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'''Henry Cort''' (c. 1740 – 23 May 1800) was an English ironware producer who was formerly a Navy pay agent. During the [[Industrial Revolution]] in England, Cort began refining iron from [[pig iron]] to [[wrought iron]] (or bar iron) using innovative production systems. In 1784, he obtained a patent for an improved version of [[Peter Onions]]'s [[Puddling (metallurgy)|puddling process]], for refining cast iron, although its commercial viability was only realised in the 1790s, through further innovations introduced by [[Richard Crawshay]] and Homfray of the [[Cyfarthfa Ironworks]], in [[Merthyr Tydfil]].
'''Henry Cort''' (c. 1740 – 23 May 1800) was an English ironware producer who was formerly a Navy pay agent. During the [[Industrial Revolution]] in England, Cort began refining iron from [[pig iron]] to [[wrought iron]] (or bar iron) using innovative production systems. In 1784, he obtained a patent for an improved version of [[Peter Onions]]'s [[Puddling (metallurgy)|puddling process]], for refining cast iron, although its commercial viability was only realised in the 1790s, through further innovations introduced by [[Richard Crawshay]] and Homfray of the [[Cyfarthfa Ironworks]] in [[Merthyr Tydfil]].


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
Little is known of Cort's early life other than that he was possibly born into a family coming from [[Lancaster, Lancashire|Lancaster]], England although his parents are unknown.<ref>Mott, R. A. (ed. P. Singer), ''Henry Cort: the Great Finer'', The Metals Society, London 1983</ref> Although his date of birth is traditionally given as 1740, this can not be confirmed and his early life remains an enigma.<ref>{{cite ODNB|first=Chris|last=Evans|title=Cort, Henry (1741?–1800)|year=2006|doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/6359 |url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/6359|access-date=5 August 2010}}</ref>
Little is known of Cort's early life other than that he was possibly born into a family coming originally from [[Lancaster, Lancashire|Lancaster]] but living in Jamaica at the time of his (possible) father; another Henry Cort although his parents are not definitely known.<ref>https://salthistory.yolasite.com/early-life-of-henry-cort.php The early life and times of Henry Cort</ref> Although his date of birth is traditionally given as 1740, this can not be confirmed and his early life remains an enigma.<ref>{{cite ODNB|first=Chris|last=Evans|title=Cort, Henry (1741?–1800)|year=2006|doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/6359 |url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/6359|access-date=5 August 2010}}</ref>
By 1765, Cort had become a [[Royal Navy]] pay agent, acting on commission collecting half pay and widows' pensions from an office in Crutched Friars near Aldgate in London. At that time, despite [[Abraham Darby I|Abraham Darby]]'s improvements in the smelting of iron using [[Coke (fuel)|coke]] instead of [[charcoal]] as [[blast furnace]] fuel, the resultant product was still only convertible to bar iron by a laborious process of decarburization in [[finery forge]]s. As a result, bar iron imported from the Baltic undercut that produced in Britain.<ref>Evans, C., Jackson, O., and Ryden, G. ‘Baltic iron and the British iron industry in the eighteenth century’. Econ. Hist. Rev. (2nd ser.), 55, 642–665. 2002: King, P. ‘The production and consumption of bar iron in early modern England and Wales’ Econ. Hist. Rev. (2nd ser.), 58, 1-33. 2005:</ref>
By 1765, Cort had become a [[Royal Navy]] pay agent, acting on commission collecting half pay and widows' pensions from an office in Crutched Friars near Aldgate in London. At that time, despite [[Abraham Darby I|Abraham Darby]]'s improvements in the smelting of iron using [[Coke (fuel)|coke]] instead of [[charcoal]] as [[blast furnace]] fuel, the resultant product was still only convertible to bar iron by a laborious process of decarburization in [[finery forge]]s. As a result, bar iron imported from the Baltic undercut that produced in Britain.<ref>Evans, C., Jackson, O., and Ryden, G. ‘Baltic iron and the British iron industry in the eighteenth century’. Econ. Hist. Rev. (2nd ser.), 55, 642–665. 2002: King, P. ‘The production and consumption of bar iron in early modern England and Wales’ Econ. Hist. Rev. (2nd ser.), 58, 1-33. 2005:</ref>


