EAW002784 ENGLAND (1946). Harrison & Co Ltd Malleable Iron Works, North Hykeham, 1946

© Copyright OpenStreetMap contributors and licensed by the OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Cartography is licensed as CC BY-SA.

Nearby Images (7)

EAW002784
  0° 0m
EAW003247
  152° 63m
EAW002786
  148° 121m
EAW002783
  188° 129m
EAW002785
  159° 134m
EAW003249
  213° 145m
EAW003248
  109° 191m

Details

Title [EAW002784] Harrison & Co Ltd Malleable Iron Works, North Hykeham, 1946
Reference EAW002784
Date 11-September-1946
Link
Place name NORTH HYKEHAM
Parish NORTH HYKEHAM
District
Country ENGLAND
Easting / Northing 493472, 367366
Longitude / Latitude -0.60070851832486, 53.194865967399
National Grid Reference SK935674

Pins

WW2 Communal Surface Blast Shelter

Sparky
Saturday 16th of September 2017 03:51:26 PM
WW2 Static Water Supply SWS

Sparky
Saturday 16th of September 2017 03:50:19 PM
WW2 Camouflage Scheme Factory Paint and Planting

Sparky
Saturday 16th of September 2017 03:49:42 PM
WW2 Camouflage Scheme Ground TBC

Sparky
Saturday 16th of September 2017 03:48:51 PM
Hykeham Station (North Hykeham) Nottingham to Lincoln Line (still operational 2017) Built by the Midland Railway and engineered by Robert Stephenson. Opened 1846. North Hykeham station as Hykeham . The original terminal station in Lincoln for this line (Lincoln Midland, later St Marks) was closed in the 1980s and the line realigned to use a second station (Central).

totoro
Thursday 18th of May 2017 09:49:44 PM
Harrison, Teague & Birch opened a foundry near Holmes Bridge in St. Marks Lane (1874). The firm’s business expanded rapidly during the last decade of the 19th century and, with no room for expansion on their existing site, the company established a branch plant in North Hykeham. These works, later to be known locally as “The Malleable”, were steadily enlarged and in 1922 the St Marks foundry was closed and all of the firm’s operations were transferred to North Hykeham. aka The Hykeham Foundry Company. aka Harrison and Co (Lincoln) aka The Malleable Hostel blocks were built in WW2 for migrant workers. In 1938 Ley's Malleable Castings took over. 1950's- Annealing plant; automatic moulding machine; hot blast melting plant added. Pandrol clips for holding rail lines to concrete sleepers were produced. In the late 70's the furnaces were fuelled 25% by scrap rubber tyres. Acquired by Meade Corporation 2004, closed 2006. The final casting, December 2006, was a cast iron plaque of the Lincoln Imp.

totoro
Thursday 18th of May 2017 09:38:05 PM