Showing posts with label Walter William Coltman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walter William Coltman. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 July 2023

Ernest Edwin Coltman's loose ends

So, a couple of weeks ago I shared with you the story of a deed box, and the man it belonged to, and ended by saying there were a few loose ends to tie up. Well, what follows is the story of one of the sisters of Ernest Edwin Coltman.

1863 saw the birth of Henrietta Coltman, daughter of Huram and his wife Eliza, and older sister to Ernest Edwin. Henrietta was born while the family were probably living on Derby Road, where her father was an engine smith, and had three older siblings, John Charles, Eliza Ann, and Huram jnr.. Sadly, only a few months after Henrietta was born, young Huram, aged only 2, died. Another three siblings were born – Florence Mary in 1865, Ernest Edwin in 1867, and Walter William in 1869.

By 1871, Henrietta now aged 7, was one of the six Coltman children living with their parents on Nottingham Road, where the family were joined in 1873 by another daughter, Clara. On the 1881 census return, the family, except Florence Mary, had moved to Island House on Granby Street, and father Huram is a mechanical engineer employing 13 men and 1 boy. Another move sees Henrietta, now 27, living with her parents and three younger siblings, Ernest Edwin, Walter William, and Clara, on Meadow Lane. 

In September 1892 comes the sudden death of Henrietta’s mother, Eliza, aged about 61. On 4 October 1898, Henrietta, daughter of Huram and Eliza, and sister to Ernest, was admitted to Royal Holloway Sanatorium by request of her father, Huram. Henrietta was single, aged 35, a Baptist, and had been living at 119 Park Road, a group of houses known as Auckland Terrace, until she was admitted to the hospital.




The Royal Holloway Sanatorium at Virginia Water, Runnymede, was funded by Thomas Holloway, an entrepreneur, and philanthropist who also funded the creation of Royal Holloway College, which is now part of the University of London – and a place with a Loughborough connection, through Avery Woodward. Of course, the redbrick and Portland stone used in the construction of the sanatorium, which was designed by William Henry Crossland, and opened in 1885, is also very familiar to those of us connected with Loughborough. The sanatorium was a private hospital, so patients (or their relatives) paid for their care and treatment. Today, the hosptial building has been converted into town houses, called Virginia Park.

It is sad to report, that as far as I can tell, Henrietta spent the rest of her life in the sanatorium, where she died on 7 October 1915. Probate was granted to her brother, Ernest Edwin, and her effects were £955 11s. 6d.. Henrietta was buried in the Christ Church in Virginia Water.




On a more cheerful note, Ernest Edwin Coltman seems to have been something of an horticulturalist – as were some of his family – at least, that’s what we might think without reading the newspaper report carefully! The 39th annual exhibition of the Loughborough Chrysanthemum and Fruit Society took place in the Town Hall, on Saturday 8th November, 1913. According to the ‘Melton Mowbray Mercury and Oakham and Uppingham News’ printed the following Thursday, there were fewer entries than in previous years, and most entries were from local people. As well as members of the Coltman family, names like Farnham, Proudman, Tyler, Palmer, de Lisle, Hallam, Widdowson etc. are also familiar to us today.



In this particular show, Ernest Edwin seems to have been competing against his own younger brother, Walter William, who at the time was mayor of Loughborough. Walter took first prize for his neat arrangement of chrysanthemum groups, and first for his circular group of chrysanthemums, to Ernest’s 3rd place in the latter. Ernest, however, came first for his bush chrysanthemums, second for his table group of chrysanthemums, and first for his single variety of cooking apple. Ernest was also second with his salvias, and second with his single flower chrysanthemum plants.

I do suppose, however, that since Walter William was mayor, and was the person who actually opened the show, for him to win more than he did might have seemed like favouritism on the part of the judges. Those judges for the blooms were Mr W. Weston (of Kingston, but I'm not sure if that's Kingston on Soar, or a different Kingston) and Mr G. Brown of Aston Hall, while the judges of the fruit classes were Mr Jamieson and Mr A. McVinish, both of Beaumanor. 

But what of Ernest the gardener? Well, according to the show results, Ernest wasn’t necessarily gardening alone, as in brackets after some of his successes, it mentions who his gardener was, and there was more than one – in one case, this was H. Wye, and in another a person called Tyler. But, not to worry as this seems de rigour as Mrs Peacock’s gardener was A. Harris, Farnham’s was H. Salter, Proudman’s was F. Bray, and de Lisle’s was S. Preston! And Mr J. T. Smith, another winner, actually had a nursery on Derby Road! 

