Wilsontown Ironworks

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The ruins of the Wilsontown Ironworks are located near the village of Forth in Scotland, approximately 23 miles to the south east of Glasgow. The works were founded by the three Wilson brothers in 1779, and operated until 1842. The works had two blast furnaces, and in 1790 a forge was added. Later a rolling and slitting mill and additional forging hammers were installed. This increased the capacity of the works to 40 tons of manufactured iron per week. In its heyday the works employed 2,000 persons. The works had a railway branch line from the site to Auchengray railway station on the Caledonian Railway.

It was at the Wilsontown Ironworks that James Beaumont Neilson developed the first Hot blast form of the Blast Furnace.

The buildings were cleared after closure, but the general layout of the site can still be discerned and an heritage trail has been created. In 2007 Forestry Commission Scotland launched a project to raise public awareness of the Wilsontown industrial heritage site.

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