In 1768, Cort's second marriage was to Elizabeth Heysham, the daughter of a Romsey solicitor and steward of the [[Earl of Portland|Duke of Portland]] whose estates included Titchfield.<ref name="Espinasse 1877, p. 225">Espinasse (1877), p. 225</ref> Her uncle William Attwick, although a successful London attorney, had inherited the family ironmongery business in Gosport which supplied the navy with mooring chains, anchors and hundreds of different items of ironmongery.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.fareham.gov.uk/council/general/henrycort/historyhcort.aspx |author=Pam Moore |title=History of Henry Cort |publisher=Fareham Borough Council |access-date=6 June 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120319223427/http://www.fareham.gov.uk/council/general/henrycort/historyhcort.aspx |archive-date=19 March 2012 |df=dmy-all }}</ref>
In 1768, Cort's second marriage was to Elizabeth Heysham, the daughter of a Romsey solicitor and steward of the [[Earl of Portland|Duke of Portland]] whose estates included Titchfield.<ref> https://salthistory.yolasite.com/early-life-of-henry-cort.php The early life and times of Henry Cort</ref> Her uncle William Attwick, although a successful London attorney, had inherited the family ironmongery business in Gosport which supplied the navy with mooring chains, anchors and hundreds of different items of ironmongery.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.fareham.gov.uk/council/general/henrycort/historyhcort.aspx |author=Pam Moore |title=History of Henry Cort |publisher=Fareham Borough Council |access-date=6 June 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120319223427/http://www.fareham.gov.uk/council/general/henrycort/historyhcort.aspx |archive-date=19 March 2012 |df=dmy-all }}</ref>


=== Partnership with Samuel Jellicoe ===
=== Partnership with Samuel Jellicoe ===
In 1780, the Royal Navy's [[Victualling Commissioners]] reached an agreement with Cort, who had taken over Attwick's business, to supply iron hoops for their barrels. This led to Cort investing in a new [[rolling (metalworking)|rolling mill]] at an existing iron mill in Titchfield which was later used for the production of bar iron.<ref name="Eley">{{Cite web|title= The Gosport Iron Foundry and Henry Cort|author= Philip Eley|url= http://www3.hants.gov.uk/gdc/gosport-dc-local-studies/local-history-online/henry-cort|publisher= Hampshire County Council|access-date= 6 June 2012|url-status= dead|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120210031634/http://www3.hants.gov.uk/gdc/gosport-dc-local-studies/local-history-online/henry-cort|archive-date= 10 February 2012|df= dmy-all}}</ref> Short of funds, he turned to Adam Jellicoe, at that time chief clerk in the Pay Office of the Royal Navy, who agreed to finance Cort to the amount of nearly £58 000 on seemingly little security beyond the value of the business. It was the accepted practice for clerks in the Pay Office to temporarily use surplus funds for their own benefit. As part of the arrangement, Jellicoe's son Samuel became a partner in the Fontley Works. The deal was later to have unfortunate repercussions for Cort.<ref>Espinasse (1877), p. 229.</ref>
In 1780, the Royal Navy's [[Victualling Commissioners]] reached an agreement with Cort, who had taken over Attwick's business, to convert scrap iron hoops for their barrels. He had recently taken over a [[rolling (metalworking)|rolling mill]] at an existing iron mill in Titchfield which was later used for the production of bar iron.<ref> https://salthistory.yolasite.com/early-life-of-henry-cort.php The early life and times of Henry Cort</ref> Short of funds, he turned to Adam Jellicoe, at that time chief clerk in the Pay Office of the Royal Navy, who agreed to loan Cort funds to develop a new method of converting cast iron to bar iron, over the next ten years this amounted to the amount of nearly £58 000 on seemingly little security beyond the value of the business. It was the accepted practice for clerks in the Pay Office to temporarily use surplus funds for their own benefit. As part of the arrangement, Jellicoe's son Samuel became a partner in the Fontley Works. The deal was later to have unfortunate repercussions for Cort.<ref>https://salthistory.yolasite.com/early-life-of-henry-cort.php The early life and times of Henry Cort.</ref>


