Difference between revisions of "1899 Brickworks at Walters Ash"

From Lacey Green History

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{{Social Snapshot
 
|Year=1899
 
|Author=Jill Bristow
 
|Socialperiod=Category:1800's
 
}}
 
 
'''[[Walters Ash Farm]]''' is the property at the far south in the parish, opposite Bradenham turn.
 
'''[[Walters Ash Farm]]''' is the property at the far south in the parish, opposite Bradenham turn.
  
 
'''THE PLAN'''
 
'''THE PLAN'''
  
[[Thomas Bristow]], a stone merchant, bought the farm in 1896 in order to start a brickworks, the clay there being very suitable for bricks.
+
Thomas Bristow, a stone merchant, bought the farm in 1896 in order to start a brickworks, the clay there being very suitable for bricks.
  
 
'''THE START'''
 
'''THE START'''

Revision as of 08:18, 12 January 2025

Walters Ash Farm is the property at the far south in the parish, opposite Bradenham turn.

THE PLAN

Thomas Bristow, a stone merchant, bought the farm in 1896 in order to start a brickworks, the clay there being very suitable for bricks.

THE START

The brickworks was launched on Jan 13th 1896. (T. Bristow and Bros.)

FAMOUS

“Naphill Hand Made Bricks” as they became known, were sought after for their colour of soft mauves mingled with a soft red, long after a factory made, cheaper, commodity had virtually stolen the market.    

THE CLOSE

The last burn of bricks was in 1963 when his son Archibald Charles Bristow (known as Ben) retired. Two houses were built with the bricks from this for May Ashdown and Beryl Highgate two of Tom’s grand-daughters.

Also see 1899 Stone Cutting at Walters Ash, also at Walters Ash Farm