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Industrial
Change in Wolverhampton and District
Lock
Making
For many
centuries Wolverhampton and the surrounding areas have been the
chief lockmaking district in the country. It is not known when the
manufacture of locks began though there are references to lockmaking
in the district dating back to the time of Queen Elizabeth I. In
the seventeenth century it was the principal trade of Wolverhampton.
A Dr Plot writing in 1686 said,
"
The greatest excellency of the blacksmiths profession in this
country lies in their making of locks for doors, wherein the artisans
of Wolverhampton seem to be prefered to all others".
A Portuguese
merchant writing in 1732 about Wolverhampton said,
"
The chief manufacturers of this town are locksmiths, who are reckoned
the most expert of that trade in England".
Trade
directories from the late 17th century list most of the lockmakers
in the town. Another useful source are the Red Book directories.
For instance the Red Book for 1892 lists no fewer than 21 lock manufacturers
and 202 locksmiths together with 36 keymakers. Trade directories
and Red Books are available for consultation at Wolverhampton Archives
and Local Studies.
Many
of the locksmiths would have served an apprenticeship with a lock
maker in order to learn the trade.

Click on the image to enlarge
Apprentice
indenture of George Arthur Clift (DX-155)
An indenture
is the document that lays out the conditions of the apprenticeship
between the apprentice and the master. In this indenture George
Arthur Clift is apprenticed to James Hodges until he was 21 years
old. The word indenture comes from the irregular shape at the top
of the document. Indentures were originally drawn up between master
and apprentice on one piece of parchment that was then cut with
an irregular line so that the apprenticeship could be proved or
disproved by putting the two pieces of the document together. In
a true document the indents on the paper would make a perfect fit.
Examples
of advertisements taken from Trade Directories show not only the
large number of companies involved in lock making, but also the
variety of types of locks made in Wolverhampton and the surrounding
area.

Click on the image to enlarge
Here
is a selection of images from Melville & Co's Directory and
Gazetteer 1851
Chubb
Jeremiah
Chubb arrived in Wolverhampton to open a lock-making factory in
1818. In 1820 he opened a factory in Temple Street, and in 1836
moved to St James' Square. In 1838 the works moved to Railway Street
on the site of the Old Workhouse.
Chubbs
is famous for its Chubb Detector Lock (patented in 1818) which was
produced as part of a challenge to design an unbreakable lock following
a serious robbery which took place in the Portsmouth Dockyard helped
by the use of false keys. Following the robbery a reward of £100
was offered for a lock that could only be opened by its own key.
A lock was made by Jeremiah Chubb, who was in business with his
brother Charles as a ship's outfitter and ironmonger in Portsmouth.

Extract
from The Illustrated Midland News, 4th June 1870

Extracts
from Old Wolverhampton Sixty Years Ago 1888 (L9)
The original
lock used four levers. Improvements by Charles Chubb, his son John
and others in the years 1824-1847 produced a lock that had six levers.

Six
Lever Chubb Detector Lock from Locks and Lockmaking (L683)

Wolverhampton
Directory 1849

Making
locks at Chubbs 1911 (L6/CHU/I/1)
Another
well known lockmaker was Arthur C Smith of Powlett Street, Wolverhampton:

Click on the image to enlarge
Arthur
C Smith Illustrated List (L683p)
©
Copyright. Wolverhampton City Council, 2002
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