=== Rolling mill and puddling furnace ===
=== Rolling mill and puddling furnace ===
[[Image:Puddling furnace.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Schematic drawing of a puddling furnace]]
[[Image:Puddling furnace.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Schematic drawing of a puddling furnace]]
Cort developed his ideas at the Fontley Works (as he had renamed Titchfield Hammer) resulting in a 1783 patent for a simple reverberatory furnace to refine pig iron followed by a 1784 patent for his puddling furnace, with grooved rollers which mechanised the formerly laborious process. Conventional economic histories have for a long time seen this as building on the existing ideas of the [[Cranege brothers]] and their [[reverberatory furnace]] (where heat is applied from above, rather than through the use of [[blast furnace|forced air]] from below) and (particularly) [[Peter Onions]]' puddling process where iron is stirred to separate out impurities and extract the higher quality wrought iron.
Cort developed his ideas at the Fontley Works (as he had renamed Titchfield Hammer) resulting in a 1783 patent for a simple reverberatory furnace to refine pig iron followed by a 1784 patent for his puddling furnace, with grooved rollers which mechanised the formerly laborious process. His work built on the existing ideas of the [[Cranege brothers]] and their [[reverberatory furnace]] (where heat is applied from above, rather than through the use of [[blast furnace|forced air]] from below) and (particularly) [[Peter Onions]]' puddling process where iron is stirred to separate out impurities and extract the higher quality wrought iron.
Research in 2023 hypothesized that the grooved-roller process in particular had been an innovation of Black metallurgists, at John Reeder's foundry, Reeder's Pen, in St Thomas, Jamaica. Although there is no direct proof of this, it was noted that sugar mills on the islands used rollers with grooves to crush sugar-cane, and this could have inspired metallurgists to use grooved rollers to roll iron bars. The paper states that the Jamaican works were forcibly closed due to fears of the work's steel being used for weapons in a slave revolt, eventually being dismantled in 1782 and relocated to Portsmouth. Finally claiming that the grooved-roller process could have been brought to Portsmouth from Jamaica with the mill, in 1783.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Bulstrode |first=Jenny |date=2023 |title=Black metallurgists and the making of the industrial revolution |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07341512.2023.2220991 |journal=History and Technology}}</ref> However, further research in the same year reexamined the primary sources cited by the original paper and found contradictory information and conclusions based on speculation. This new research noted that Reeder's Pen was engaged in no abnormal iron production methods for the time, was not a center of innovation for iron production techniques, and that the works was in fact fully demolished on site over public and government fears that a Franco-Spanish invasion was imminent, and that the works may be utilized by Franco-Spanish forces.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Jelf |first1=Oliver |date=August 23, 2023 |title=The origin of Henry Cort’s iron-rolling process: assessing the evidence |url=https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/rp5ae/ |journal= |doi=10.31235/osf.io/rp5ae}}</ref>


The puddling furnace effectively lowered the carbon content of the [[cast iron]] charge through [[oxidation]] while the "puddler" extracted a mass of iron from the furnace using an iron "rabbling bar". The extracted ball of metal was then processed into a "shingle" by a [[Shingling (metallurgy)|shingling]] hammer, after which it was rolled in the rolling mill. The original process of Cort was ineffectual until significant alterations were made by Richard Crawshay and other Merthyr Tydfil ironmasters as Cort used iron from charcoal furnaces rather than the coke smelted pig iron in general production by then.
The puddling furnace lowered the carbon content of the [[cast iron]] charge through [[oxidation]] while the "puddler" extracted a mass of iron from the furnace using an iron "rabbling bar". The extracted ball of metal was then processed into a "shingle" by a [[Shingling (metallurgy)|shingling]] hammer, after which it was rolled in the rolling mill. The original process of Cort was ineffectual until significant alterations were made by Richard Crawshay and other Merthyr Tydfil ironmasters as Cort used iron from charcoal furnaces rather than the coke smelted pig iron in general production by then.


=== Death of Adam Jellicoe ===
=== Death of Adam Jellicoe ===
When Adam Jellicoe died suddenly on 30 August 1789, it became apparent that the £58 000 lent to Cort could not be repaid. As a result, the Crown seized all the Property of Adam Jellicoe as well as that of the partnership of Cort and Samuel Jellicoe. Cort was held responsible for Jellicoe's debt and declared bankrupt.<ref name=" Eley" /> The Crown later gave Samuel Jellicoe possession of the works at Fontley where he " remained ... undisturbed for long years afterward" and made no attempt to realize patent dues from ironmasters, as the system did not work with the grey iron produced in the Midlands and South Wales.<ref>Espinasse (1877), p 234</ref>
When Adam Jellicoe died suddenly on 30 August 1789, it became apparent that the £58 000 lent to Cort could not be repaid. As a result, the Crown seized all the Property of Adam Jellicoe as well as that of the partnership of Cort and Samuel Jellicoe. Cort was held responsible for Jellicoe's debt and declared bankrupt. The Crown later gave back to Samuel Jellicoe possession of the works at Titchfield and Gosport


