by John E. Dolan
Unlike most inventors Alfred Nobel combined technical creativity with commercial flair, both to a very high degree. A lack of capital proved no hindrance to Nobel and having borrowed it he had, within ten years, founded an international group of dynamite companies in Sweden, Finland, Germany and Norway before turning his attention to the United States, Great Britain and the rest of Europe.
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| Outline map of Scotland showing location of Ardeer. |
Although potentially very lucrative Nobel
found Great Britain one of the most difficult of all his ventures
mainly for bureaucratic reasons.
Nitroglycerine
as a blasting explosive was first advertised in the U.K. in 1865.
The first recorded demonstration was in Cornwall in 1865 at the
exhibition held by The Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society.
The first practical trial with the liquid was carried out at West
Hoe Quarry in April 1866. It was also in use in North Wales in
the Glyn Rhowy Slate quarry at Llanberis later in the same
year.
Nobel took out a British patent for dynamite in May
1867. He came over to England a third time and began a vigorous
public relations exercise to convince the authorities and
potential users of the safety of his new explosive. The first
demonstration was carried out at Merstham Quarry, Surrey in the
south of England in July of 1867. During this demonstration Nobel
set fire to sticks of dynamite, threw packets of the explosives
from a cliff, and detonated it in various ways to demonstrate
both what it could do and its safety. The demonstrations,
however, failed to persuade the authorities at this time.
At this time the law relating to explosives in the United Kingdom
was governed by the Gunpowder Act of 1860 which pre-dated
Nobel's use of nitroglycerine (blasting oil) and the terms of the
Act were, therefore, technically completely out of line with the
new explosive. In 1866 Parliament attempted to deal with
inadequacies by passing the Carriage and Deposit of Dangerous
Goods Act. This Act failed to provide any means of
enforcement and, through lack of understanding, failed completely
to address the real problem of safety and sensitivity. The
authorities cautious approach was unfortunately re-enforced in
the U.K. by an explosion of a consignment of liquid
nitroglycerine which came in through Liverpool and blew up at
Caernarvon (9th July 1869) and the Government of the day passed
an act totally prohibiting the manufacture, transport or sale of
nitroglycerine or any product containing it in the U.K.
(Explosives Act of 1869).
Nobel, however was not to be deterred. He persisted and after two
very frustrating years was able to persuade the authorities of
the efficacy and safety of dynamite as distinct from liquid
nitroglycerine and got an easing of the strict regulations but
was still unable to obtain permission to establish his business
in England. Eventually he turned to Scotland where he found a
receptive group of entrepreneurial businessmen with whose help,
and principally assisted by John Downie, then the General Manager
of the Glasgow shipbuilding firm the Fairfield Engineering and
Shipbuilding Company, Nobel set up a company with a factory site
on the west coast of Scotland some 30 kilometres south of Glasgow
on the Clyde Estuary at Ardeer in April 1871 with the rights to
work his patents under the name of The British Dynamite Company.
John Downie was appointed the first General Manager and
Secretary, a post which he held until his untimely death in a
tragic accident when destroying some defective dynamite in
Southern Ireland.
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Nitroglycerine nitration - the first Hill in 1875. |
The factory was designed by P.A. (Alarik)
Liedbeck, Nobel's friend and the engineer who had assisted him
with the Heleneborg plant and who was the manager of his first
factory at Vinterviken in Sweden. The factory at Ardeer therefore
benefited substantially from the experience already acquired from
Nobel's earlier factories. The equipment installed was a
considerable improvement on the early systems. From the very
start nitroglycerine was produced on the batch process plant
which, with its "one-legged stool" (to prevent the operator
falling asleep) is now almost a logotype for dynamite
manufacture. The first 336 kilo charge of nitroglycerine was
produced at Ardeer on the 13th January 1873.
The first batch of dynamite was produced later that year by hand
mixing the kieselguhr and nitroglycerine in brass-lined wooden
boxes in 45 kilo lots. The cartridging had the benefit of the
already developed dynamite cartridging machine. All these process
houses had sand floors which had full Government approval on the
somewhat dubious grounds that the Ardeer sand was of "such a fine
quality that it did not constitute 'grit' within the meaning of
the Explosives Act of 1875". Another peculiar "safety"
precaution was that the girls who operated both these processes
worked in their bare feet.
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| Dynamite cartridging, Ardeer, in the 1880s. |
The kieselguhr with which
nitroglycerine was mixed to produce dynamite was found in
substantial deposits in Scotland at Loch Cuithir on the Isle of
Skye and in Aberdeenshire. The supply of acid for the nitration
process was at first obtained from The Westquarter Chemical
Company near Falkirk, half way between Edinburgh and Glasgow and
conveniently on the banks of the Grand Union Canal at Laurieston.
