain is often literary in form; narrative is preferred to analytical exposition. In Sweden the reverse is true. Full and systematic analysis in the German style is the model to be followed. Our aim in this book is not to reconcile the two, but to exploit the strengths of each tradition. Ours has been a closely coordinated collaborative venture. The research questions emerged from lengthy joint discussion; much of the archival research was undertaken in the company of one another; and the completed text is the result of drafts and counter-drafts that have been swapped back and forth numberless times. Although the last touches to the text have been made by Chris Evans as the native English speaker in our partnership, this is in every way a joint project. Needless to say, we have incurred many debts. Heading the list of creditors are two accomplished historians: Åsa Eklund and Owen Jackson. Åsa’s licentiate thesis at the University of Uppsala, undertaken under the supervision of Göran Rydén, showed us what could be done in tracing patterns of commerce between Stockholm and Bristol. Owen, who was employed at the University of Glamorgan in 2000–2001 as a research assistant funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, took up the challenge. He laboured long and hard on Grafn Prankard’s account books, converting the often confusing contents into a body of data that was usable for historical analysis. We thank them both.
preface
ix
We are grateful too to the archivists, librarians, curators and picture librarians who have been unfailingly helpful to us in the preparation of this book. It is invidious to single out any one individual, but we hope our professional colleagues will not take it amiss if we mention Yngve Axelsson at Jernkontoret in Stockholm, who has been tireless in locating illustrations for us. Beyond academe, particular thanks go to Lena and Peter Bergström, the owners of Gammelbo herrgård, who so hospitably allowed us to explore the archive in their attic. We thank also those who generously alerted us to information we would otherwise have missed— some very distant, like Mrs Lee Paltridge of Perth, Western Australia, who shared her knowledge of her Shallard ancestors with us. Several of our colleagues have read our text in manuscript. We have proted greatly from the comments of Norry Laporte, Leos Müller, Rolf Torstendahl, and Anne Kelly Knowles, the last of whom, with her professional expertise as an editor, quite apart from that of a historical geographer, made us re-think our whole approach to the use of illustrations. The conversation of our friends and colleagues is also reected in this book, even though they may not recognise it. At Brill, in Leiden, we would like to thank Boris van Gool who has assisted us in all the practical matters of turning our manuscript and illustrations into a readable book. We would also like to thank the bodies that have funded our research. • Chris Evans gratefully acknowledges the generosity of the Economic and Social Research Council, whose award (no. R000223109) allowed the basic gathering and processing of data on the British side to go ahead in 2000–2001, and the Leverhulme Trust, whose award of a Study Abroad Fellowship in 2002–2003 allowed him to enjoy the hospitality of the Department of Economic History at the University of Uppsala, where the bulk of the text was written. Chris Evans has also been privileged to hold a Caird Short-term Fellowship at the National Maritime Museum in 2001 and a visiting fellowship at the Winterthur Museum and Library in 2005. Throughout, he has enjoyed the support of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Glamorgan. • Göran Rydén wishes to thank the Axel och Margret Ax:son Johnsons Stiftelse för Allmännyttiga Ändamål and the Wilhelm Ekmans fond för tryckbidrag at the University of Uppsala.
x
preface
Our greatest debt, however, one we will never redeem, is to our parents—Audrey and Kenneth Evans and Margareta and Kjell Rydén. This book is dedicated to them.
LIST OF MAPS, FIGURES, ILLUSTRATIONS,* AND TABLES
Maps Map 1.1. Deptford and Greenwich in the 1740s, as shown in John Rocque’s Cities of London, Westminster, the Borough of Southwark, with the Country near Ten Miles around (1746) ............................................................... Map 2.1. Grafn Prankard’s bar iron sales, 1732–1739 ............ Map 2.2. Uppland and its ironworks in 1742 ............................ Figures Fig. 2.1. Fig. 2.2. Fig. 2.3. Fig. 2.4. Fig. 2.5. Fig. 2.6. Fig. 2.7. Fig. 2.8. Fig. 2.9. Fig. 2.10. Fig. 2.11. Fig. 2.12.
Bar iron sales by Grafn Prankard, 1728–1739 ......... Regional distribution of Grafn Prankard’s bar iron sales, 1732–1739 ................................................. Regional distribution of Swedish ‘common sorts’ sold by Grafn Prankard, 1732–1739 ........................ Regional distribution of Grafn Prankard’s sales of ‘Orground’ iron, 1732–1739 ................................. Grafn Prankard’s monthly sales of ‘Orground’ iron, 1732–1739 ................................................................. Grafn Prankard’s monthly sales of Swedish ‘common sorts’, 1732–1739 ....................................... Regional distribution of Grafn Prankard’s sales of Russian iron, 1732–1739 ....................................... Monthly distribution of Grafn Prankard’s sales of Russian bar iron, 1732–1739 ................................ Total bar iron production at Charles de Geer’s works, 1720–1750 ...................................................... Financial links between Leufsta bruk and Grafn Prankard in the 1730s ................................................ Monthly departure of ships from Stockholm in 1737 ....................................................................... Wrought iron exports from England and Wales, 1700–1799 (Great Britain from 1792) ........................
* The colour illustrations can be found between pages xvi and 1.