=== Patents and royalties ===
=== Patents and royalties ===
The importance of Cort's improvements to the process of iron making were recognised as early as 1786 by [[John Baker-Holroyd, 1st Earl of Sheffield|Lord Sheffield]] who regarded them along with [[James Watt]]'s work on the [[steam engine]] as more important than the [[American Revolution|loss of America]].<ref>{{Cite book|title= Great Engineers|last=Matschoss|first=Conrad|publisher= Books for Libraries; Reprint edition|date= June 1970|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=4T_3BG9i3BQC&pg=PA110 |page=110|isbn= 978-0836918373 }}</ref>
The importance of Cort's improvements to the process of bar purported iron making were recognised as early as 1786 by [[John Baker-Holroyd, 1st Earl of Sheffield|Lord Sheffield]] who regarded them along with [[James Watt]]'s work on the [[steam engine]] as more important than the [[American Revolution|loss of America]].<ref>{{Cite book|title= Great Engineers|last=Matschoss|first=Conrad|publisher= Books for Libraries; Reprint edition|date= June 1970|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=4T_3BG9i3BQC&pg=PA110 |page=110|isbn= 978-0836918373 }}</ref>
In 1787, Cort came to an agreement with [[South Wales]] [[ironmaster]] [[Richard Crawshay]] whereby all iron manufactured according to the former's patents would result in a [[Royalties|royalty]] of 10&nbsp;[[Shilling (English coin)|shilling]]s per ton.<ref>Espinasse (1877), p. 233</ref> Cort seems to have alienated most of those with whom he came in contact.
In 1787, Cort came to an agreement with [[South Wales]] [[ironmaster]] [[Richard Crawshay]] whereby all iron manufactured according to the former's patents would result in a [[Royalties|royalty]] of 10&nbsp;[[Shilling (English coin)|shilling]]s per ton.<ref>Espinasse (1877), p. 233</ref>
However, there were a series of production problems and the death of Adam Jellicoe in 1789 precipitated legal actions by the Crown to recover the money lent by Adam Jellicoe to Cort. As a result of which, Cort was declared bankrupt and although he soon rectified his financial status he never again engaged in industrial activities.<ref>https://issuu.com/jeremygreenwood6/docs/the_early_life_and_times_of_henry_c Henry Cort ; a revised biography </Ref>


== Personal life ==
== Personal life ==
Cort's marriage to Elizabeth Heysham produced 13 children.<ref>Espinasse (1877), p.225</ref> His business ventures did not bring him wealth, even though vast numbers of the puddling furnaces that he developed were eventually used (reportedly 8,200 by 1820), they used a modified version of his process and thus avoided payment of royalties. He was later awarded a government pension, but died a ruined man, and was buried in the churchyard of [[St John-at-Hampstead]], London.
Cort's marriage to Elizabeth Heysham produced 13 children.<ref>Espinasse (1877), p.225</ref> His business ventures did not bring him wealth, even though vast numbers of the puddling furnaces that he developed were eventually used (reportedly 8,200 by 1820), they used a modified version of his process and thus avoided payment of royalties. He was later awarded a government pension, but died a ruined man, and was buried in the churchyard of [[St John-at-Hampstead]], London.

== Legacy ==
Fifty years after Cort's death, ''[[The Times]]'' of London lauded him as "the father of the iron trade".<ref>The Times, editorial, 29 July 1856, cited from Rosen (2010), p. 328</ref> His son, Richard Cort, became a cashier for the [[British Iron Company]] in 1825 – 6 and subsequently wrote several pamphlets severely critical of the management of the company. He also attacked a number of early railway companies.

[[The Henry Cort Community College]] bears his name and is located in the town of [[Fareham]], in the south of Hampshire, England. The [[South East Hampshire Bus Rapid Transit|busway]] between Fareham and [[Bridgemary]], built on the trackbed of the old [[Gosport]] to Fareham railway line, is entitled Henry Cort Way on maps.


