Andrew Handyside and Company
was an iron founder in Derby
, England
in the
nineteenth century.
Born in
Edinburgh
, Scotland
in 1805,
Handyside worked in his uncle Charles Baird's engineering
business in St.
Petersburg
before
taking over the Brittania Foundry in 1848. It had first been
opened around 1820 by Weatherhead and Glover to cast ornamental
ironwork, and had achieved a high reputation, partly from the skill
of the workers, but also because of the quality of the local
moulding sand. By the 1840's it was diversifying into railway
components. Among the early customers were the
Midland Railway's
Derby Works for which it supplied cylinder
blocks and other castings.
Although cast iron ornaments were going out of fashion, until the
advent of
steel there was an increasing demand
for engineering and for iron framed construction.
He concentrated in
improving the strength of the material, which, when tested at
Woolwich
in 1854
proved to have a tensile strength of between 20 and 23 tons per
square inch, against a norm of about seventeen. He also
retained the artistry that had gone before and improved upon
it.
His output ranged from garden ornaments to railway bridges. He
produced lamp posts for the new gas street lighting (one of which
still exists in the Wardwick in Derby) and was one of the first to
produce the new standard Post Office letterboxes. Nearly two
thousand different window frames designs were produced. The company
even supplied a dome to the steel maker
Henry Bessemer for the roof of his
conservatory.
When one considers the small area occupied by the works, on the
bank of the
River Derwent,
hemmed in by the slope behind, its output seems remarkable. Between
1840 and 1846, for instance, it produced four hundred bridges for
the
London,
Brighton and South Coast Railway.
In time, the works also produced rolling mills, hammers, forges and
presses, at first for its own use, then for others, including the
new steel mills.
It began
manufacturing arched structures, such as the train sheds for
railway stations, including, in 1854, Bradford
Adolphus
Street, Middlesbrough
, and St. Enoch in Glasgow
. In the 1870s the company's prefabricated
market halls, built from standardised components were exported all
over the world.
In 1871 it built the Trent
Bridge
at Nottingham
and, in 1872, the Albert Suspension Bridge
in London. Other bridges and structures were built in
Russia
, Japan
, Africa, South America,
Canada
and India
.
Structural components, such as support columns, were also used by
architects in many countries.
In 1874, Andrew Handyside achieved another first, realising that
the depreciation of buildings, plant and machinery should be set
against their net profits. Unfortunately, their local Inspector of
Taxes disagreed. The company won its initial appeal but then lost
in the
Court of Exchequer
Chamber.
In 1877, the
Great Northern
Railway came to Derby, with a long viaduct from the east across
the Derwent Valley, slicing through the northern part of the city,
including Friar Gate - a very well-to-do area. To placate the
residents, a graceful bridge was built across the road. This,
though initially reviled, is now much prized by the citizens of the
city, who have successfully resisted several attempts by the
modernisers to replace it with a bypass. Handyside also provided a
bridge across the River Derwent which was tested by running six
locomotives across it.
In 1877,
the Cheshire Lines
Committee opened its new line and Handysides provided the
structures of the Manchester Central station
and of Liverpool Central
. Another Handyside structure that still exists
is the Outwood
Viaduct
on the Bury
to Rawtenstall
line, converted from a timber superstructure in
1881. Although the line closed in 1966 it has since been
restored as part of a nature trail.
The
largest structure built by Handysides, said to be the largest hall
in the kingdom covered by one span of iron and glass, was the 1886
National Agricultural Hall in London
, now known
as Olympia
.
In 1893 Handysides provided the structures for the
Manchester Ship Canal, including the
Barton swing bridge. Such was
his thoroughness, that he assembled and tested it in the yard
before shipping it to site.
Handyside died in 1887 and the firm gradually declined until it
closed early in the twentieth century. The foundry was demolished
to be replaced by a housing estate, the only remaining trace being
the name of a road: Handyside Street.
See also
William Handyside - Engineer
References
- Cooper, B., (1983) Transformation of a Valley: The
Derbyshire Derwent Heinemann, republished 1991 Cromford:
Scarthin Books
- Robert Thorne, ‘Handyside, Andrew (1805–1887)’, Oxford
Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept
2004; online edn, Jan 2008 link
External links
- Bridge over Weaver Navigation
- Hayhurst Bridge over Weaver Navigation,
- Pillar Box
- Great Northern Railway bridge over the Derwent at
Derby
- Former Royal Agricultural Hall, Islington
- Outwood Viaduct, Bury, Greater Manchester
- Barton Bridge and Aqueduct, Manchester Ship
Canal
- Sutton Bridge, South Holland, Lincolnshire
- Carrington Street Nottingham Railway Station
Midland Railway
- Trent Bridge, Nottingham
- Swing-bridge at Hudson Dock, Sunderland
- Ornamental fountain Temple Newsham Park,
Leeds