NEWS > PIONEERS WHO LED THE WAY FOR SAFETY ON THE STREETS
This article is taken from the Express and Star article dated Thursday November 12, 2009, by Carl Chinn. To view the original pages please click here.
"LAURA Eddowes is a sales estimator at the
long-established and important Wolverhampton
firm of Steelway and she has contacted
me to tell me about a remarkable first both for the
company and the city.
Laura writes that “regular users of the Bilston Road
will be familiar with the Steelway factory, but what they
may not be aware of is the company’s contribution to
road safety.
“Wolverhampton led the way in July 1934 when the UK’s
first pedestrian safety barriers were installed at the busy junction
of Princes Square. Steelway manufactured these after
long and careful experiment and with the co-operation and assistance
of Mr Edwin Tilley, chief constable, and Mr H B
Robinson, the borough engineer and surveyor.
“It was after an accident involving a boy at Princes Square that
a means of protection was necessary. The barriers stopped pedestrians
walking off a blind corner into the path of motorists. Some
residents were unhappy at the change but where Wolverhampton
led London followed.
“On March 19, 1935, Mr Hore-Belisha, then Minister of Transport,
inaugurated London’s first pedestrian safety barriers at Bri-tannia Crossing, Camden. Of course,
they were supplied by Steelway. A
full copy of the company’s archives
including a photo showing the 1937
coronation barriers being installed
will be available later this year from
Wolverhampton Archives.”
Steelway’s achievement was a resounding
one, especially for a relatively
new company. The business
had only been founded in 1928 at the
Queensgate Works site in Wolverhampton
by CW Goodyear. Three
years later it merged with F Hammond &
Co, a noted manufacturer of
handrail standards.
Barriers
Mr Hammond joined the board of
directors, which also included FH
Clark as chairman, JE Bettles as a
director, and Miss EK Holbrook, secretary.
In addition Steelway was the sole
selling agents of drop forged
handrail standards manufactured by
J Brockhouse & Co of West
Bromwich and in turn Mr JVH
Brockhouse was the selling agent in
London for all Steelway products.
After the launch of Steelway’s first
pedestrian guard rail in London, a
second installation was carried out
on March 22, 1935, at Whitechapel
Crossing for the Metropolitan Borough
of Stepney. Two years later the
innovative Wolverhampton company
manufactured the sockets and detachable
uprights to form crowd control
barriers for the 1937 coronation
of King George VI – parts of which
were used again for the coronation
of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953.
A letter of appreciation received
after the 1937 coronation from New
Scotland Yard reads: “Now that the
coronation is a matter of history, I
should like to express my thanks to
your firm for the efficient way in
which you met the demand for barrier
material. As you know the barriers
were of unusual design, which
required special attention by you in
manufacture. They proved most satisfactory,
and I have not had any
complaints regarding them. This is
a matter of satisfaction to all concerned.”
A pioneering enterprise in industrial
metalwork access, Steelway became
well known and highly
regarded for its flooring, ladders,
stairs, handrails, guardrails, and
platforms. It continues to be held in
esteem for such products.
During the Second World War, it
went over to war work and was involved in the manufacture of stretchers
for injured personnel and was a
member of the National Scheme for
Disabled Men. Many of the workers
who left to fight in the war effort returned
to their original positions
with the coming of peace.
Eight years after the war ended
Steelway became a subsidiary of the
Glynwed Group of companies and
went on to provide open mesh flooring
to the Z Cars series stage sets
and grating to the James Bond films
On Her Majesty’s Secret Service and
Diamonds Are Forever.
Specialist
Then in 1983 the company expanded
to form Steelway Fensecure.
Fensecure itself traces its origins
back to 1918 when John Knowles
(Wednesbury) Ltd was started by BC
Knowles and JJ Knowles. Unsurprisingly
for a Black Country town that
was famed as “Tubetown”, the firm
was a manufacturer of tube fittings.
However it was not until John
Knowles was bought out by Tipper
Brothers in the 1960s that Fensecure
really came into its own. Using the
tube fittings of which the company
was a specialist producer, the classic
range of tubular fencing systems was
born. From there, Fensecure soon
became one of the country’s leading
fencing manufacturers, a position
which it still holds proudly.
After a number of ownership
changes, Steelway Fensecure became
part of the Brigam group of companies
in 2005. Two years later it acquired
Brickhouse Access Covers of
West Bromwich, now called Steelway
Brickhouse (Steelway Fensecure
Ltd).
Today this is one of three operating
divisions. The other two are
Steelway (incorporating Rail and PP
Mackindale) and Steelway Fensecure.
With a plant each in Wolverhampton
and West Bromwich and
over 175 workers, these divisions
emphasise the ongoing importance of
high quality manufacturing in our
region.
From making metal flooring, walkways,
railings and stairs for waterworks,
nuclear power stations, railways and factories, to carrying
out spectacular restoration projects
like the rebuild of a century-old
Great Western Railway turntable as
the centrepiece of a visitor attraction
in Minehead, Steelway’s products all
have one thing in common: they are
made to the highest standards in the
Black Country."
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