BYGONE INDUSTRIES OF THE PEAK: LEAD SMELTING
This is one of a series of articles published in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper, on 23rd March 1998 (p7 & p8), and
reproduced by kind permission of its author, Julie Bunting.
The series is now available as a fully-illustrated paperback, published in 2006
by
Wildtrack Publishing of Sheffield (ISBN 1-904098-01-0) See also this
Review by Alan Jacques.
BYGONE INDUSTRIES OF THE PEAK: LEAD SMELTING
Whilst nobody would envy the working life of a lead
miner, our recent article about lead mining was only half
the story. Further processes awaited the ore once it was
brought out of the ground. To begin with it had to be
prepared for smelting and this was largely undertaken
by women and children working at the surface of the
mine, sorting and dressing the ore with hammers before
it was washed to separate the heavier lead ore from the
lighter rocks.
The ensuing smelting process, which extracted the
actual metal from the ore, usually took place some
distance from the mine on a site which dealt with the
output of several other mines. Known as 'boles' the
earliest smelters were set up on exposed hilltops where
the prevailing wind acted as a 'blast' for the fierce fire
needed to melt the ore. Simple in design, if wasteful
compared with later improvements, a bole was basically
a depression in the ground, enclosed by a low wall with
a windward-facing gap. Layers of ore and firewood
were piled into the hearth for burning, and the melted
lead channelled out into moulds to solidify into pigs.
Old stone moulds have been recovered from a site by the
Bar Brook, east of Baslow.
It is thought that the seven 'leadworks' listed in the
Domesday Survey of 1086 were probably smelting
works serving areas around those places referred to:
Ashford, Bakewell, Crich, Matlock, and Wirksworth
which supported three works.
Tantalising inscriptions on Roman pigs of lead are
believed to refer to a place or mineral field named
Lutudarum, the site of which has never been identified.
One pig bears the word LVTVDARES, abbreviated on
other examples to LVT or LVTVD.
Former lead smelting sites have left us with the
place-name Bolehill, as at Wirksworth, Eyam, Hathersage,
Wormhill, Bakewell and Holmesfield. The names Burton Bole and
Smelting Hill occur at Abney, while Smeltinghill Wood is found at
Fallinge, south of Beeley. Tangible evidence lies in numerous old
slag heaps, waste from the smelting process, including the Bar
Brook site already mentioned and several on Beeley Edge. Some
bole smelters produced 'blackwork', a slag still rich enough in
lead to be worth re-smelting. Charcoal was added to the fuel to
obtain a higher temperature and the result was a hard metal much
valued for shot making. The remaining slag made good road
surfacing material.
Reliance on wind power had to be improved upon and one simple
advance was the use of foot bellows to provide the necessary
draught. Further progress came in the 16th century through water
power, utilising a waterwheel to power large bellows, an
innovation taken up on the river Sheaf at Beauchief.
This example attracted considerable interest and by 1574 a
smelting mill was in operation on the Derwent in Chatsworth Park,
followed by others at Calver, Curbar, Stoney Middleton, Hazleford
Bridge near Hathersage and one belonging to the Duke of Rutland
on the Wye between Beeley and Rowsley. Ruins in Hay Wood at
Froggatt are believed to be the remains of an 18th-century
smelting mill, where a stream was diverted along stone launders
to a water wheel installed at a lower level.
Although similar undertakings continued in use for some time, a
major advance in lead smelting arrived in the mid-18th century
with the low arched reverbatory furnace, or cupola, introduced by
the London Lead Company, a Quaker firm which had been attracted
to Winster lead mines around 1720. Their first cupola was
constructed at Kelstedge near Ashover in 1735.
INSIDE THE CUPOLA
Under the rounded dome of a cupola, ore and fuel (generally coal)
were kept separate and a strong draught - provided by means of a
flue and tall chimney - caused the flames to reverberate from the
roof and hearth, blasting them over the ore and so melting the
lead. The liquid metal ran into a pot and the slag was raked out.
Not only was the cupola far more efficient than the bole but its
design meant that poisonous vapours were cooled and condensed in
the flue as they were drawn towards the chimney. Open smelting
used to leave the surrounding land so toxic that it could never
be grazed again. As recently as 1966 a number of cows died from
lead poisoning due to seepage and disturbance of old slag heaps
at a farm at Hope.
In the latter half of the 18th century, the existing smelt mill
at Barbrook was modernised by the erection of a cupola, as was
the communal Lord's smelt mill in Middleton Dale. A second
cupola, Storrs Cupola, was built at Stoney Middleton around 1777.
Three mine-owning brothers from Middleton also built a cupola
below Eden Tree at Bradwell. Of three others at Bradwell, that
known as the Slag Works, at the bottom of the Dale, was the site
of a tragedy in 1854 when sulphurous fumes caused the deaths of
two workmen and two young men who had gone to their rescue.
Dilapidated remains of the 360-foot arched flue of the Slag Works
can still be traced running parallel to the road.
A smelting works at Alport was in operation until the latter half
of the 19th century, leaving behind arched underground flues,
large enough to walk through, both crossing and ascending the
hillside. From about 1879 to 1924, white, grey and red lead was
produced at Brough Lead Works with smelting and refining carried
on around the clock. Cupolas were also built at Harewood on
Beeley Moor and Lumsdale near Matlock, where a well preserved
chimney stands amongst other industrial remains maintained by the
Arkwright Society. North-east of Hathersage an area of rough
ground identifies the slag heaps of Callow Bank cupola.
According to Lead Mining in the Peak District (Peak
District Mines Historical Society) Stone Edge Smelt, close to the
A632/B6015 road junction about three miles from Ashover, is the
most completely preserved Derbyshire example in its original
state. The B6015 is in fact the Winster/Chesterfield road so the
smelt was ideally situated to serve the lead mines of Winster and
Ashover, not least because of its proximity to a main road and
the Chesterfield-Stockwith Canal. There are abundant traces of
former activity on the site including an impressive square-built
chimney which may be the oldest industrial chimney in Britain,
dating to the 1770s/1780s. In the late 18th/early 19th centuries
the output from Stone Edge reached some 500 tons of lead a year.
Because lead smelting was inextricably linked to the fortunes of
mining, both industries rose and fell together. So it was that
when production boomed at the famous Millclose Mine near Wensley
in the 1930s, a smelter had to be erected on site because Lea
Lead to which ore was normally taken for smelting, could no
longer cope unaided. Although mining ceased at Millclose in 1940,
the smelter was taken over by present owners H. J. Enthoven &
Sons, whose existing smelter in the East End of London was at
risk from enemy bombing. Today lead is the fifth most commonly
used metal in the industrial world and Enthovens is now wholly a
recycling company, taking in some 3 million scrap batteries every
year, mainly from cars, to reprocess the original refined lead
alloys.
The company is therefore heir to one of the oldest industrial
processes known in the Peak, smelting battery paste and metallic
lead in 4.5 metre long rotary furnaces at a temperature of 1000C,
a world away from the simple boles where the story of lead
smelting began. By complete contrast a Romano-British smelting
hearth of probable 4th-century date can be seen in the Peak
District Mining Museum at Matlock Bath, alongside later examples
of pigs of lead and assorted moulds including an example from the
Peak incised 'T. Hill, Bradwell, Derbyshire'.
© Julie Bunting
From "The Peak Advertiser", 23rd March 1998.
© Copyright Julie Bunting, GENUKI and Contributors 1995-2008, &c.
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[Created 8 May 2003. Last updated 24 Oct 2008 - 11:23 by Rosemary Lockie]