First Four Years (1951) | BFI National Archive

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  • čas přidán 11. 12. 2017
  • This majestic documentary tells the story of ambitious modernisation in the Welsh steel and tinplate industry. This involved upgrading the Margam works near Port Talbot and building both the Abbey hot strip mill next door and a new cold rolling mill and tinplate works at Trostre near Llanelli. Film cameras were frequently on hand: thanks to them, an integrated mega-complex takes shape before our eyes.
    The film was produced by cooperative production company DATA, whose dynamic leader Donald Alexander secured rolling contracts with both the National Coal Board (for the Mining Review series for which DATA is best known) and the Steel Company of Wales for ongoing coverage of the developments summarised here. No doubt DATA's filmmakers, based in London, frequently combined steel with coal filmmaking trips to Wales. Clocking in at over 40 minutes, this compilation of DATA's footage is an exhaustive progress report on four years' worth of large-scale and complex work. Taken a sequence at a time, it's engrossing industrial history. Taken as a whole it's a cinematic monument, colossal in scale but intricate in detail, to the magnitude of a major project - and the sheer ambitious optimism of the postwar re-investment in British industry that lay behind it.
    This video is part of the Orphan Works collection. When the rights-holder for a film cannot be found, that film is classified as an Orphan Work. Find out more about Orphan Works: ec.europa.eu/internal_market/c.... This is in line with the EU Orphan Works Directive of 2012. The results of our search for the rights holder of this film can be found in the EU Orphan Works Database: euipo.europa.eu/ohimportal/en...
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  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 154

  • @apacherider7110
    @apacherider7110 Před měsícem +71

    I visited Cardiff Bay for work this week. I had a walk in the morning before my meeting. I looked out at the old harbour and imagined the ships there 100 years ago. I read an information board saying it was the biggest industrial harbour in the world, now sadly all gone. Then I think back to our great industrial heritage. If you could imagine 100s of Amazon warehouses stacked full of industry of all kinds, the ingenuity, the skills, knowledge and wealth. Now there is one of those warehouses with a small pile of pennies in the corner, that's what left. How the politicians and the establishment have destroyed this country, it makes me very sad and angry. The next general election will only replace the current bunch of idiots with the new ones. Beam me up, Scoty.

    • @billirvine9078
      @billirvine9078 Před měsícem +4

      Sorry boyo NKD. The Klingons have drained our crystals.

    • @monteceitomoocher
      @monteceitomoocher Před měsícem +6

      Regrettably the only thing that'll change post election is the colour of the flag atop the pole, such is the state of British politics today.

    • @richardrowlands9113
      @richardrowlands9113 Před měsícem +4

      My father was born at Tiger Bay, in 42, so you walked in his footprints, as a merchant sailor he seen the world and brought his family to Australia in 68

    • @heathstjohn6775
      @heathstjohn6775 Před 24 dny +2

      The voters voted for the politicians.
      There is no separate species of people called politicians.
      People get what they vote for.
      Vote for mainstream CON/Lab/Lib politicians, and you'll have the land we have today.
      Vote for any party that should put the nation first, and you'll have a different land. Even if the land isn't t a successful one, it shouldn't be a voluntarily destroyed one.
      People shall blame anyone but themselves.

    • @jamesrichardson1
      @jamesrichardson1 Před 13 dny

      The people who vote in the politicians that destroy your way of life are the ones who live in the cities these people built. Thy think that houses just grow from the ground, you plant the trees that grow your computers, and the food you eat just falls out of the packaging plant.

  • @darrinmcneill534
    @darrinmcneill534 Před měsícem +37

    Has anyone watching this ever dug out wet clay with a shovel I have and by god it’s hard work men where men back then and had to do hard graft like this
    They built our country ❤

    • @admiralcraddock464
      @admiralcraddock464 Před měsícem

      I did when waiting to start my apprenticeship in 1970 aged 16

    • @stephendavies925
      @stephendavies925 Před měsícem +1

      Me to in a oil refinery for Mcalpines in the 70s, a grafter made it just bearable, hard work though

    • @piccalillipit9211
      @piccalillipit9211 Před měsícem +5

      I have yes. On a similar thing. We had 40 tons of gravel delivered at my uncle's - hes a farmer - about 65 years old at the time. I said i would give him a hand moving it - I thought it would take 2 or 3 days. I was about 2 or 3 hours late. HE HAD SHIFTED THE LOT...!!!
      Him 1 wheelbarrow, a shovel and 3 hours of hard graft he moves 40 toms of gravel from the road to the back of the farm buildings.

