Mexborough and Swinton Times, 19th August 1887,
Obituary of Mr Thomas Barron
His Involvement in The Glassworks Of South Yorkshire
Mr Thomas Barron lived in Glasshouse Lane and his death was indirectly caused by the carriage he was in colliding with a dray at Barker’s Corner.
Mr Barron was born at Ratcliffe Bridge, Lancashire on 18th Sept. 1812, but left for Huslet with his parents at the age of two years, and was later apprenticed to Mr John Bower of the glassworks there. After his apprenticeship he than went to work at “The Aire and Calder Works” in Castleford, then owned by Messers Breffit and Co. He also for a time worked for Mr John Kilner at Thornhill Lees, this being the father of the owner of Kilner Bros. Glassworks at Denaby Main.
In 1835 he married Miss Armitage at Lees Old Church, and during their married life they had seven sons and five daughters.
After working at Thornhill Lees Mr T. Barron came to Mexborough with his father Mr Joseph Barron (Jnr), Benjamin Rylands, John and James Tillotson, and Joseph Wilson, they were all practical glass-blowers and all were determined to start up in business, and in 1850 did just this, in an old house which stood on the site where the Don Glass Works once stood (now under the by-pass behind York Square.) calling it the Don Glass Bottle Works. All the members worked very hard until they had a weekly output of 130 gross (18,720 bottles per week). In 1852 Messers Benjamin Rylands, John and James Tillotson and Joseph Wilson left to start their own firm in Swinton.
In 1856 Mr Joseph Barron (Snr.) died leaving the glassworks to his two sons, and the first extension was started soon after this in 1857 when a second glass house was thought necessary, which started production in September 1858. But in 1864 the two brothers argued and they dissolved the partnership, Joseph taking the new building and Thomas the old giving it the name of “The Phoenix” (in 1865 The Phoenix Glassworks opened officially according to John Goodchild). After only a couple of years his brother went bankrupt and the property was bought by Andrew Montagu, Mr W Roebuck, Hartley Barron and Joseph and Chas. Bullock, Mr Peter Waddington being later taken into the company.
In 1873 the first old Flint House was pulled down and a new one erected on the site, and in 1874 a third house was built, and extension followed extension until it became one of the largest glassworks in the area.
In 1883 he heard of a better way of producing glass this being by the Siemens Process (invented in 1866 for the production of Steel) and on Feast Day (24th June) 1883 a start was made on the foundations for the chimney of the new furnace, and the production of glass by the “continuous system” of Siemens Process started in April 1884.But by 1885 business was such that another furnace was needed and a second gas fired furnace was erected. By this time Thomas Barron was employing three hundred men and boys.
Next in this article comes a comment on the mode of the times (don’t forget that when this article was written out country was in the grips of the Great Depression, which took from 1870 to 1900 to clear) and this was that other countries had put a levy on all goods imported into that country from Britain, to give priority to their own manufactured goods, but the
British Government had refused in their turn to put a tax on imported goods, and as a consequence it had hit the British manufacturing industries, in particular those which had a large export trade, such as glass industries and Thomas Barron in particular, who exported to Australia who in 1886 put a tax of 1/6 (71/2p) a gross (144) on imported bottles to encourage their own emerging glass works in New South Wales. It also Comments that a British Trades Mark Act had been brought out, and that Mr Barron thought that the death of the British silk and sugar industries were as a direct result of the tax put on British goods by foreign governments.
In 1882 when he was 70yrs old he blew one of his last bottles, at the opening of one of his furnaces, a Mr James Rogers told him that he would fill with whisky any bottle he could blow and was astonished when he blew a gallon bottle.
Mr Barron was one of the founder members of Mexborough Local Board, first sitting when it was a District Sanitary Board and eventually became overseer of the poor. A Congregationalist by religion he gave frequently to Mexborough Congregational Church. He was an “old fashioned” Conservative, believing it to be his duty to look after his employees and started “The Phoenix Sick and Divided Society” to enable them to obtain financial aid in times of hardship. In Jan. 1885 at the Montagu Arms, where they held their annual meetings, Mr Barron was presented with a pair of gold spectacles in a silver case and a silver mounted Malacca walking stick with solid Ivory handle, his wife at the same meeting was presented with a pair of gold spectacles enclosed in a case inlaid with pearls, she also received a Victorian lady’s workbox. The cane and spectacle case being inscribed with “Presented to Mr T. Barron Esq., by his workmen 2nd Jan. 1885”. There was after the presentation a speech given by Mr Liversedge, who comments that Mr Barron had seen the glass manufacturing industry in Mexborough grow from the old methods of glass bottle manufacture to the latest, and they could at that time not be bettered for quality, or colours, and that it was one of the finest buildings in Britain or the continent.
When Mr Barron first came to Mexborough there were only about sixty families in the whole of Mexborough, but by 1887 the population had increased to the point that it was about time that Mexborough and the surrounding district should be represented by an MP in parliament, and that it seemed silly that the Lord of the Manor James Montagu could try and sit for Pontefract but not for his own town, and its area, also that his neighbour Mr Wrightson of Cushworth Hall should have sat for Northallerton for so many years. If Mexborough kept on growing the way that it had over the past few years, it would not be long before it outstripped the nearby towns of Rotherham and Doncaster in prosperity and population, and that Doncaster had just acquired a stroke of luck in that Mr Edmond Beckett had just sited his “Plant” there.
At the funeral the High St. and the vicinity of Glasshouse Lane where Mr Barron had lived was crowded with mourners and people who had come to pay their last respects. What follows is then a The funeral cortege included 230 workmen and then ten coaches in which were Mr Barron’s relatives. A procession of the business people of Mexborough then followed the cortege.
At 3p.m. that day all business was suspended in the town, as two thousand people assembled at the newly opened cemetery, the coffin was carried into the chapel there by some of his workmen, the Congregational Choir sang under the leadership of Mr A Popple and he was buried in a vault on the Nonconformist side of the cemetery. It was the largest funeral ever seen in the town.