To be fair to Mr Smith, at the start of the First World War, he opened his nurseries to the public with a view to collecting money for the war effort. In all, he opened 19 glasshouses to allow people to see his show and single chrysanthemums, apparently one of the finest collections in the district. As if so many chrysanthemums weren’t enough, there we also carnations, bouvardias, cyclamen, and begonias to see. The viewing was open for a couple of days, and who should visit on the first day, but Mrs Florence Coltman, wife of Walter William! Over two guineas was given to the Belgian Fund, and one guinea to the fund for our Indian troops’ comfort.

I've written about chrysanthemum shows before, so you can read more about some of the earlier local chrysanthemum shows on the blog.   

Do please pop back to the blog for more about another Ernest Edwin Coltman loose end!

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posted by lynneaboutloughborough

With apologies for typos which are all mine!

_______________________________________________

Thank you for reading this blog.

Copyright:

The copyright © of all content on this blog rests with me, however, you are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follows:

Dyer, Lynne (2023). Ernest Edwin Coltman's loose ends. Available from: https://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2023/06/ernest-edwin-coltmans-loose-ends.html [Accessed 9 July 2023]

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Sunday, 2 July 2023

Coltman Family Boiler Makers and Engineers

Coltman Engineers and Boiler Makers

Huram Coltman was the creator of the company H. Coltman and Sons, engineers, and boiler makers. Huram was born in Broughton Astley, or Wigston, in 1832, to Charles Coltman, a framesmith, and his wife, Hannah, (sometimes recorded as Ann or Anna). By the time he was 19, Huram, still living at home with his parents and siblings, was, like his father and younger brother, Zina, a framesmith. It’s possible, that after his marriage in 1854, Huram and wife Eliza lived in Loughborough, as their first son, John Charles was born in Loughborough. Certainly, by the time of the 1861 census, the family, which now included a daughter, Eliza Ann, was living on Derby Road, and Huram was an engine smith.

A further son, Huram, was born in 1861, but sadly died, shortly after the birth of daughter Henrietta, in 1863, when Huram was a foreman for Henry Hughes, at the Falcon Works. Three more children were born to Huram and Eliza: Florence Mary (1865), Ernest Edwin (1867) and Walter William (1869). In 1867 the family was living on Regent Street, but by 1871 had moved to Falcon House on Nottingham Road, and Huram is recorded on the census return as a master railway builder, and in 1873, daughter Clara was born here.

At some point, Huram had gone into partnership with Henry Hughes, and in 1875, a patent for 6 months was granted to Henry Hughes (Leicester) and Huram Coltman for an invention relating to improvements for trams. However, the partnership was dissolved in 1877, and was reported in the 'London Gazette' on 3 August:

… the Partnership in the trade of business of Locomotive Builders and Mechanical Engineers, heretofore carried on by the undersigned, Henry Hughes and Huram Coltman at Loughborough, in the county of Leicester, under the style of Henry Hughes and Co., was dissolved…

Trade directories for the next couple of years variously list Huram as working from Cambridge Street and Charles Street in Loughborough. By 1881, the family is living at Island House on Granby Street, and Huram is a mechanical engineer employing 13 men and one boy. His eldest son, John Charles is an assistant engineer, and is probably the ‘& Son’ in the company name, ‘H. Coltman & Son’. Between 1885 and 1890, Huram’s son, Walter William served a five-year apprenticeship with the company, now also known as the Midland Ironworks, and became a partner from 1890-1899, joining (I think), brothers John Charles and Ernest Edwin.

By 1882, the company had had new, large premises built next to the Midland railway station on Meadow Lane. The works were fitted out with modern tools, and the workers had experience of making and repairing locomotive tank engines, stationary and portable steam engines, vertical, portable and flue boilers, etc. etc..



In the 1880s the company put out adverts for their products in newspapers across the country. The photo below is of a boiler mounted horizontally on the wall in the servant’s area of Brodsworth House, near Doncaster. I don’t think it’s a Coltman boiler (it was mounted too high to be able to see any identifying marks) as a Coltman boiler would have been mounted vertically, but the overall object might have been similar in some respects.


Here’s an advert that the firm placed in the ‘Runcorn Examiner’ in 1883, advertising vertical and Cornish boilers and vertical, horizontal, and portable engines, and one in the ‘Widnes Advertiser’ of 1886, advertising vertical boilers of between 1 and 14 horsepower:



By 1891, the firm is known for being an engineering company, making steam boilers, as well as being an iron foundry. An 1892 publication [1] contains, amongst many other things, a description of Messrs. Coltman and Sons, Engineers and Boiler Makers of Meadow Lane Loughborough at that time:

The engineering and boiler-making works of Messrs. Coltman and Sons have long held a foremost position amongst the industrial features of Loughborough …

The premises are situated on the northern outskirts of Loughborough and close to the main line of the Midland Railway Company, with which they are connected by sidings. They consist of five main shops or sheds, solidly built and well equipped for the purposes of the heavy iron trade. Considerable extensions have been made to the rear of these shops, with the result that the establishment may be fairly regarded as one of the largest boiler works in the Midlands.