    • @Garwfechan-ry5lk
      @Garwfechan-ry5lk Před 29 dny

      Very correct

  • @davidvivian596
    @davidvivian596 Před rokem +58

    In my opinion, the guys who built this infrastructure are heroes of the first order. Although some of the film may be 'staged' for the cameras, there's little doubt that these workers took their lives in their hands to get the job done. We owe them a debt of gratitude.

    • @morganmorgan3904
      @morganmorgan3904 Před 2 měsíci +7

      Well said!, your words echo my opinion also!.

    • @onepup-pr3yl
      @onepup-pr3yl Před měsícem

      @@richardrowlands9113 They want us to believe Britain was built by blacks and brown people, showing documentary films like this will be forbidden soon because they don't show how diverse enough we were, they should be shown and studied in every school in the country to show what made this country great and what has been lost.

    • @Garwfechan-ry5lk
      @Garwfechan-ry5lk Před 29 dny

      No it was not staged it was all done by the Ministry of Works of the Atlee Government on site with the men and Management.

    • @BaronEvola123
      @BaronEvola123 Před dnem

      Life was better back then. Now, you have more stuff, but your communities and families are torn asunder.

  • @rayjones2150
    @rayjones2150 Před měsícem +10

    Dad was a storeman in Ebbw Vale, he issued anything fron a clock spring to a half tonne bronze bearing. The store was 1/2 mile long, so they had a bike with basket. The site was 3.5 miles long. I was there when they opened a new Electolytic Tinning Line 1971/2, I was in IT dept. There were 9,800 on the payroll. Hardly a trace left today, just the original brick built main office.

  • @theflyinghamster8442
    @theflyinghamster8442 Před 25 dny +12

    When Britain was GREAT and British .

  • @douglasvick9703
    @douglasvick9703 Před 26 dny +7

    I hated school and in my Biological fathers Leyland Octopus As a little lad smuggled under blankets in to Trostre Velindre etc...(Kids wait in the security hut) not Me.!!!!!I peeked out watching the crane loading the steel/tinplate...Wonderful childhood and still cab happy UK Europe at 81....Lovely memories....

  • @cliveclerkenville2637
    @cliveclerkenville2637 Před 3 měsíci +19

    Worked on 1/2/3 furnaces in the early 70s. All gone now.

  • @philthycat1408
    @philthycat1408 Před měsícem +10

    Only when things started to get easier here did people from other countries start setting their eyes on coming to the UK to stay 🇬🇧

  • @hiscifi2986
    @hiscifi2986 Před měsícem +17

    Horses, Canals, Steelworks, Railways, Coalmines... All gone, but not forgotten.

  • @kopynd1
    @kopynd1 Před rokem +31

    the days we got on with the job, lets just get the job done, not like the last 40yrs,construction, donkey jackets and wellies freezing in the winter wet in the rain, a remember those days, to think a wind proof quilted viz jacket to day, they wouldn't last a week, men of steel those days, tough as boot leather,

    • @andrewlilley3660
      @andrewlilley3660 Před měsícem

      What's the point of that? I bet it put many of them in an early grave, poor buggers.

    • @samrodian919
      @samrodian919 Před měsícem +5

      You got that wrong mate. They were a tough as OLD boot leather! Two working generations later, all bloody gone! What a waste

  • @user-jy8mo5fi5q
    @user-jy8mo5fi5q Před měsícem +22

    It is now 2024 some 73 years since this film was made and now all those steel works have since gone and no longer exist.

  • @martinwarner1178
    @martinwarner1178 Před měsícem +8

    Those fellows, hard at work, on hard jobs. I jolly well admire them to the extreme. I worked forty years in canning, using the tinplate from these mills. Peace and goodwill.

