Here in this West Cork cottage, The
Gate Lodge, Lough Ine House, there is a victorian, cast-iron, spiral
staircase. The lodge, I understand was built around 1830. It is
quite possible therefore that the staircase is original. It was, I
believe, assembled on site from a number of standard components
bolted together to make an exceptionally strong and secure staircase;
a victorian version of an IKEA flat-pack. There are twelve stair
sections, each cast as a one-piece step and riser, on one side the
risers slot into each other to make a strong central column. On
their outsides the stair sections are bolted together by extensions
of bannister supports eleven of which are identical, the twelfth,
first step, support is more substantial and has slightly different
decoration from the others. The top stair section has had an extra
piece fitted to it; another standard section minus its riser, to make
a top-of-stairs platform into which have been cast the words,
“HAYWARD BROTHERS . UNION STREET . BOROUGH . LONDON”.
From my late teenage years this South
Bank area has been very well known to me. In those days, the 1960s,
it was a maze narrow lanes and alleys between tall brick warehouses
around cobbled yards, pockets of Dickensian London yet thriving along
the Thames. To stroll the area was a delight to the olfactory
senses; scented spice importers traded cheek by jowl with leather
tanners, wine merchants with importers of exotic foods. My own
interests in Bermondsey and the Borough in those days were the paper
merchants (Business) and a particularly excellent old wine bar
(Pleasure!) but Haywood Brothers must have, unknown to me, been
trading, if not manufacturing, in Union Street.
I know they were there because, finding
the name cast into the top step of the staircase here, I searched the
internet for further information about the firm. I found, 'Faded
London' a blog put together by an individual with an interest in the
historical minutiae of London; cast iron coal-hole covers being one
of his special fancies. According to 'Faded London' the Hayward
Brothers established their iron founding business in 1783 as a
diversification from their existing glass manufacturing concern. For
the better part of the next two hundred years they flourished,
becoming, among other things major manufacturers of coal-hole covers.
Apparently the business ceased to trade during the 1970s; a victim
perhaps of the Clean-Air Acts and a growing preference for
central-heating.
1 comment:
A concise history of the foundry of the stairs we recently purchased on eBay. I am stripping the paint by immersing each step in an old boiler full of boiling water. So far it’s worth the effort and is keeping me busy during the corona virus isolation.
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