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  2. Firth Brown Steels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firth_Brown_Steels

    Firth Brown Steels was initially formed in 1902, when Sheffield steelmakers John Brown & Company exchanged shares and came to a working agreement with neighbouring company Thomas Firth & Sons. In 1908 the two companies came together and established the Brown Firth Research Laboratories and it was here, in 1912, under the leadership of Harry ...

  3. Harry Brearley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Brearley

    Monument to Harry Brearley at the former Brown Firth Research Laboratories in Sheffield, England. Harry Brearley (18 February 1871 – 14 July 1948) was an English metallurgist, credited with the invention of "rustless steel" (later to be called "stainless steel" in the anglophone world).

  4. History of Sheffield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Sheffield

    Stainless steel was discovered by Harry Brearley in 1912, at the Brown Firth Laboratories in Sheffield. [68] His successor as manager at Brown Firth, Dr William Hatfield, continued Brealey's work. In 1924 he patented '18-8 stainless steel', [69] which to this day is probably the most common alloy of this type. [70] Sheffield's population, 1700 ...

  5. Company of Cutlers in Hallamshire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Company_of_Cutlers_in...

    The Cutlers' Hall in Sheffield City Centre. This was expanded to include other trades by later acts, most notably steelmakers in 1860. In the same year the Company was given the right to veto any proposed name of a limited company anywhere in the United Kingdom which contains the word "Sheffield". [3]

  6. Viners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viners

    It manufactured stainless steel cutlery and other products. The firm prospered in the 1960s with a modern factory in Sheffield and subsidiaries in Ireland, France and Australia. From 1945, the cutlery industry in Sheffield began a slow decline, accelerated with the collapse of steel and other heavy industries.

  7. Mark Firth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Firth

    Firth was born in Sheffield, the son of Thomas Firth (1789–1850), of Pontefract, York, and Mary Loxley. [1]He joined the crucible steel works of Sanderson Brothers where his father worked as head smelter, but left in 1842 to set up his own business with his brother, Thomas Jr.

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