  • @georgerenton965
    @georgerenton965 Před 4 dny

    I hauled steel back in the 70’s, I recall picking up a couple of ingot mould stools at Shanango Steel in Lackawanna New York, and delivered them
    directly to the # 1 melt shop at Stelco ( Steel Company of Canada ). I’ve picked up a lot of steel product, coils, plate, bar, ingots, billets, but
    what I got to see inside that building was heavy industry in your face. I had to wait in there with my truck and trailer while they taped and poured
    molten steel further up the building, then the crane carried the product by my truck. This huge gantry crane then came along and lifted
    the mould stools of my trailer. Apparently they bump the solid red hot “ pig “ onto the stool, and the “pig “ remains on the stool till it’s soon
    shipped to the nearby rolling mill. Meanwhile the empty mould goes back to the furnace area to be refilled once it’s tapped. It had to be close
    to a 100 degrees in that building. Being the dead of winter my air system froze up soon after I left, and I had to add methyl hydrate to the tanks.

  • @cliveclerkenville2637
    @cliveclerkenville2637 Před 3 měsíci +8

    Used to watch them tap the furnace on a quiet night shift. Amazing stuff.

  • @GLF-Video
    @GLF-Video Před rokem +12

    The working conditions are frightening. But they got the job done.

  • @harpo7226
    @harpo7226 Před měsícem +2

    I could watch shows like this all day. 👍

  • @danholliday5564
    @danholliday5564 Před 3 lety +17

    Should have a lot more views.

  • @andyrbush
    @andyrbush Před měsícem +2

    Wonderful to see these old films.

  • @alexfogg381
    @alexfogg381 Před 4 lety +18

    Amazing from marsh land to producing steel, in 4 years. I'm amazed that the men working around the molten metal are so calm.

    • @georgerhys5434
      @georgerhys5434 Před 3 lety

      a tip: watch movies on KaldroStream. I've been using them for watching all kinds of movies lately.

    • @louisjaxtyn7409
      @louisjaxtyn7409 Před 3 lety

      @George Rhys definitely, I've been watching on kaldrostream for years myself =)

    • @noeljude19
      @noeljude19 Před 3 lety

      @George Rhys definitely, I have been watching on KaldroStream for since december myself :D

  • @familycurious3813
    @familycurious3813 Před 3 lety +10

    Wonderful stuff. My grandfather worked in the tinplate works in Gowerton. Fantastic to get an idea of how they worked.

  • @dont-want-no-wrench
    @dont-want-no-wrench Před měsícem +8

    it always amazes me the scale of capital required for something like this would be considered worth investing, of course in these years with a destroyed europe there would have been a great demand for product.

  • @davidvivian596
    @davidvivian596 Před rokem +21

    See the guys rolling the white-hot steel ingots (@ 37:32) wearing their 'Sunday best' three piece suits and trilby hats! Obviously, dressing scruffily is bad form whilst making steel.

    • @donaldpaterson5827
      @donaldpaterson5827 Před měsícem +7

      Dressing scruffily is bad when the wife learns you’re going to be filmed!

    • @onepup-pr3yl
      @onepup-pr3yl Před měsícem +1

      That was the norm, and clean-shaven collar and tie wasn't just for office workers!

    • @davidkidd1974
      @davidkidd1974 Před 15 dny +1

      That hat was the only hat they had

  • @cliveclerkenville2637
    @cliveclerkenville2637 Před 3 měsíci +6

    Roller man. Best job in the woks. Used to watch that too.

  • @joegoldman3065
    @joegoldman3065 Před 19 dny +1

    Being British, they knew that the most important thing when working in an industrial setting like this with tons of powerful machinery is to wear a necktie. That way. You maximize the chance for your tie Getting caught in the machinery which would crush you within seconds. At least you had a sharp tie on. They had a brilliant sense of style.

  • @joegill3612
    @joegill3612 Před měsícem +16

    Built by giants destroyed by politicians

    • @heathstjohn6775
      @heathstjohn6775 Před 24 dny +1

      ...voted for, and still being voted for, by the " Giants ".

  • @glyngibbs9489
    @glyngibbs9489 Před měsícem +8

    If they had these MEN on the HS2 it would be finished

  • @ancientbriton8262
    @ancientbriton8262 Před měsícem +7

    The guys controlling the rolling mill were top men, hence the Truby Hat and not flat caps as a symbol of their skill and standing, with all those knobs, gauges and levers, must have felt like they were controlling the starship Enterprise 😊

    • @daviddwight5745
      @daviddwight5745 Před měsícem +1

      More the responsibility, rolling mills when they go wrong is terrifying

  • @andrewallen9993
    @andrewallen9993 Před měsícem +11

    Back when the UK made things.

