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Work & industry in Tredegar Part 1 Introduction Tredegar, 19th century, Victorian, Industrial Revolution, coal, iron, Blaenau Gwent, Wales. www.access2heritagebg.co.uk
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1
Work & Industry in Tredegar
during the 19th century
A Key Stage 2
Educational Resource Pack
Part 1—Introduction
2
Contents
Part 1—Introduction
What did Tredegar look like before the 19th century (before 1800)?
What happened in Tredegar during the early 19th century (after 1800)? …………………………
Why did Tredegar become a centre of iron-making in the 19th century?
Part 2—Getting the Raw Materials
Where did iron ore come from? …………………………………………………………………………….
Who dug the iron ore?
What was ‘scouring’ for iron ore?
Where did coal come from? ………………………………………………………………………………...
Why was coal so important during the 19th century and what was it used for?
Who dug the coal?
Can we find out more about work at mines and collieries during the 19th century? ……………
How long was a working day at mines and collieries during the 19th century?
At what age did children start work at mines and collieries in the 19th century?
Part 3—Health & Dangers at Work ………………………………………………………………………..
How did working underground affect the health of colliers in the 19th century?
Bedwellty Pits Disaster of 1865
List of known accidents in the mines and ironworks of Glamorgan 1839-4 ……………………...
List of unexpected deaths in Merthyr Tydfil area 1837-1841
Part 4—Making Iron
How was iron made in the 19th century? ………………………………………………………………..
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What happened to the rocks after they had been dug up?
Layout of buildings at an ironworks
The Blast Furnace
What was Pig Iron? …………….……………………………………………………………………………..
What was Cast Iron used for?
What if you needed iron which didn’t snap if it was bent out of shape?
Did making iron produce waste? …………………………………………………………………………..
Brick Making
Making iron in the 1700s
Part 5—Using the census ……………………………………………………………………………………
How can we find out more about the jobs that people did during the 19th century?
1891 census for Plumber’s Row (Nos. 1 to 8)
1851 census for Plumber’s Row (Nos. 1 to 8) …………...……………………………………………...
1861 census for Plumber’s Row (Nos. 1 to 5)
Part 6—Truck shops; Trade Directories; Ironworks & Collieries; Worker’s Portraits; A Day in
the Life of a Door-boy ………………………………………………………………………………………..
What was the ‘truck system’ and why was it so unpopular amongst workers?
Trade Directories
Ironworks & Collieries of Tredegar ……………………………………………………………………….
William Clayton’s worker portraits of 1860s
A day in the life of a door-boy from the Children’s Employment Inquiry of 1841
Part 7—Teachers’ Notes, Further Activities & Sources ………………………………………………
Part 8—Museum Activity Pack
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Introduction
Key question: What changes took place in the work that people did at
Tredegar during the 19th century? Write down your ideas.
Think about:
What was Tredegar like before the start of the 19th century (before the
year 1800)?
What kind of work did most people do before 1800?
How did Tredegar’s environment change during the 19th
century (between the years 1800 and 1900)?
What types of job did people have in the 19th century?
5
What did Tredegar look like before the 19th
century (before 1800)?
‘Previous to the present century the district was inhabited by farmers
and their shepherds, the hills clothed with trees on each side, ferns and
flowers, in rich profusion, were growing everywhere. Farmhouses and
pretty little orchards dotted the surface … “Nature, in all her primitive
grandeur,” reigned supreme.’
Evan Powell, History of Tredegar, 1884
According to Evan Powell, a local historian, what type of jobs did most
people have in the Tredegar area before the 19th century?
6
There are no pictures of the
Tredegar area before 1800 so
we have to rely on written
evidence and old maps.
On the right is part of an old
map of Monmouthshire made
in 1637.
Can you find:
The Sirhowy river?
[Which is spelt Srowaye]
Bedwellty Church
[Which is spelt Bidwelthye]
Compare this map of 1637
with a modern map. Can you
work out where the town of
Tredegar should be?
7
On the right is part of a map of
Monmouthshire made in 1766.
Can you find:
The Sirhowy river?
[Which is spelt Stoway]
Bedwellty Church
[Which is spelt Bedweltey]
Compare this map of 1766 with
a modern map.
Can you work out where the
town of Tredegar should be?
What type of area do you think
this was according to the map
of 1766?
8
On the right is part of an
old map of Monmouthshire
made in 1789.
Can you find:
Sirhowy Furnace?
[Which is spelt Sorrwy]
Bedwellty Church
[Which is spelt Bedwelty]
Brynore Iron & Coal Mines
Compare this map of 1789
with the older maps of
1637 and 1766.
What changes are starting
to appear on the newest
map of the area?
11
On the left is a map of the Tredegar
area at the start of the 19th century
(in the year 1800).
The lines on the map show fields,
roads and streams.
The small black rectangles on the
map are buildings. The area at the
top of the map is the only place
where there are lots of houses, which
had only just been built.
Look carefully at the map and find the
Sirhowy Ironworks.
Where might the people living in the
new houses be working?
13
Here is a map of the Tredegar area in
1840, 40 years later than the map on
page 11. Compare both maps.
Make a list of the changes that had
occurred by 1840.
Make a note of anything to do with
iron or coal.
What might explain the huge increase
in the number of streets and houses
that had been built by 1840?
What jobs might people
living in the new houses
be doing?
14
Here is a map of Monmouthshire
showing the Tredegar area in
1831. However, it does not show
anything that used to be within the
county of Brecknockshire.
The thick black lines that look like
centipedes are actually horse-
drawn railways called dramroads.
These routes supplied ironworks
with raw materials needed to
make iron.
The dramroad from Tredegar to
the south following the Sirhowy
river was used to send finished
iron to buyers through the port of
Newport.
15
Left: Tredegar’s iron was sent
to the docks at Newport from
where it could go anywhere
in the world by sea.
Right: A dramroad in use.
Teams of horses were used
to haul drams filled with raw
materials for making iron.
16
Why did Tredegar become a centre of iron-
making in the 19th century?
The minerals cropped out at the surface and could in places be dug out
as potatoes from a garden.
Theophilus Jones, 1809
The answer lies beneath our feet ...
17
Over 200 years ago, a new way of making iron in large quantities was
discovered that used coal for fuel instead of wood. Along the heads of
the valleys of South Wales, all of the raw materials for making iron were
found close to the surface and could be mined using simple equipment.
The 3 ingredients for making iron are: iron ore, coal and limestone.
18
Did you know?
During the 19th century, iron ore or ironstone was called ‘mine’.
Someone who dug ironstone was always called a ‘miner’.
Someone who dug coal for a living was always called a ‘collier’.
Today, anyone who digs out any type of rock including coal from under-
ground, is called a miner.
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