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Albright and Wilson (Bristol)

Image by brizzle born and bred
1811 Arthur Albright was born in Oxfordshire.
1827 Albright moved to Bristol, where he was apprenticed to his uncle as a chemist.
1842 Arthur Albright, a trained chemist, became a Partner in the Birmingham chemical firm of John and Edmund Sturge; his sister had married Edmund Sturge who was a Quaker. The Sturges were already manufacturing potassium chlorate for the match industry, at their chemical works at Selly Oak, adjacent to the Worcester and Birmingham Canal.
1844 Albright added the production of white phosphorus.
1850 The production of potassium chlorate and white phosphorus was moved to Langley Green, Oldbury, West Midlands.
1851 Production of white phosphorus restarted. Albright was granted a patent in relation to his improved method of phosphorous production.
The new site was located next door to the firm of Chance Brothers and Co (later Chance and Hunt) in order to obtain access to a supply of sulphuric acid and hydrochloric acid, and of coal from the Black Country coal fields. It was also adjacent to two different arms of the Birmingham Canal Navigations, (the BCN), one leading off the Titford Canal, so it had good transport links.
1851 Production of the red form of phosphorus, "amorphous phosphorus" was commenced by Arthur Albright, by heating white phosphorus in a sealed crucible under a vacuum. This process had been discovered by Professor Schrötter, in Vienna and patented by him. However, it was explosive to make and Albright discovered a safe means of production.
1854 On 31 December Albright terminated his partnership with the Sturges.
1854 John Edward Wilson, a merchant, joined Albright and, in 1856, became a partner in the new partnership Albright and Wilson. The company was founded as a manufacturer of potassium chlorate and white phosphorus for the match industry. For much of its first 100 years of existence, phosphorus-derived chemicals formed the majority of its products.
1857 John Wilson married the sister of Rachel Albright (Albright’s wife).
c.1880 The development of the MacArthur-Forrest process for extracting gold from low-grade ore and mine tailings using cyanide excited the interest of a number of companies including Albright and Wilson.
1892 Albright and Wilson became a private limited company, Albright and Wilson Ltd; it remained a double family-owned firm for nearly 100 years, until 5 March 1948 when it became a public company.
1894 Albright and Wilson and Oldbury Alkali Co, neighbours in Oldbury and both engaged in the production of cyanide, decided to join forces in that business. A small subsidiary, British Cyanides Co Ltd, was formed under the chairmanship of Alexander Chance, and a plant was constructed on a piece of land adjacent to both companies. They experienced difficulties in converting sulpho-cyanide into cyanide.
1900 When the South African War broke out in 1900, the largest market for cyanide disappeared and all but 2 of the British suppliers left the business, one of the surviviors being British Cyanides Co.
Albright and Wilson expanded considerably into silicones, detergents, food additives, metal finishing chemicals, strontium based chemicals and Chromium based chemicals. It was the second largest chemical manufacturer in the United Kingdom; although it was always very much smaller than ICI.
Oldbury remained the Headquarters of Albright and Wilson for most of the company’s existence, eventually becoming known as the Oldbury Division. The Oldbury site was also the location of its central Research Laboratories.
1922 Listed Exhibitor – British Industries Fair. Phosphorus, White and Amorphous; Compounds of Phosphorus (technical and pure) for all purposes; Carbon Tetrachloride (pure); Sulphur S. P. V. and Lac; Ammonium Persulphate, etc. (Stand No. A.28) [1]
1929 Listed Exhibitor – British Industries Fair. Manufacturers of fine Pharmaceutical Chemicals. Phosphorus and its compounds, chlorides, Oxychlorides, etc. Phosphates, Phosphoric Acid. Carbon Tetrachloride, Ammonium Persulphate, Precipitated Sulphurs, Stone Preservative (Silicon Ester), Pure Ammonium Sulphate, Glycerosulphate. (Stand Nos. K.82 and K.85) [2]
1947 Listed Exhibitor – British Industries Fair. Manufacturers of Phosphorus, Phosphoric Acids, Sodium Phosphates, Acid Sodium Pyrophosphate, Tetrasodium Pyrophosphate, Monacalcium Phosphate, Tricalcium Phosphate, Ammonium Phosphates, Sodium Metaphosphate, alkyl Phosphates, Phosphorus Chlorides, Sesquisulphide, Hypophosphites, Carbon Tetrachlorides, Soldium Alginate, Ethyl Silicate. (Olympia, Ground Floor, Stand No. A.1052)
1948 The company became a public company.
By 1951 the company employed 4,000 people in the UK, Ireland, North America and Australia.
