3703 x 3651 px | 31,4 x 30,9 cm | 12,3 x 12,2 inches | 300dpi
Aufnahmedatum:
24. September 2022
Ort:
Don Street, Rotherham , Yorkshire , England, UK
Weitere Informationen:
In 1845 a directory first listed a brass-founding business under Chrime Brothers; Edward, Richard and Peter were the sons of Edward Chrimes senior, a plumber and glazier. In the same year Edward Chrimes junior patented the 'high pressure loose valve screw-down cock', fore runner of the modern domestic tap; His brother Richard returned from London initially on a temporary basis to run the company. He then entered into partnership with John Guest, with the company becoming known as Guest and Chrimes. In 1848 the firm also started making sluice valve bodies cast in one piece, and from 1849 they manufactured patented New York style fire hydrants, which were widely exported. The first foundry, known as Butter Market Foundry, was situated close to the River Don and the Market Place. In the mid 1850s the firm was awarded a large contract for valve gear and plumbing equipment for the Madrid Water Company in Spain, which necessitated an expansion of manufacturing. A new larger site was purchased beside the River Don and in 1857 the present factory was built on Don Street on a previously open field. The firm now had the facility for casting and machining both brass and iron. The premises of Guest and Chrimes were listed at Grade II in February 1986. In 1999 the complex closed. All the post-1934 buildings were demolished in the early C21, having gone by 2012. In July 2018 there was a fire in the front, eastern range. Subsequently the whole of the front office range, caretaker’s house, eastern extension and part of the angled return were demolished, leaving eight bays attached to the long rear range with the water tower Read more at https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1192221?section=official-list-entry