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
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== Further reading ==
== Further reading ==
* Jenny Bulstrode. 2023. "[https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07341512.2023.2220991 Black metallurgists and the making of the industrial revolution]." History and Technology
* Dickinson, H. W. Henry Cort's Bicentenary, in ''The Newcomen Society'', Transactions 1940–41, volume XXI, 1943.
* Dickinson, H. W. Henry Cort's Bicentenary, in ''The Newcomen Society'', Transactions 1940–41, volume XXI, 1943.
* Mott, R. A. (ed. P. Singer), ''Henry Cort: the Great Finer'', The Metals Society, London 1983)
* Mott, R. A. (ed. P. Singer), ''Henry Cort: the Great Finer'', The Metals Society, London 1983)
Line 89: Line 84:
*[https://archive.today/20130104064709/homepage.ntlworld.com/paul.hawkins.tyd/Tyd/HenryCort.htm Henry Cort] – another brief biography
*[https://archive.today/20130104064709/homepage.ntlworld.com/paul.hawkins.tyd/Tyd/HenryCort.htm Henry Cort] – another brief biography
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120210031634/http://www3.hants.gov.uk/gdc/gosport-dc-local-studies/local-history-online/henry-cort The Gosport Iron Foundry and Henry Cort]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120210031634/http://www3.hants.gov.uk/gdc/gosport-dc-local-studies/local-history-online/henry-cort The Gosport Iron Foundry and Henry Cort]
*[http://henry_cort.geneagraphie.com/index%281%29.htm Henry Cort, Father of the Iron Trade] - the most reliable and up-to-date information on the British inventor
*[http://cort.geneagraphie.com/ Henry Cort, Father of the Iron Trade] - extensive research carried out by Eric Alexander on the life of the British inventor


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Cort, Henry}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cort, Henry}}
[[Category:1740 births]]
[[Category:1740s births]]
[[Category:1800 deaths]]
[[Category:1800 deaths]]
[[Category:British ironmasters]]
[[Category:English ironmasters]]
[[Category:18th-century British inventors]]
[[Category:18th-century British inventors]]
[[Category:People from Lancaster, Lancashire]]
[[Category:People from Lancaster, Lancashire]]
[[Category:People of the Industrial Revolution]]
[[Category:People of the Industrial Revolution]]
[[Category:English metallurgists]]

Latest revision as of 10:11, 26 November 2024

Henry Cort
Henry Cort
Born
Henry Cort

Circa 1740
Unknown
DiedFriday 23 May 1800
NationalityEnglish
Occupation(s)Inventor, pioneer in the iron industry
Known forInventions relating to puddling and rolling in the manufacture of iron.
ChildrenRichard Cort

Henry Cort (c. 1740 – 23 May 1800) was an English ironware producer who was formerly a Navy pay agent. During the Industrial Revolution in England, Cort began refining iron from pig iron to wrought iron (or bar iron) using innovative production systems. In 1784, he obtained a patent for an improved version of Peter Onions's puddling process, for refining cast iron, although its commercial viability was only realised in the 1790s, through further innovations introduced by Richard Crawshay and Homfray of the Cyfarthfa Ironworks in Merthyr Tydfil.

Biography

[edit]

Little is known of Cort's early life other than that he was possibly born into a family coming originally from Lancaster but living in Jamaica at the time of his (possible) father; another Henry Cort although his parents are not definitely known.[1] Although his date of birth is traditionally given as 1740, this can not be confirmed and his early life remains an enigma.[2] By 1765, Cort had become a Royal Navy pay agent, acting on commission collecting half pay and widows' pensions from an office in Crutched Friars near Aldgate in London. At that time, despite Abraham Darby's improvements in the smelting of iron using coke instead of charcoal as blast furnace fuel, the resultant product was still only convertible to bar iron by a laborious process of decarburization in finery forges. As a result, bar iron imported from the Baltic undercut that produced in Britain.[3]

In 1768, Cort's second marriage was to Elizabeth Heysham, the daughter of a Romsey solicitor and steward of the Duke of Portland whose estates included Titchfield.[4] Her uncle William Attwick, although a successful London attorney, had inherited the family ironmongery business in Gosport which supplied the navy with mooring chains, anchors and hundreds of different items of ironmongery.[5]

Partnership with Samuel Jellicoe

[edit]

In 1780, the Royal Navy's Victualling Commissioners reached an agreement with Cort, who had taken over Attwick's business, to convert scrap iron hoops for their barrels. He had recently taken over a rolling mill at an existing iron mill in Titchfield which was later used for the production of bar iron.[6] Short of funds, he turned to Adam Jellicoe, at that time chief clerk in the Pay Office of the Royal Navy, who agreed to loan Cort funds to develop a new method of converting cast iron to bar iron, over the next ten years this amounted to the amount of nearly £58 000 on seemingly little security beyond the value of the business. It was the accepted practice for clerks in the Pay Office to temporarily use surplus funds for their own benefit. As part of the arrangement, Jellicoe's son Samuel became a partner in the Fontley Works. The deal was later to have unfortunate repercussions for Cort.[7]

Rolling mill and puddling furnace

[edit]
Schematic drawing of a puddling furnace

Cort developed his ideas at the Fontley Works (as he had renamed Titchfield Hammer) resulting in a 1783 patent for a simple reverberatory furnace to refine pig iron followed by a 1784 patent for his puddling furnace, with grooved rollers which mechanised the formerly laborious process. His work built on the existing ideas of the Cranege brothers and their reverberatory furnace (where heat is applied from above, rather than through the use of forced air from below) and (particularly) Peter Onions' puddling process where iron is stirred to separate out impurities and extract the higher quality wrought iron.