1960s The company built plants at Belledune and Long Harbour in Canada, though this did not turn out as expected. The company being rescued by its partial acquistion by Tenneco.
1971 Tenneco bought a part of Albright and Wilson’s share holdings; and in 1978 obtained full ownership. In the short term, the company retained its own identity; however many of its subsidiaries were sold off.
1995 Tenneco divested many of its assets; and parts of the original core of Albright and Wilson were transferred into a new public company, Albright and Wilson Plc which was floated on the stock market, in February of that year.
1999 However, just four years later, following disappointing results, the French chemical company Rhodia acquired Albright and Wilson and the century-and-a-half old name finally disappeared.
Parts of the original Albright and Wilson company are now owned by the Huntsman Corporation.
(any further information please)
source of information Grace’s Guide. The Best of British Engineering 1750-1960s
www.gracesguide.co.uk/wiki/Main_Page
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November 17th, 2011 - 10:59
The Fire at Albright and Wilson, Avonmouth. 3rd October 1996
At around 10:30 am on 3rd October 1996, a tanker containing what was believed to be epichlorohydrin began off-loading at the Albright & Wilson site in Avonmouth, Bristol. Soon after, a series of explosions destroyed both the storage tank and the road tanker and started a fire, which persisted for an hour. It was later discovered that the road tanker in fact contained sodium chlorite, which reacts explosively with epichlorohydrin. The fire generated a 100m black plume of smoke containing hydrogen chloride, which drifted across the Severn estuary closing local motorways and rail services.
Three weeks before the delivery was due, the company received a quality certificate confirming the number of the tank container in which the epichlorohydrin would be delivered. However due to a mix-up by the haulier, a different numbered tank containing sodium chlorite was sent by mistake. No crosschecks were made against the original documentation, which would have highlighted that the wrong chemical had been delivered. By the time the haulier notified the company of the mistake, off-loading of the road tanker ha commenced.
November 17th, 2011 - 11:52
Avonmouth Incidents as Reported in the Press
http://www.joolz.demon.co.uk/campaigns/avonmouth/history.html
November 17th, 2011 - 12:30
I have a lovely old ledger that belonged to J & E Sturge. It dates from late 1870′s to early 20th century. Obviously this is after the partnership between albright and sturge ended but its a great insight into the chemical industry in the 19th century. They have put soo much detail in it, theres details of chemists across britain and the rest of the world. Theres also an entry for Jesse Boots (the son of the founder of boots!) They documented orders but also some details on the kind of person the owner was. Also they kept newspaper clippings related to the chemists and letters from companies stating if they were good credit! Its fasinating, im slowly trying to read it
Sally
November 17th, 2011 - 13:26
abandoned house hunting, are we?
November 17th, 2011 - 13:56
It’s a far cry from Philadelphia, but I’m trying….
November 17th, 2011 - 14:54
so were you inside???? are there photographs of this adventure?! inquiring minds!
believe me, I’d much rather run across something like this than take a chance with some of the maybe-crackhouses in Philly proper!
November 17th, 2011 - 15:38
Yes, we thoroughly explored the inside! The mansion is actually a working place of business. You can rent out the entire hotel if you want. While we were there, a family had rented it out for their daughter’s wedding.
It was actually a little heartbreaking to be inside. The original design of the place is still really glorious. You can see the architect’s original intention in the beautiful crown moulding, original murals and tile floors. But it’s really falling apart. And whatever is falling apart has been repaired in a very cheap, inelegant, state-funded, bare-bones method.
So the glorious original library, with its gorgeous window seats and built-in bookcases, was furnished with metal folding chairs and plastic tables. The arm of the goddess statue in the center of the beautiful cloverleaf-shaped swimming pool was broken off, and the water in the pool was green with scum.
I kept thinking, "Some obscenely wealthy arts patron from New York needs to find out about this place, buy it back from the state, and pour millions of dollars into it." It’s a place with seriously amazing potential. But I don’t think the potential will ever be appreciated by the state government of Georgia.
November 17th, 2011 - 15:57
Well that is quite sad. At the very least, it is not threatened with being demolished or being stripped of its historical treasures and left to rot as I have watched so many truly-similarly spectacular properties lead to such slaughter.
At any rate, I applaud your exploratory spirit, going in somewhere you shouldn’t be that is still in use is rather exciting as well!
November 17th, 2011 - 16:56
wow, sounds soo sad!