industrial biography-第30部分
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as to the iron produced by Cort's process; said; 〃Though I cannot
perfectly agree with you as to its goodness; yet there is much
ingenuity in the idea of forming the bars in that manner; which is
the only part of his process which has any pretensions to novelty。。。。
Mr。 Cort has; as you observe; been most illiberally treated by the
trade: they are ignorant brutes; but he exposed himself to it by
showing them the process before it was perfect; and seeing his
ignorance of the common operations of making iron; laughed at and
despised him; yet they will contrive by some dirty evasion to use his
process; or such parts as they like; without acknowledging him in it。
I shall be glad to be able to be of any use to him。 Watts
fellow…feeling was naturally excited in favour of the plundered
inventor; he himself having all his life been exposed to the attacks
of like piratical assailants。
。。。'
Although the Cort patents expired in 1796 and 1798 respectively; they
continued the subject of public discussion for some time after; more
particularly in connection with the defalcations of the deceased Adam
Jellicoe。 It does not appear that more than 2654l。 was realised by
the Government from the Cort estate towards the loss sustained by the
public; as a balance of 24;846l。 was still found standing to the
debit of Jellicoe in 1800; when the deficiencies in the naval
account's became matter of public inquiry。 A few years later; in
1805; the subject was again revived in a remarkable manner。 In that
year; the Whigs; Perceiving the bodily decay of Mr。 Pitt; and being
too eager to wait for his removal by death; began their famous series
of attacks upon his administration。 Fearing to tackle the popular
statesman himself; they inverted the ordinary tactics of an
opposition; and fell foul of Dundas; Lord Melville; then Treasurer of
the Navy; who had successfully carried the country through the great
naval war with revolutionary France。 They scrupled not to tax him
with gross peculation; and exhibited articles of impeachment against
him; which became the subject of elaborate investigation; the result
of which is matter of history。 In those articles; no reference
whatever was made to Lord Melville's supposed complicity with
Jellicoe; nor; on the trial that followed; was any reference made to
the defalcations of that official。 But when Mr。 Whitbread; on the 8th
of April; 1805; spoke to the 〃Resolutions〃 in the Commons for
impeaching the Treasurer of the Navy; he thought proper to intimate
that he 〃had a strong suspicion that Jellicoe was in the same
partnership with Mark Sprott; Alexander Trotter; and Lord Melville。
He had been suffered to remain a public debtor for a whole year after
he was known to be in arrears upwards of 24;000L。 During next year
11;000L。 more had accrued。 It would not have been fair to have turned
too short on an old companion。 It would perhaps; too; have been
dangerous; since unpleasant discoveries might have met the public
eye。 It looked very much as if; mutually conscious of criminality;
they had agreed to be silent; and keep their own secrets。〃
In making these offensive observations Whitbread was manifestly
actuated by political enmity。 They were utterly unwarrantable。 In the
first place; Melville had been formally acquitted of Jellicoe's
deficiency by a writ of Privy Seal; dated 31st May; 1800; and
secondly; the committee appointed in that very year (1805) to
reinvestigate the naval accounts; had again exonerated him; but
intimated that they were of opinion there was remissness on his part
in allowing Jellicoe to remain in his office after the discovery of
his defalcations。
the report made by the commissioners to the Houses of Parliament in
1805;*
'footnote。。。
Tenth Report of the Commissioners of Naval Inquiry。 See also Report
of Select Committee on the 10th Naval Report。 May; 1805。
。。。'
the value of Corts patents was estimated at only 100L。 Referring to
the schedule of Jellicoe's alleged assets; they say 〃Many of the
debts are marked as bad; and we apprehend that the debt from Mr。
Henry Cort; not so marked; of 54;000L。 and upwards; is of that
description。〃 As for poor bankrupt Henry Cort; these discussions
availed nothing。 On the death of Jellicoe; he left his iron works;
feeling himself a ruined man。 He made many appeals to the Government
of the day for restoral of his patents; and offered to find security
for payment of the debt due by his firm to the Crown; but in vain。 In
1794; an appeal was made to Mr。 Pitt by a number of influential
members of Parliament; on behalf of the inventor and his destitute
family of twelve children; when a pension of 200L。 a…year was granted
him。 This Mr。 Cort enjoyed until the year 1800; when he died; broken
in health and spirit; in his sixtieth year。 He was buried in
Hampstead Churchyard; where a stone marking the date of his death is
