Thomas Swan, Company Profile, History, Status And Accreditations, Techical Capabilities, News, Events, Careers, Web Links

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    Thomas Swan - History

Home   Company  History


HISTORY



Founded by ‘Tommy’ Swan in 1926, Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. has been managed by three generations of the Swan family. The business has changed considerably from the early days as a road surfacing company that utilised the waste product (slag) from the local steel and iron industry. Today Thomas Swan is one of the UK’s largest family-owned chemical manufacturing companies and provides a wide range of performance chemicals and custom manufacturing services for companies around the world. For more information please see the below time-line that covers some of the key events in the history of our company.



 Date

 Event

 Comment / Photos

     

1840

Haematite (Iron ore) discovered at Delves Lane, Consett

Bee Hive’ furnaces built at Crookhall

1901

E.P. Hooley discovers ‘Tar Macadam'

In 1901, E.P.Hooley, the county surveyor of Nottinghamshire, noticed that a barrel of tar had burst and run over a road near Derby Iron Works in Derbyshire, which had been lightly covered with slag from the nearby blast furnaces to form makeshift macadam. He observed that a dust free hard wearing surface resulted from this accident.

This discovery was quickly exploited in the locality and gradually spread.

When Hooley’s patent expired, the technology was taken up by others, including ‘Tommy’ Swan at Consett. Tommy set up mixing plants on the Crookhall site to utilise the readily available (and cheap) blast furnace slag to produce very durable tar macadam.

1920

 Crookhall Slag Works founded

 

1926

Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. founded by Tommy Swan at Crookhall, Consett, County Durham.

Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. was founded in 1926. Operations expanded and in 1931 an office block was erected at Crookhall. The company prospered as tar macadam technology developed and spread. Large scale supply / application contracts were undertaken throughout the UK and abroad e.g. Spain.

With the rapid development of the oil production industry after World War II tar macadam gave way to bitumen macadam, a structurally superior (and cheaper) material. However, there were inherent problems with bitumen. It did not adhere to blast furnace slag, or indeed quarried stone, as well as coal tar did.

It would not stick to damp stone and, in some circumstances, would ‘strip’ from dry stone if wet conditions were encountered after mixing. This was a great drawback especially for the softer or ‘cutback’ bitumens. A solution to this problem was essential.

In 1947 it duly arrived, via a quirk of fate! Tommy’s son, Robert Douglas Swan, married the daughter of an American who had recently been associated with the development of a product, NOSTRIP, to solve precisely that problem.

1931

Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. office block built at Crookhall

1947

NOSTRIP licence acquired and chemical manufacturing of Wetfix begins. Wetfix was designed to help bitumen to stick to wet road surface stones.

Following the acquisition of the NOSTRIP licence ‘Tommy’ quickly built a plant for the manufacture of an equivalent product at Crookhall, which he called WETFIX.

This anti-stripping or wetting agent, a cationic surfactant, was to revolutionise the business. Not only was it used in the company’s own macadam, but it was also sold to other manufacturers and, more significantly, to bitumen suppliers such as Shell Oil UK.

Further developments in the chemistry of the product resulted in a specialised range of improved, more efficient wetting agents. The emphasis on chemical technology increased with the introduction of a range of specialised industrial paints in the early 1950s under the name SWANCOTE. Because of these developments, macadam manufacture gradually diminished in importance and was eventually discontinued in 1958.

Further exploitation of the basic Wetfix chemistry gave rise to synthetic waxes and a range of curing agents for epoxy resins, along with SLURRY SEAL, a specialised sealing material for aircraft runways and other surfaces.

1955 – mid 1970’s

Dialkyl amino amines introduced 

Specialised range of industrial paints under the name         SWANCOTE introduced

1958

Macadam manufacture discontinued

1960s

Alkyl imidazolines introduced

CASAMIDS introduced

1962

Robert Douglas Swan, son of Tommy Swan, takes control of the family business

Robert ‘Douglas’ Swan took over the business from his father, developing the chemical business in domestic and international markets, managing it for about 10 years.

Douglas Swan had a more informal approach to managing the business and his calculations of deals and prices on the back of an envelope were legendary to those that worked with him.

1966

Tommy Swan, founder of Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. retires

1968

Tom Swan, grandson of the founder, starts work for Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. from Dow Chemicals

From the first Wetfix derived products, the company emerged as a chemical company focusing on performance chemicals, fine chemicals, contract manufacture and technology licensing.

