Taken from a report entitled 'Asbestos In Scotland' by Thomas Gorman, Ronnie Johnston Phd, Arthur McIvor Phd and Andrew Watterson Phd.
Scotland has had a long association with the asbestos industry. Scottish entrepreneurs were among the pioneers in developing the manufacture of asbestos products, with the first companies appearing in the 1870s. One account suggests that it was two Scottish businessmen who first introduced the mineral to the United Kingdom, establishing the Patent Asbestos Manufacturing Company in Glasgow to process asbestos, imported initially from Canada in 1871. Thereafter growth was rapid as the potential of the manufactured mineral began to be realized. By 1885 there were at least 19 asbestos manufacturers and distributors in Glasgow and a further handful dotted around Lanarkshire. The number of companies increased, and at the turn of the century 52 were listed as "asbestos manufacturers" in the Glasgow Post Office Directory.
The importance
of the industry in Clydeside in this early period is suggested
by the fact that of 18 asbestos companies
(undoubtedly the largest) listed in a UK Trade Directory
in 1884, six were located in Glasgow. The Scottish
Asbestos Company (founded in 1877) was one of the
pioneers exploiting the market for engine packing and
insulation, producing asbestos blocks, rope, and millboard
for these purposes from their Levenshields
works in Nitshill, near Glasgow. By 1914, Scottish trade
directories reveal that there were more than 60
asbestos manufacturers throughout the country,
including seven in Aberdeen and three in Edinburgh.
However, Glasgow and the West Scotland industrial
region remained the center of asbestos production and
consumption throughout the twentieth century.
Turner Brothers, the company that came to dominate
the U.K. asbestos industry (as Turner & Newell),
began manufacturing asbestos from its plant in
Rochdale in the late 1870s. In 1938 Turners set up a
factory at Dalmuir to manufacture asbestos-cement
products, to be used largely in the construction industry.
Turner's Dalmuir asbestos factory expanded to
employ at maximum capacity in the 1950s some 320
workers, of whom 45 were women. They continued
production until closure in 1970. |
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Other multinational
asbestos companies also expanded into Scotland. Cape
Asbestos and Johns Manville, for example, established
Marinite Co. Ltd. in Glasgow in 1952 to produce
asbestos panelling, which was widely used in the building
industry and on ships as an insulator and fire retardant.
It was this that was widely used to insulate the
Cunarder Queen Elizabeth II, built at John Brown's shipyard,
Clydebank, in the 1960s. Marinite directly
employed around 250 workers at this time.
However, in Scotland it was the building contractors
(and Direct Works Departments of the urban corporations),
shipyards, and engineering companies that were
the major users of the product.
At the end of the nineteenth
century, boiler-covering and pipe-covering companies
that specialized in thermal insulation emerged.
By 1900, there were 26 boiler-covering firms in Glasgow
alone. These companies were relatively small but by the
1920s had combined together in an employers' organisation
to represent and protect their collective interests.
This organization expanded to absorb other Scottish
firms, becoming the Scottish Thermal Insulation
Engineers' Association in the 1940s. One of the largest
and most active member companies was Newalls Insulation,
a subsidiary of the major U.K. asbestos producer,
Turner & Newall. The biggest shipbuilders, such
as John Brown's, had their own asbestos preparation
sheds in the yards.
A clear indication of the expansion of the asbestos
industry can be gathered from the Clydeside statistics
of raw asbestos imports, which increased 30-fold
between 1920 and 1967. Among the main exposure
points in Scotland were the shipyards; marine engineering;
locomotive construction, motor engineering,
maintenance, and repair (friction products such as
clutch and brake linings); the oil refineries in Grangemouth;
heating engineering (including storage heater
construction); and electrical engineering. In the shipyards
asbestos was used to insulate boilers and pipes
and as a fire retardant to comply with increasingly strict
fire-prevention regulations. The extent of the exposure
can be gauged from the fact that there were 42 shipbuilding
and ship-repairing yards in Scotland in 1960-
32 of which were located on Clydeside. The Queen Elizabeth
II built at John Brown's in Clydebank between
1965 and 1967 provides a prime example of the extensive
use of asbestos in ship construction at this time,
and at peak more than 3,000 workers were employed in
the ship's construction. Many of these, across a whole
range of trades (including laggers, joiners, plumbers,
french polishers, plasterers, and electricians), were
exposed to asbestos dust.
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