Fawcett, Preston And Company
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William Fawcett (26 December 1763 – 28 December 1844) was an engineer and manufacturer of guns and steam engines, supplying steam engines for some of the earliest steam ships in Britain and America, and for use on sugar plantations in America. He was a partner in the firm of Fawcett, Preston and Company, which supplied the steam engines for a number of ships, including the
paddle steamer A paddle steamer is a steamship or steamboat powered by a steam engine driving paddle wheels to propel the craft through the water. In antiquity, paddle wheelers followed the development of poles, oars and sails, whereby the first uses were wh ...
''William Fawcett'', described as the first ship operated by what would become the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O).


Early career

William Fawcett was born 26 December 1763 in
Liverpool Liverpool is a port City status in the United Kingdom, city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside, England. It is situated on the eastern side of the River Mersey, Mersey Estuary, near the Irish Sea, north-west of London. With a population ...
, England, into a
Quaker Quakers are people who belong to the Religious Society of Friends, a historically Protestant Christian set of denominations. Members refer to each other as Friends after in the Bible, and originally, others referred to them as Quakers ...
family. He married a daughter of Joseph Rathbone, son of
William Rathbone II William Rathbone II (22 May 1696 – 1746) was a member of the noted Rathbone family of Liverpool, England. William Rathbone was the son of a sawyer who lived in Gawsworth, Cheshire, and shared his name. Born on 22 May 1696, William Rathbone II to ...
and Mary Darby, sister of
Abraham Darby II Abraham Darby, in his lifetime called Abraham Darby the Younger, referred to for convenience as Abraham Darby II (12 May 1711 – 31 March 1763) was the second man of that name in an English Quaker family that played an important role in the ea ...
. Fawcett was an apprentice engineer at the Phoenix Foundry in Liverpool, which was owned by the Darbys of
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and managed by his father-in-law. Fawcett completed his apprenticeship in 1784, and Joseph Rathbone took him into the management of the foundry. When Rathbone died in 1790, he left £2,500 and five shares in
the Iron Bridge The Iron Bridge is a cast iron arch bridge that crosses the River Severn in Shropshire, England. Opened in 1781, it was the first major bridge in the world to be made of cast iron. Its success inspired the widespread use of cast iron as a str ...
on the
River Severn The River Severn (, ), at long, is the longest river in Great Britain. It is also the river with the most voluminous flow of water by far in all of England and Wales, with an average flow rate of at Apperley, Gloucestershire. It rises in t ...
to Fawcett. Fawcett leased the Phoenix Foundry (for a seven year term) in 1790, and bought it from the Darbys in 1794 for £2,300, naming the firm Fawcett and Company. After buying the Phoenix Foundry and organizing Fawcett and Company in 1794, Fawcett began producing armaments, in particular,
naval guns Naval artillery is artillery mounted on a warship, originally used only for naval warfare and then subsequently used for more specialized roles in surface warfare such as naval gunfire support (NGFS) and anti-aircraft warfare (AAW) engagements. T ...
. The production of arms helped the firm prosper during the
Napoleonic Wars {{Infobox military conflict , conflict = Napoleonic Wars , partof = the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars , image = Napoleonic Wars (revision).jpg , caption = Left to right, top to bottom:Battl ...
, but Fawcett's fellow Quakers denounced him for his production of weapons of war and he left the faith. Fawcett went bankrupt in 1810, and sold the foundry to George and Henry Littledale in 1813. Fawcett stayed on as manager, with the firm renamed Fawcett, Littledales, and Company. Fawcett bought back part of the firm by the early 1820s, and in 1823 the Littledales sold their majority interest in the firm to the Preston family. The firm then became Fawcett, Preston and Company.


Steam engines

Fawcett and Company began manufacturing steam engines in 1800. Fawcett, Littledales produced its first
marine steam engine A marine steam engine is a steam engine that is used to power a ship or boat. This article deals mainly with marine steam engines of the reciprocating type, which were in use from the inception of the steamboat in the early 19th century to thei ...
in 1817, which was installed in the
Mersey ferry The Mersey Ferry is a ferry service operating on the River Mersey in northwest England, between Liverpool to the east and Birkenhead and Wallasey on the Wirral Peninsula to the west. Ferries have been used on this route since at least the 12 ...
''Etna''. The firm exported
stationary steam engine Stationary steam engines are fixed steam engines used for pumping or driving mills and factories, and for power generation. They are distinct from locomotive engines used on railways, traction engines for heavy steam haulage on roads, steam car ...
s to sugar plantations in Louisiana in the early 1820s. In 1827, William Fawcett received a patent, together with Matthew Clark, for a device for producing sugar from cane juice using the steam from a steam engine's boiler. Fawcett, Preston exported marine steam engines to Canada and the United States. They supplied the engines for the ''Conde de Palmella'', the first ocean-going steamer to leave Britain (traveling from London to Lisbon), for the ''Royal William'', the first steam ship to travel from Liverpool to New York primarily under steam, and for the ''President'', the largest steam ship at the time of her construction. Two paddle steamers were named for Fawcett. In 1828, Fawcett, in partnership with Joseph Robinson Pim, commissioned the construction of a paddle steamer named ''William Fawcett''. The Fawcett, Preston firm provided the steam engine for the ship. The ship is often named as the first ship used by the Peninsular Steam Navigation Company, which later became the P&O. In 1829, a smaller paddle-wheel steamer, also named ''William Fawcett'', was built and provided with an engine from Fawcett, Preston. That ship served as a ferry between
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and Liverpool for 20 years. William Fawcett died in Liverpool on 28 December 1844, age 83. The Fawcett name remained on the firm and its successors through the 19th and 20th centuries.


Notes

{{DEFAULTSORT:Fawcett, William 1763 births 1844 deaths 19th-century British engineers Engineers from Liverpool