Nobel bought into this company and entered into partnership with
its director, Mr. McRoberts who, in 1874, became his chief
chemist and, eventually, Ardeer's factory manager. McRoberts'
name has become synonymous with the design of early gelatine
mixing and cartridging machinery some of which is still in use
today.
In 1877 the company name was changed to Nobel's Explosives
company.
It was to the Westquarter factory that Nobel turned when he
determined to manufacture detonators in Scotland in 1876. When
manufacture began in that year only six workers were employed
using mercury fulminate brought in from abroad. However, in 1878,
Nobel decided to produce the fulminate requirement on site and a
small factory for this purpose was built at Redding-Moor about
half a kilometre south of the Westquarter factory and on the
other side of the Grand Union Canal. As soon as the decision to
build this factory had been taken Nobel sent to Sweden for
another young assistant, C.O. Lundholm to take charge of the
technical production. Lundholm completed the job in twelve months
and then, in 1879, went to Ardeer as assistant manager where he
became a household word. From these small beginnings the
Westquarter factory grew until, at its peak, 1,700 people were
employed producing some 73 million detonators.
It was about this time that McRoberts moved to Ardeer and sold
his house "Hawthorn Cottage" in Laurieston to Nobel to serve as
his residence when in Scotland. "Hawthorn Cottage" is still
standing and occupied today and is, in fact the only building
directly associated with Alfred Nobel remaining in Scotland.
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'Hawthorn Cottage' - Nobel's house in Lauriston. |
The company prospered during the latter
part of the 1880's developing an impressive overseas trade and,
had by the time of Nobel's death become the largest exporter of
explosives in the world. This had been achieved through
diversification into and the development of new products,
including blasting gelatine in 1879, gelignite in 1881,
ballistite in 1887, guncotton in 1892 and cordite in 1895.
The export trade was greatly facilitated by the access to the sea
which was fully exploited by loading from the beach (a process in
which it was "all hands to the pumps", even the factory girls
assisting) into the sailing vessel "The Jeannie" (named after the
wife of Mr. McRoberts, Nobel's Factory Manager).
Later, the acquisition of the harbour facilities at Irvine
provided quayside loading for coasters and, over the years, a
succession of explosives steamers was acquired or built and owned
to serve the overseas trade, each, with one famous exception,
named after the wives of company dignitaries:
The Alfred Nobel
The Lady Gertrude Cochran
The Lady Tennant
The Lady Anstruther
The Lady Dorothy
The Lady McGowan
The Lady Helen.
Interestingly enough Nobel protested about
the naming of the "Alfred Nobel" pointing out that a ship was a
"She" and not a "He", adding the comment that "she is in any
case much too elegant to be named after an old wreck like
me."
At its foundation in 1871, the British Dynamite Company began
with a plot of only 400,000 square metres, but expansion was
rapid, and by 1907, Nobel's Ardeer factory was reputed to be the
largest explosives factory in the world.
The Ardeer site proved to be ideally suited to the manufacture of
high explosives. When Alfred Nobel moved to the area in 1871, he
described it vividly in a letter to his brother.
"Picture to yourself everlasting bleak sand dunes with no
buildings. Only rabbits find a little nourishment here; they eat
a substance which quite unjustifiably goes
by the name of grass. It is a sand
desert where the wind always blows often howls filling the
ears with sand. Between us and America,
there is nothing but water a sea whose mighty waves are
always raging and foaming. Now you will have some idea of the
place where I am living. Without work the place would be
intolerable."
In reality, Ardeer was the perfect location for Nobel's factory.
Apart from being an easily accessible location for shipping, and
being conveniently close to the thriving industrial heart of
central Scotland, it was relatively isolated, being situated on a
natural peninsula with the Firth of Clyde on its west side, the
River Garnock to the east, and the mouth of the River Irvine to
the south. Perhaps more important still was the suitability of
the land itself, the sandy surface providing a perfect material
for the raising of embankments and mounds to protect the danger
zones within the factory, which themselves could be separated by
wide safety distances.
The new factory, as Nobel's colourful description implies, was
very remote, a very favourable point in the eyes of the nervous
public, but its isolation meant that there were no roads only a
dirt track through the sand dunes. Equally there were no services
and, from the very outset, the factory had to be self-sufficient.
