Samuel Osborn & Company

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Samuel Osborn and Company was a steelmaker and engineers tool manufacturer situated in Sheffield, South Yorkshire.

Contents

[edit] Early Life

Samuel Osborn junior was born in Sheffield in 1826, his father, also named Samuel, was a partner in the firm of Clark and Osborn, makers of pocket knives, razors, brushes and tortoiseshell combs.

Samuel junior did not follow in fathers footsteps but, leaving school at 15, he joined city drapers, T.B. & W Cockayne. After seven years he moved into the steel industry and joined toolmakers Thomas Ellin & Son later moving to Henry Russell & Company where he became a travelling salesman.

[edit] Branching out on his own

In 1851 he set up on his own as a file manufacturer with premises in Broad Lane which were named Clyde Works. Within 5 years his company expanded and he rented a six - hole crucible furnace on Calver Street in the city centre, whilst only the following year he set up a tilt and forge in the Philadelphia district of the city, the new site being named Brookhill Works.

Osborn, like many other steel makers, showed an interest in his workers health and in particular two of the major illnesses which affected the file making industry: grinders asthma and lead poisoning. By 1864 he discovered an amalgam to replace the soft bed of lead in which the files were placed when being cut by hand. To reduce contact between his workers and lead he developed a file cutting machine although the craftsmen were opposed fearing job losses and a loss of quality in their product, neither being proved to be true.

[edit] A new works and a new product

Osborn’s brother-in-law, William Fawcett, went into partnership with him in 1867 and new premises, in the Wicker area of the city, were bought the following year, these taking the name Clyde Steel & Iron Works, this becoming their main base of operations, the large Head Office of the company fronting the Wicker (These buildings still stand and house retail businesses at street level and, above, the Sheffield and District Afro-Caribean Cultural Association).

In 1870 Osborn met Robert Forrester Mushet, an iron master working in the Forest of Dean where he was producing a new alloy steel, considered to be far superior to crucible steel. Osborn bought the sole rights to manufacture Mushet's Special Self Hardening Steel, Mushet's two sons Henry and Edward moving up to Sheffield to oversee its manufacture. Business was booming with orders created by the Franco-Prussian War and the development of the railways.

[edit] The fall and rise of the company

The bubble, however, burst and in 1874 Osborn was forced to file for liquidation.

With industrial development, a new market for Mushet’s Self Hardening Steel was found in America and the company opened a London Office. Taking on new partners and making connections in continental Europe he paid off all his creditors within ten years, the company being registered as the second largest private enterprise in the Sheffield & District Steel & Allied Trades Association. Expanding again, in 1885 he bought and expanded the Rutland Works, in the Neepsend area of the city.

Samuel Osborn died in 1891, the company, however, continued.