  • @johnstudd4245
    @johnstudd4245 Před 24 dny +2

    "Sand(in this case) is available in unlimited quantities". How often have we heard something similar to that said. And 50 years later or less, it's all gone.

  • @alexfogg381
    @alexfogg381 Před 4 lety +15

    Interesting thing the diesel locomotive pushing the flatbed of ingots is an american built switcher made by Alco.

    • @chezpostmanpat
      @chezpostmanpat Před 3 lety +4

      AFAIK, the works used 5 Alco’s (#801-805) along side Brush / Rolls Royce locos, which replaced the older steam locos

    • @davidkean1487
      @davidkean1487 Před 6 dny

      Lima cranes & Euclid trucks too!

    • @davidkean1487
      @davidkean1487 Před 6 dny

      Rolling mill stands, United Engineering & Foundry PGH.

  • @tractors-plant-machinery
    @tractors-plant-machinery Před měsícem +1

    Absolutely brilliant footage!

  • @adrianaaraujo8634
    @adrianaaraujo8634 Před 3 dny

    Nice record!

  • @Garwfechan-ry5lk
    @Garwfechan-ry5lk Před 5 měsíci +21

    Made in Great Britain, what do we make now!

    • @bushwhackeddos.2703
      @bushwhackeddos.2703 Před měsícem +10

      Foreigners

    • @stephenjones9153
      @stephenjones9153 Před měsícem +1

      Made in Great Britain 🇬🇧 and what do we make now ?? Answer Shit Politicians and a Government that doesn't give a stuff about anyone else but there greedy selves and there corrupt friends and family.
      😭😭😭

    • @patpending8134
      @patpending8134 Před měsícem +2

      Question marks!

    • @richardrowlands9113
      @richardrowlands9113 Před měsícem

      Welfare for blacks

    • @alexanderheath6662
      @alexanderheath6662 Před 29 dny +1

      Not a lot 😂

  • @neilfurby555
    @neilfurby555 Před měsícem +4

    Wonderful workers and great plans, but many sad comments... not much else to say. Huge ambitions, all derelict or just memories and museums!

  • @vmax42dave
    @vmax42dave Před měsícem +3

    Amazing !

  • @bootchop88
    @bootchop88 Před 7 dny +1

    Where did the steel for Raleigh bicycles made at Nottingham come from?

  • @mjg6966
    @mjg6966 Před 22 dny

    So labour intensive great video 💪💪

  • @christopherhampson265

    35mins 07 seconds in MAD MAX MUSIC 👍👍👍⭐️🇬🇧

  • @sea-saw2654
    @sea-saw2654 Před 3 dny +1

    Two world wars and all that work throughout this once great land all for where we are now ... Im 100% sure if my grandfathers and great father's could see the state of this country now none of them would have gone to war... I struggle to believe there has ever been a era of greater political incompetence than the last 60 years in the uk...

  • @heathstjohn6775
    @heathstjohn6775 Před 24 dny

    Magnificent what self-belief can do.

  • @snapon1948
    @snapon1948 Před měsícem +1

    Worked in Etna Iron steel Works as hand Roller in the Strip mill , most antiquated, mill is Scotland 1965 All gone

  • @daffyduk77
    @daffyduk77 Před 2 měsíci +2

    the pulpit controllers' jobs 35:00 must have been transformed with the advent of CCTV

  • @petermitchell6348
    @petermitchell6348 Před 2 měsíci +4

    If the furnace is hot enough to melt iron, what does the furnace itself not melt?

    • @hypergolic8468
      @hypergolic8468 Před měsícem +19

      The Furnace is lined with kiln bricks (a skilled job) then the Tuyeres that feed the blast air into the furnace are cooled by water jackets so they don't melt.

  • @Bringontheasteroid
    @Bringontheasteroid Před měsícem +16

    I was expecting more diversity, given recent claims in the media of who actually built Britain. Hard working men, who probably wouldn’t recognise any aspect of regressive modern life.

    • @taxpayer_revolt
      @taxpayer_revolt Před měsícem

      According to the BBC it was the "Windrush Generation" that built everything postwar.🙄

  • @skelejp9982
    @skelejp9982 Před 8 dny

    I worked at the Dutch Steel Factory; Hoogovens IJmuiden.
    And at the part, where they used to do steel plating, the Hall was called; De Maagdenhal.. Meaning: ''Hall of Virgins''...because , back then there were mostly woman working there..
    And those days, only unmarried women worked..

