real time web analytics
Report - - Brock Mill, Wigan, August 2017 | Industrial Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Brock Mill, Wigan, August 2017

Hide this ad by donating or subscribing !

UrbandonedTeam

the north
Regular User
Date of Explore
August 2017

Video coming in the next few days, be sure to check out my video for Daresbury Hall here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gEI7_idMro

The Day
We had originally planned to go to Oldham to do some explores but all trains from my area to Manchester had been cut off, so we just hopped on a bus to Wigan while I did some last minute research.

History (from another report)
A forge at Brock Mill, by the River Douglas in Wigan, existed before 1766. By 1775 a foundry had been established half a mile downstream. In 1788, both were acquired by the Earl of Balcarres who formed a partnership to expand the two businesses and build blast furnaces at the Haigh Foundry site. The iron smelting business did not go well (the blast furnaces were given up in 1815) but the foundry and forge slowly prospered and began to produce ‘Fire Engines’ – beam pumping engines – for local collieries. In 1812, Daglish built Lancashire’s first locomotive at Haigh. Modelled on Blenkinsop’s Yorkshire Horse it was to work trains from John Clarke’s Orrell and Winstanley coal pits to the Leeds & Liverpool Canal. It worked very well, so much so that he built two more before the end of 1816, one working by adhesion only. It was reported that two of these locomotives remained in use until the collieries closed in 1852. Haigh Foundry was acquiring a reputation and deserving it. The foundry became skilled at casting ever larger steam cylinders and the forge wrought the parts which couldn’t be cast. As early as 1819, they cast an 84in bore cylinder weighing 22 tons for a local colliery and exported engines and sugar mills to the colonies. In 1835, The Earl leased the whole business for 21 years to Messrs Evans & Ryley, soon after joined by a Mr Burrows. All three were capable men and they decided to re-enter the locomotive business. Exactly how many locomotives were built will probably never be known but the total was probably between 110 and 120. Most were for main-line railway companies. Locomotives were only part of the business. Haigh Foundry was becoming a major player, supplying large cast swing bridges and dock ironwork for Hull and Liverpool Docks, and very large steam engines for coal and metal mines. They even dabbled in architectural ironwork. By the end of the lease, Burrows had already planned to leave with two of the firm’s best engineers to set up a new company. Evans & Ryley were getting old and did not seek to renew the lease. However, Messrs Birley & Thompson saw an opportunity and took out another 21 year lease in 1856. Birley’s huge family had interest in many businesses and an equally large number of contacts with potential customers but one big problem had to be resolved. The works lay in the valley bottom and the only road out was steep. In 1848, a massive beam engine (possibly the largest in the world at that date) had needed 48 horses to drag its components up the hill. The answer was a railway, linking both foundry and forge to the Earl’s extensive Haigh colliery railways. The line was in use by 1860, worked it appears by Haigh’s own loco and by those belonging to the Earl. Only 9 years later, the Lancashire Union Railway’s Whelley Loop cut right across the foundry line and a new railway was built to connect with the LUR at Haigh Junction. By the late 1870s, the market was less buoyant and the depression of the early 1880s hit Haigh hard. The lease was given up and the works closed in January 1885. The railway continued in use until 1919 serving a coal yard and tenants of the foundry buildings. Amazingly, most of the buildings survive, along with two cast iron river bridges, one stone overbridge and almost the whole route of the 1869 railway. The main foundry buildings have been a major producer of herbal medicines for many years! In one corner of the site, an iron foundry (J.T. & E Castings) continues (as of 2010) to operate. Brock Mill forge sadly didn’t survive and all traces were swept away by a totally inappropriate housing development in the 1990s.

The Explore
We gained access to the site really easily, and just had a really peaceful explore with no distractions and i'm sure we could have had unlimited time in there without any issues. There was sticker rolls left all over the place featuring the branding that would go around the medicine bottles for all the different types they sold. I would also mention that a certain part of the building was absolutely littered with asbestos, so I would definitely bring a mask and it reminded me that I need to cop one as soon as possible.

Pictures

Pretty happy with the pictures I took at this place, please leave feedback :)

36730103356_dc098de730_b.jpg


35968269363_76f27e6b9a_b.jpg


36730106786_859df1f3ae_b.jpg


35968270253_3c016495e6_b.jpg


36638055221_6624922e11_b.jpg


36730110866_7e1d53b110_b.jpg


36730110166_22187381f1_b.jpg


36380278000_a8ec93bb6c_b.jpg


36380278260_fb9eced6b0_b.jpg


36380278590_85ba9a4807_b.jpg


36638053231_f1a953c1e3_b.jpg


35968268493_640afd51f3_b.jpg


36638050541_53d4e66ea9_b.jpg


36638051331_9fd707d12b_b.jpg


35968267443_9c1f003543_b.jpg


35968267033_a6721976b2_b.jpg


35968266533_abe3c2b29e_b.jpg


35968266813_01422576ca_b.jpg


35968268223_39d7d37c50_b.jpg


Thanks for reading :)
 
Top