still to be seen。 A few years since it was illegible; but it has
recently been restored by his surviving son。
Though Cort thus died in comparative poverty; he laid the foundations
of many gigantic fortunes。 He may be said to have been in a great
measure the author of our modern iron aristocracy; who still
manufacture after the processes which he invented or perfected; but
for which they never paid him a shilling of royalty。 These men of
gigantic fortunes have owed muchwe might almost say everything to
the ruined projector of 〃the little mill at Fontley。〃 Their wealth
has enriched many families of the older aristocracy; and has been the
foundation of several modern peerages。 Yet Henry Cort; the rock from
which they were hewn; is already all but forgotten; and his surviving
children; now aged and infirm; are dependent for their support upon
the slender pittance wrung by repeated entreaty and expostulation
from the state。
The career of Richard Crawshay; the first of the great ironmasters
who had the sense to appreciate and adopt the methods of
manufacturing iron invented by Henry Cort; is a not unfitting
commentary on the sad history we have thus briefly described。 It
shows how; as respects mere money…making; shrewdness is more potent
than invention; and business faculty than manufacturing skill。
Richard Crawshay was born at Normanton near Leeds; the son of a small
Yorkshire farmer。 When a youth; he worked on his father's farm; and
looked forward to occupying the same condition in life; but a
difference with his father unsettled his mind; and at the age of
fifteen he determined to leave his home; and seek his fortune
elsewhere。 Like most unsettled and enterprising lads; he first made
for London; riding to town on a pony of his own; which; with the
clothes on his back; formed his entire fortune。 It took him a
fortnight to make the journey; in consequence of the badness of the
roads。 Arrived in London; he sold his pony for fifteen pounds; and
the money kept him until he succeeded in finding employment。 He was
so fortunate as to be taken upon trial by a Mr。 Bicklewith; who kept
an ironmonger's shop in York Yard; Upper Thames Street; and his first
duty there was to clean out the office; put the stools and desks in
order for the other clerks; run errands; and act as porter when
occasion required。 Young Crawshay was very attentive; industrious;
and shrewd; and became known in the office as 〃The Yorkshire Boy。〃
Chiefly because of his 〃cuteness;〃 his master appointed him to the
department of selling flat irons。 The London washerwomen of that day
were very sharp and not very honest; and it used to be said of them
that where they bought one flat iron they generally contrived to
steal two。 Mr。 Bicklewith thought he could not do better than set the
Yorkshireman to watch the washerwomen; and; by way of inducement to
him to be vigilant; he gave young Crawshay an interest in that branch
of the business; which was soon found to prosper under his charge。
After a few more years; Mr。 Bicklewith retired; and left to Crawshay
the cast…iron business in York Yard。 This he still further increased;
There was not at that time much enterprise in the iron trade; but
Crawshay endeavoured to connect himself with what there was of it。
The price of iron was then very high; and the best sorts were still
imported from abroad; a good deal of the foreign iron and steel being
still landed at the Steelyard on the Thames; in the immediate
neighbourhood of Crawshay's ironmongery store。
It seems to have occurred to some London capitalists that money was
then to be made in the iron trade; and that South Wales was a good
field for an experiment。 The soil there was known to be full of coal
and ironstone; and several small iron works had for some time been
carried on; which were supposed to be doing well。 Merthyr Tydvil was
one of the places at which operations had been begun; but the place
being situated in a hill district; of difficult access; and the
manufacture being still in a very imperfect state; the progress made
was for some time very slow。 Land containing coal and iron was deemed
of very little value; as maybe inferred from the fact that in the
year 1765; Mr。 Anthony Bacon; a man of much foresight; took a lease
from Lord Talbot; for 99 years; of the minerals under forty square
miles of country surrounding the then insignificant hamlet of Merthyr
Tydvil; at the trifling rental of 200L。 a…year。 There he erected iron
works; and supplied the Government with considerable quantities of
cannon and iron for different purposes; and having earned a
competency; he retired from business in 1782; subletting his mineral
tract in four divisionsthe Dowlais; the Penydarran; the Cyfartha;
and the Plymouth Works; north; east; west; and south; of Merthyr
Tydvil。
Mr。 Richard Crawshay became the lessee of what Mr。 Mushet has called
〃the Cyfartha flitch of the great Bacon domain。〃 There he proceeded
to carry on t