  • @colliecandle
    @colliecandle Před 3 lety +4

    What a nasty scar on the landscape. Port Talbot itself on a windy, wet winters day - if feeling suicidal, visiting that place will 'clinch' it ! i used to have to deliver to the place - what a depressing hole, i could never understand why anyone would want to live there.

    • @davidvivian596
      @davidvivian596 Před rokem +12

      You may be right, but we all owe the people who work (and live) there, a huge debt of gratitude

    • @Deepthought-42
      @Deepthought-42 Před 28 dny

      @@davidvivian596And the guys in the pits. Eternal respect to the people of South Wales whose communities were destroyed by Thatcher and her ilk.

  • @user-lt7ne9mv9b
    @user-lt7ne9mv9b Před měsícem +1

    What's the piece of music from 28:40 to 31:00. I recall Emerson Lake & Palmer performed it. I can't find it on any of the listings in the desrciption.

    • @parkdigwig3447
      @parkdigwig3447 Před měsícem

      Aaron Copland “Hoedown”
      czcams.com/video/dYdDYSTEuWo/video.htmlsi=6h8dWbp7SxJmyL9l

    • @nicholasbell9017
      @nicholasbell9017 Před měsícem +2

      Could it be "Pictures at an exhibition " by Mussorgsky? ELP had an album and a film with this title.

    • @chrispomphrett4283
      @chrispomphrett4283 Před měsícem +2

      No, not pictures at ..... It's actually Aaron Copland 'Rodeo' YT it.. enjoy.

    • @bas1010
      @bas1010 Před 10 dny

      Look up Appalachian Spring by Copland

  • @kellytkachenko
    @kellytkachenko Před 3 lety +8

    So how long did the steel plant last is still there

    • @mikedavies8124
      @mikedavies8124 Před 3 lety +7

      Yes.its still there. I work there

    • @chezpostmanpat
      @chezpostmanpat Před 3 lety +10

      Still there and still going strong - built for The Steel Company of Wales (SCOW), from 1948 along side the older Margam works. SCOW later became British Steel Corpoation, then British Steel, then Corus, and now currently owned by Tata

    • @Mercmad
      @Mercmad Před měsícem

      ​@@chezpostmanpata saying attributed to an Gent " when the Indians can make their own railway track,I'll eat a pound of it . ( Tata )

  • @gagasmancave8859
    @gagasmancave8859 Před měsícem

    How the Hello you go about designing a factory like this awesome

  • @phildxyz
    @phildxyz Před 23 dny +1

    Fascinating - back when we had the optimism to build things. It's all a wasteland now.

  • @Bunz69er
    @Bunz69er Před 3 dny

    13:43 One slip and she's all over for of these blokes.

  • @davidkidd1974
    @davidkidd1974 Před 15 dny

    The Humans of the future wish they would bring restore the farms to grow food for them to eat, and fix back all the coal fumes that fill the atmosphere. Dont get me wrong, my great Grandad Thomas Jones, worked in the steel mills all his life, and his dad in the coal mines.

  • @sigbjrnjohansen8872
    @sigbjrnjohansen8872 Před 27 dny

    😮😢😊 etter slike natur inngrep håper jeg fabrikken fortsatt er i bruk og att folk ser verdien i stål

    • @tjm3900
      @tjm3900 Před 23 dny

      No, all is gone :-(

  • @Hertog_von_Berkshire
    @Hertog_von_Berkshire Před měsícem +1

    Chap in the thumbnail: Mark Selby?

  • @leonwilks4114
    @leonwilks4114 Před 7 dny

    If only these chap's were given the role of building HS2 it's completion would have been done years ago at less than half the cost

  • @kilgoretrout413
    @kilgoretrout413 Před měsícem +2

    And not a single mobile phone 📲 in sight 🥹🥲

  • @martinworkman8669
    @martinworkman8669 Před 8 dny

    And there is was.......Gone

  • @user-se2pq4xq6s
    @user-se2pq4xq6s Před měsícem

    Old times.

  • @alanwann9318
    @alanwann9318 Před měsícem +4

    This is Pakistan now?

  • @typhoon2827
    @typhoon2827 Před měsícem +1

    6:10 ex military carrier?