The puddling furnace lowered the carbon content of the cast iron charge through oxidation while the "puddler" extracted a mass of iron from the furnace using an iron "rabbling bar". The extracted ball of metal was then processed into a "shingle" by a shingling hammer, after which it was rolled in the rolling mill. The original process of Cort was ineffectual until significant alterations were made by Richard Crawshay and other Merthyr Tydfil ironmasters as Cort used iron from charcoal furnaces rather than the coke smelted pig iron in general production by then.

Death of Adam Jellicoe

[edit]

When Adam Jellicoe died suddenly on 30 August 1789, it became apparent that the £58 000 lent to Cort could not be repaid. As a result, the Crown seized all the Property of Adam Jellicoe as well as that of the partnership of Cort and Samuel Jellicoe. Cort was held responsible for Jellicoe's debt and declared bankrupt. The Crown later gave back to Samuel Jellicoe possession of the works at Titchfield and Gosport

Patents and royalties

[edit]

The importance of Cort's improvements to the process of bar purported iron making were recognised as early as 1786 by Lord Sheffield who regarded them along with James Watt's work on the steam engine as more important than the loss of America.[8] In 1787, Cort came to an agreement with South Wales ironmaster Richard Crawshay whereby all iron manufactured according to the former's patents would result in a royalty of 10 shillings per ton.[9] However, there were a series of production problems and the death of Adam Jellicoe in 1789 precipitated legal actions by the Crown to recover the money lent by Adam Jellicoe to Cort. As a result of which, Cort was declared bankrupt and although he soon rectified his financial status he never again engaged in industrial activities.[10]

Personal life

[edit]

Cort's marriage to Elizabeth Heysham produced 13 children.[11] His business ventures did not bring him wealth, even though vast numbers of the puddling furnaces that he developed were eventually used (reportedly 8,200 by 1820), they used a modified version of his process and thus avoided payment of royalties. He was later awarded a government pension, but died a ruined man, and was buried in the churchyard of St John-at-Hampstead, London.


Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ https://salthistory.yolasite.com/early-life-of-henry-cort.php The early life and times of Henry Cort
  2. ^ Evans, Chris (2006). "Cort, Henry (1741?–1800)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/6359. Retrieved 5 August 2010. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ Evans, C., Jackson, O., and Ryden, G. ‘Baltic iron and the British iron industry in the eighteenth century’. Econ. Hist. Rev. (2nd ser.), 55, 642–665. 2002: King, P. ‘The production and consumption of bar iron in early modern England and Wales’ Econ. Hist. Rev. (2nd ser.), 58, 1-33. 2005:
  4. ^ https://salthistory.yolasite.com/early-life-of-henry-cort.php The early life and times of Henry Cort
  5. ^ Pam Moore. "History of Henry Cort". Fareham Borough Council. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012. Retrieved 6 June 2012.
  6. ^ https://salthistory.yolasite.com/early-life-of-henry-cort.php The early life and times of Henry Cort
  7. ^ https://salthistory.yolasite.com/early-life-of-henry-cort.php The early life and times of Henry Cort.
  8. ^ Matschoss, Conrad (June 1970). Great Engineers. Books for Libraries; Reprint edition. p. 110. ISBN 978-0836918373.
  9. ^ Espinasse (1877), p. 233
  10. ^ https://issuu.com/jeremygreenwood6/docs/the_early_life_and_times_of_henry_c Henry Cort ; a revised biography
  11. ^ Espinasse (1877), p.225

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Dickinson, H. W. Henry Cort's Bicentenary, in The Newcomen Society, Transactions 1940–41, volume XXI, 1943.
  • Mott, R. A. (ed. P. Singer), Henry Cort: the Great Finer, The Metals Society, London 1983)
  • Webster, Thomas The Case of Henry Cort and his Inventions in the Manufacture of British Iron, Mechanics' Magazine, 1859
[edit]