The firm’s great speciality is the manufacture of the larger classes of vertical boilers for stationary engines. They also build locomotives, vertical engines and boilers combined, and flue boilers. The space, appliances, and machinery which Messrs. Coltman have at command enable them to conduct these departments most efficiently.

All the work is carried out on the premises and under the immediate supervision of the partners, who are practical engineers of great experience. It is to this fact, no doubt, that the continued progress and prosperity of the business may be traced. We believe we are correct in saying that it was commenced in a comparatively small way, but, ‘great oaks from little acorns grow’, and at present Messrs. Coltman’s foundry is one of the industrial mainstays of the district in which it is situated. It already finds employment for about 150 hands, and it will no doubt continue to keep pace with the commercial growth of Loughborough and neighbourhood.

In conclusion we may mention that the senior partner of the firm is serving on the Aldermanic bench of his native town, and has always been to the fore in endeavouring to promote the interests and advancement of his fellow-townsmen”.

The partnership of the firm, which was known as H. Coltman and Sons, was dissolved in 1894, when Huram retired, leaving his sons John Charles, Ernest Edwin, and Walter William at the helm.

In 1895, the company applied for a patent for a refuse destructor and steam generator combined, an invention which was attributed to Ernest. The machinery was first used in connection with the Loughborough sewerage works, which was built in late 1895.

In March 1899, a patent was sealed for improvements to vertical boilers, which was submitted by Huram, John Charles, and Ernest Coltman, shortly before the partnership of the company changed. Later in 1899, Walter William Coltman left the partnership of John Charles and Ernest E. Coltman, trading as H. Coltman and Sons, to become a manufacturing engineer on his own account, taking on the role of the proprietor of the company Central Boiler and Engineering Works, often referred to as Walter W. Coltman and Co., based on Great Central Road.



The company H. Coltman and Sons, as well as advertising as repairers to all kinds of engines and boilers, and having a large stock of circular and straight firebars, boiler mountings and fittings at the lowest prices, then went on to diversify somewhat. Between 1907 and 1920 we find the company producing 20hp cars, albeit in small numbers. In February 1920, a note appeared in the ‘London and China Express’ that the Loughborough firm of Herbert Morris Ltd. had acquired the business of H. Coltman and Sons, Midland Ironworks.


Meanwhile, the Central Boiler Works of Walter William Coltman continued to trade, and adverts for staff often appeared in the press, whether that were for a smith (angle-iron), skilled rivetters, electric welders, or young people to learn the trade. In the 1930s, a member of the local Onions family was the secretary and director of the Central Boiler Works.


Walter William Coltman, who created the Central Boiler Works died in 1958, but the company kept trading until the early 1980s, when in 1982 they were taken over by Loughborough-based Trentside Investments Ltd., and finally closing down in June 1982, there being many employees who had been with the 80-year-old company for over 20 years. The closure was put down to the decline in demand for coal-fired boilers, which had in part been caused by the lower price of oil.

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Notes

[1] ‘Loughborough: its history, manufactures, trade'. Brighton: London: Robinson, Son & Pike, 1892

[2] Huram Coltman went on to serve two terms as mayor of Loughborough, firstly in 1896-97, following Walter Chapman Burder, and then in 1898-9, following William Tidd. He was succeeded in the role by Thomas Mayo. 

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posted by lynneaboutloughborough

With apologies for typos which are all mine!

_______________________________________________

Thank you for reading this blog.

Copyright:

The copyright © of all content on this blog rests with me, however, you are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follows:

Dyer, Lynne (2023). Coltman family, boiler makers and engineers. Available from: https://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2023/06/coltman-family-boiler-makers-and.html [Accessed 2 July 2023]

Take down policy:

I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

Blog archive and tags:

If you are viewing this blog in mobile format, you will not be able to easily access the blog archive, or the clickable links to various topics. These can be accessed if you scroll to the bottom of the page, and click 'View Web Version'. Alternatively, there is also a complete list of posts, which when clicked will take you to the page you are interested in.

Searching the blog:

You can search the blog using the dedicated search box that appears near the top of the blog when viewed in the web version. Alternatively, you can search using your usual search engine (e.g. Bing, Google, DuckDuckGo etc.) by following this example:

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NOTE – the words you’re actually looking for must be in “” and the first of these must be preceded by a space

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Lynne