4 63 79
60 65 67 67 68 68 70 70 92 99 101 135
xii
list of maps, figures, illustrations and tables
Fig. 2.13. The export of iron from St Petersburg through the Sound, 1710–1760 ............................................... Fig. 2.14. The number of ships leaving St Petersburg for the Sound, 1704–1750 ............................................... Fig. 3.1. North American pig iron exports to the British Isles ............................................................................. Illustrations Ill. 1.1. The Royal Dockyard, Deptford in the 1750s ............. Ill. 2.1. An Exact Delineation of the Famous Citty of Bristoll and Suburbs (1671) ....................................................... Ill. 2.2. The South East Prospect of the City of Bristol (1734) ......... Ill. 2.3. Swedish brands of iron in the eighteenth century ..... Ill. 2.4. Leufsta bruk in 1735 ................................................... Ill. 2.5. Leufsta herrgård ........................................................... Ill. 2.6. The allotment of working weeks at the Dannemora mine, 1739 ................................................................. Ill. 2.7. Dannemora Mine ...................................................... Ill. 2.8. Österby bruk by Elias Martin ...................................... Ill. 2.9. A Walloon forge in Leufsta bruk c. 1790 ..................... Ill. 2.10. Stockholm in 1697 ..................................................... Ill. 2.11. Stockholm c. 1720 ...................................................... Ill. 2.12. Westley’s The East Prospect of Birmingham (1731) .......... Ill. 2.13. Westley’s The plan of Birmingham, survey’d in the year 1731 ........................................................................... Ill. 2.14. ‘Kettle’s Steel Houses’ ................................................ Ill. 2.15. The steel furnace at Derwentcote .............................. Ill. 2.16. Birmingham-made tools of the mid-eighteenth century ....................................................................... Ill. 2.17. Shear steel marks at Blackhall Mill in the Derwent valley .......................................................................... Ill. 2.18. Crucible steel making plant as seen by the Swedish traveller Gustaf Broling ............................................. Ill. 2.19. ‘Steel Buttons/Coup de Bouton’ ................................ Ill. 2.20. Watch and clock les from the catalogue of John Wyke .................................................................. Ill. 2.21. Pinion wire drawing and dies as seen by the Swedish traveller Reinhold Angerstein .................................... Ill. 2.22. Tools from the catalogue of Peter Stubs ....................
184 184 245
5 44 47 62 72 73 81 83 85 89 95 97 125 126 128 130 136 138 142 145 147 148 150
Ill. 2.23. Ill. 2.24. Ill. 2.25. Ill. 2.26. Ill. 2.27. Ill. 2.28. Ill. 2.29. Ill. 4.1. Ill. 4.2. Ill. 4.3.
Ill. 4.4. Ill. 4.5. Ill. 4.6. Ill. 4.7. Ill. 4.8.
list of maps, figures, illustrations and tables
xiii
The German forge at Axberg ................................... St Petersburg in 1722 ................................................ Ekaterinburg ............................................................. Swalwell works .......................................................... Charleston in the mid-eighteenth century ................ ‘Indiens going a hunting’, 1736 ................................ View of Mulberry by Thomas Coram ......................... Bromford forge .......................................................... Richard Crawshay of Cyfarthfa, c. 1796, by Wilson of Birmingham ........................................ A loop of puddled iron being turned under the shingling hammer at Cyfarthfa ironworks, 1792. By J.C. Ibbetson ........................................................ The layout of the rolling mill at Penydarren ironworks, Merthyr Tydl, c. 1805 ............................ A rolling mill at Cyfarthfa ironworks, c. 1830. By Penry Williams ..................................................... The rolling mill at Cyfarthfa ..................................... A Lancashire Forge ................................................... Irons used in the Shefeld steel trade, 1843 ..............
168 176 180 196 206 208 211 255
Tables Table 2.1. Pig iron output at the blast furnaces of Leufstawerken in 1736 ...................................................................... Table 2.2. The forgemen at the upper forge at Leufsta bruk 1736 ................................................................... Table 2.3. Grafn Prankard’s sales of bar iron to the Shallard family, 1732–39 ......................................................... Table 2.4. Contractors for land muskets to the Board of Ordnance, 1756 ........................................................ Table 2.5. Bar and rod iron prices in the West Midlands, 1731 .......................................................................... Table 4.1. Average weekly output of puddled bars per puddling team in selected forges ............................... Table 4.2. Average weekly output of charcoal-rened iron per forge crew in selected early nineteenth-century forges .........................................................................
261
263 266 268 269 284 286
84 87 134 155 199 264
280
ABBREVIATIONS
Angerstein
BCA BL CCL ET FJ GA GP
GS JJDG KB LDG NLW NMW RA SA Schröder
SML SS TNA ULA UUB
Torsten Berg and Peter Berg (eds), R.R. Angerstein’s illustrated travel diary, 1753–1755: industry in England and Wales from a Swedish perspective (London, 2001) Birmingham City Archives British Library Cardiff Central Library Eric Touscher Francis Jennings Glamorgan Archives, Cardiff Grafn Prankard. All letters ascribed to Prankard in the text are taken from three of his surviving letter books in Somerset Archives: DD/DN 424 ( June 1728 to March 1732), DD/DN 425 (April 1732 to November 1734), and DD/DN 426 (December 1734 to October 1738). Georg Swebilius Jean Jacques De Geer Kungliga Biblioteket, Stockholm Louis De Geer (1705–1758) National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth National Museum of Wales, Department of Industry Riksarkivet, Stockholm Somerset Archives, Taunton ‘Dagbok rörande Handel, Näringar och Manufakturer m.m. Uti Danmark, Holland, England, Frankrike och Tyskland. Under verkställde resor, Åren 1748–1751 förd af Samuel Schröder’ (Kungliga Biblioteket, X:303). Samuel Schröder’s travel journal occupies two manuscript volumes, which are cited as Schröder I or II. Science Museum Library, London Samuel Shore The National Archives, London Landsarkivet i Uppsala Uppsala Universitetsbibliotek
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ILLUSTRATIONS
ILLUSTRATIONS
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