christwigg
11 years ago
Does anyone have any thoughts on the following.

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I'm happy with "thorn" as the first word (or end of the first word) My best guess is "crucible" for the second.

Any ideas if its a makers name ?

Pre-1900 probably, North Yorkshire area, about 19" in diameter.
Graigfawr
11 years ago
Maybe part of an inscription along the lines of "---thorn Crucible Steel Foundry Company".

Various small foundries that cast steel as well as the usual iron used crucibles rather than larger and more expensive plant (open-hearth furnaces, tropenas converters, etc) to melt steel, and hence described themselves as "crucible steel foundries". For example. its still possible to see some manhole covers in the Cynon Valley inscribed "Hirwaun Crucible Steel" (or similar wording - this is from memory).

The challenge will be to identify the missing letters before "thorn". As these smaller castings often didn't sell too far outside their county of origin, it might be worth scanning early twentieth century trade directories from the Noirth Riding and from adjoining counties.
Tamarmole
11 years ago
Is it the inside of a tub wheel?

Might the "thorn" be the tail end of "Black Hawthorn"???? BH were supplying kit to various Cleveland mines (locos at Roseberry ironstone and Gribdale whinstone for example).

I hasten to add that this is a real shot in the dark.
christwigg
11 years ago
Shot in the dark it may be, but you might have hit the nail on the head, not a million miles from either location.

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