  • @stevenweasel2678
    @stevenweasel2678 Před měsícem

    When Britain had ` HEAVY INDUSTRY ` &
    ` McAlpines Fusileers `

  • @alistairkewish651
    @alistairkewish651 Před měsícem +3

    Not ‘ have visited’ but ‘ visited’ - poor grammar lurks everywhere.

  • @michaelkinsey4649
    @michaelkinsey4649 Před měsícem +5

    The environmental issues here are utterly eye watering!

  • @conormorgan6280
    @conormorgan6280 Před měsícem

    Interesting map with the name Hibernian almost totally erased from the country

  • @jameshogg4625
    @jameshogg4625 Před 3 dny

    What happened to it

  • @typhoon2827
    @typhoon2827 Před měsícem +5

    Modern day young Welshman: sorry pal, i dont work, see. I'm going to top up my tan, see, at the salon. Then i need to buy some more beard oil. Then i'm going to the parlour for some more tattoo, see.

  • @stellayates4227
    @stellayates4227 Před 2 lety +11

    No sign of PPE or health and safety regs in operation!

    • @bootchop88
      @bootchop88 Před 7 dny +1

      no purple hair or " they thems " either. Better days then.

  • @RegNarnoc21
    @RegNarnoc21 Před měsícem +1

    Health and safety wasn’t much back then,now you can’t go to the toilet on a construction site without permission..

  • @mountainmantararua8824
    @mountainmantararua8824 Před 5 měsíci +11

    All this going on and before diversity. Perhaps it may have been built faster, if we had. How did GB manage without it.🤣🤣

  • @bapsmcginty4782
    @bapsmcginty4782 Před 23 dny +4

    Nowadays the heaviest industry is some spotty oik prancing in front of a camera for views. Christ how the world has changed in just 50 yeas.

  • @geoffrundel3343
    @geoffrundel3343 Před měsícem

    We now in the age of the biggest landfill that's progress regaurd to Amazon u can Inheret all my chipboard and plastic

  • @geoffrundel3343
    @geoffrundel3343 Před měsícem

    Can you get radiation sickness working in a furness ,thy must have sufferd lots of burns

  • @darrenspear4257
    @darrenspear4257 Před měsícem

    Try and find men like this now!

  • @peterchaloner2877
    @peterchaloner2877 Před měsícem +3

    Hideous. Knock it all down. Restore the lake. Rebuild the Abbey. All workers to become monks.

  • @user-wy3rq1sh2j
    @user-wy3rq1sh2j Před měsícem +1

    Where today at the top of our government system is the ability to visualise instigate and fund and deliver such projects, sadly gone I fear. DEI, transgender forces and too much immigration is all on the priorities of our "betters". To build new and something useful [not like HS2] that we could all admire, would not that be what they should be spending our money on?

  • @user-uk3uj6zs1w
    @user-uk3uj6zs1w Před 11 dny +1

    Imagine doing all this without an environmental impact survey😂

  • @christopherhampson265

    15000 tons of coke per week 😂

  • @stuartwarrick6444
    @stuartwarrick6444 Před 4 dny

    Not a lot of obesity going on, not many fat people working hard.

  • @papabits5721
    @papabits5721 Před rokem +4

    They were girls! Not woman😂

  • @fugglestick
    @fugglestick Před 12 dny

    All fit healthy lean men..now obese there....says a lot

  • @brianchislett2699
    @brianchislett2699 Před 12 dny

    I am saying nothing. (Yawn)

  • @billbright1755
    @billbright1755 Před 8 dny +1

    Fontana California had a self sufficient large steel plant. Raw materials such as iron ore Eagle Mountain California were delivered by rail most all owned by Henry J Kaiser.
    Finished product as beam, sheet, and plate all under one roof.
    Steel the very back bone of a nation’s strength. When Apollo 11 put men on the moon it was Mesabi Range sourced steel that stayed behind in the rocket blast to support the vessel and made it possible.
    The movie Steel Town was filmed there with the beautiful Ann Sheridan and Howard Duff.
    The film also featured Henry’s own line of cars produced elsewhere with his own steel.
    As a time line reference my 1951 Chevrolet pickup is still in service with its original equipment and engine. Quality construction of the time period so obvious as now 73 years on. 🇬🇧🫱🏼‍🫲🏻🇺🇸