Steam was no problem as a single boiler house was soon built at
the factory entrance. The water supply did, however, cause
problems. Factory water was pumped from a nearby coal mine, the
Lucknow Pit, but it was very muddy and formed a thick scale in
the boiler which had to be chipped away every six weeks and was
totally unfit for drinking. Drinking water was obtained from a
natural spring about a kilometre away and had to be carted up the
track by hand. In spite of these sparse resources one of Nobel's
first actions was to build a research and test centre which
established the Ardeer research tradition which was to become a
legendary centrepiece of technical excellence.
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Research laboratory in Ardeer around 1880. |
The first Nitroglycerine Hill, dynamite
plant, nitric acid unit and laboratory (converted to the works
manager's house in 1879) were all contained in the original
400,000 square meters of the landward section of the site. The
addition of a second Hill and a nitrocotton plant in 1881, and
the construction of a third Hill in 1882 resulted in the
expansion of the site to just over 1 square kilometre.
The period from 1887 to 1896 witnessed tremendous developments at
the factory. During that time groups of buildings each associated
with additional product developments grew up around the original
factory, each one a considerable factory in its own right. In
1887 a branch railway line of the Glasgow and South Western
Railway was laid right into the heart of the factory linking up
with the national railway routes and opening up a whole new era
of access. In the 1890s a further three Nitroglycerine Hills were
established bringing the total to six. Finally, in the year and
month of Alfred Nobel's death, the workers were given the luxury
of direct train access to a private railway station established
at the factory and the period of isolation was over.
By 1902, the factory had grown to cover about one 1.5 square
kilometres with 450 separate structures within which 1,200 people
were employed. The growth had been assisted by the rapid
expansion in export trade.
By this time, process steam was provided by an impressive central
boiler house, and electricity and compressed air by the factory's
own power station. Narrow gauge railways were built to connect
most parts of the site, which were also linked to the national
railway network by the factory's own sidings and marshalling
yards. However, a large proportion of the factory's output was
now exported directly via its own jetty at the south-east end of
the peninsula.
The factory continued to grow after Nobel's death. Subsequent
expansions enveloped the land to the north and the east of the
original 400,000 square meters, crossing the River Garnock, the
company even acquiring the Bogside Racecourse, once the venue for
the Scottish Grand National. At its peak the factory covered an
area of approximately 8 square kilometres. The employee payroll
increased from the mere handful of 50 at its beginning to over
13,000 in its heyday, manufacturing all its own requirement of
acids, ammonium nitrate and components importing only the very
basic of raw materials and having an enviable independence from
outside contract trades. The infrastructure was equally
impressive, the site having its own power station, road and
narrow gauge railway network as well as direct national rail
links and marshalling yards.
The technological revolution that Nobel's detonator and dynamite
triggered was immediate and far-reaching and the embryonic
industries he established had a meteoric rise which inevitably
engendered intense commercial and corporate rivalry. Nobel's
Explosives Company and Ardeer were inevitably caught up in this
corporate battlefield. The rivalry and competition reached a
climax by 1883 in which year a palace revolution took place in
Nobel's Explosives. The then General Manager, A. A. Cuthbert
resigned, and Thomas Reid was appointed Chairman and in 1884 was
joined on the board by Charles Tennant, the head of the great
Glasgow heavy chemicals firm based at St. Rollox: two strong
personalities who had a profound effect on the emerging
situation. Meanwhile Nobel's other European enterprises had also
prospered and, with equally strong personalities at the helm,
antagonisms developed the solution to which was, as Nobel saw it,
a fusion of all the Nobel Companies in Europe under a single
overall control. Thomas Reid is credited with the idea that the
best way to handle this situation was to set up a Trust Company.
In this Nobel and Reid were of the one mind but, in the event, it
was decided to set up two trust companies one in Paris the other
in London. Thomas Reid together with Charles Tennant worked
towards the implementation in the U. K. and set up the first
trust company in London in 1886, The Nobel-Dynamite Trust
Company.
This proved to be a very advanced form of business organisation
the like of which had never been seen before in London. It was a
holding company which effectively controlled the disposal of the
assets of the members and had absolute authority over them even
though the members were themselves separate corporate bodies. The
group brought together:
Nobel Explosives (Scotland)
Four German union companies
The Mexican Nobel company
The Brazilian Nobel company
The Pacific Nobel Company
The Alliance Explosives Company
The South Wales Explosives Company
The Trust was an instant success and
continued (with some changes) until the First World War when it
was formally disbanded in 1915 for obvious reasons.
Finally the year 1926 saw the greatest fusion of chemical
industries in the United Kingdom to that date in the merging of
Nobel Industries with the other major chemical companies of Great
Britain:
Brunner Mond and Company Ltd
British Alkali Company Ltd
British Dyestuffs Corporation Ltd
to form
IMPERIAL CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES (ICI).