During the late 1960’s and early 1970’s, the company developed a range of unique water dispersible epoxy curing agents with world wide applications. This technology was sold to Air Products (USA).

A variety of products emerged during the late 70’s and early 80’s notably CASAMIDS, CASABETS, CASAQUATS, CASATERICS and CASATHANES.

POWDER COATING compositions were beginning to evolve as the new ‘green’ technology for coating metal, reducing the use of wasteful and harmful solvents. The company entered this market in the early 80’s and, since then, products such as CASAMIDS 1416, 1457, OTB and, latterly, 2228 have been introduced.

Throughout the 90’s, new product ranges were either developed or acquired, notably Casamid ink resins, Casabond rubber adhesion agents and the Pepton series of rubber peptising agents.

The company continued to grow through business acquisition, technology acquisition and in-house developments.

By the early 1980’s a contract manufacturing arm of the company was firmly established, with a wide range of customers including multi-nationals - using Thomas Swan’s expertise and facilities to make materials on their behalf.

1970s onwards

Polyurethanes introduced

Tri-butyl tin fluoride introduced

1971 - 1974

CASATHANES introduced

1975 - 1976

CASABETS, CASAQUATS and CASATERICS introduced

1976

Tom Swan takes control of the family business.

Tom Swan, the grandson of the founder, has been largely responsible for the modernisation of the business and its diversification into new and innovative technologies.
Toll Manufacturing starts

Late 1970s – early 1980s

CASATHANES and powder coatings introduced

1984

PCMX production started 

In 1984, in conjunction with a UK university, the company started to manufacture a range of organo metallics for use in semi conductor research, including gallium nitride, gallium arsenide and indium phosphide.

Production of these chemicals proved to be an important stepping stone to the manufacture of the related semi conductor research equipment. Indeed, such was the potential for new developments in the equipment area that the company abandoned the manufacture of the chemicals themselves, in 1986.

A new division was subsequently created, concentrating on development of MOCVD (metallo organo chemical vapourising deposition) research equipment. Names like Epitor (computerised gas handling equipment), Epifold (quick switching gas manifold – a key component of the Epitor machine) and Epison (gas flow analyser) became world leaders.

This equipment is used in the development of novel semi conductors, which find application in many areas of electronics e.g. LEDs. These devices consist of many very thin layers of compound semi conductor materials on a substrate known as a ‘wafer’. LEDs provide alternative solutions to a wide range of lighting applications.

This division was sold to a German company in late 1999.
Thomas Swan Scientific Equipment founded

1985

Fungicides introduced

Statue of Liberty refurbishment uses Thomas Swan epoxy curing agent Casamid 360

1990s

Ink Resins, Casabond rubber adhesion and Pepton series of rubber peptising agents introduced

1999

Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. acquires dye specialist Organic Specialities Ltd. and Fort James Speciality Chemicals

Thomas Swan Scientific Equipment sold

2000

Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. becomes the first company in the world to gain external verification on its Responsible Care Management system

Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. has always sought to create wealth through the pursuit of innovation.

From a beginning in road stone to the Hubble Space telescope, from opto-electronic switching to protein separation and advanced materials Thomas Swan has improved the quality of life by commercialising some of the best new ideas of the time. The company actively seeks out and supports research into emerging technologies at UK universities.

The core competency of chemistry has been enhanced by the addition of continuous flow supercritical catalysis and micro reactor methods that position the company amongst the most innovative in the world.
Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. launches World’s first continuous-phase Supercritical Fluid Plant

2001

Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. named a ‘Top 20 World innovator’ by leading American Chemical publication

 
Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. celebrates 75th Anniversary
New offices built at Crookhall

2002

Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. announced as Chemical Industries Association Responsible Care Award Winner

2003

Thomas Swan & Co. Ltd. announced as Chemical Industries Association UK Green Chemical Technology Awards Winner

2004

Carbon Nanomaterials Business launched and Elicarb® carbon nanotubes introduced

In April 2004 Thomas Swan launched a carbon nanomaterials business for the production of single and multi-wall carbon nanotubes. The chemical vapour deposition (CVD) plant was designed and built at Consett following a collaboration lasting 4 years with the Department of Materials Science and Department of Chemistry at the University of Cambridge. The company became the first in the UK to manufacture commercial quantities of single-wall carbon nanotubes for use in a wide range of academic and industrial applications.
Colours Division launched

2006

New website launched

Harry Swan, the Great Grandson of Tommy Swan is made Managing Director. Tom Swan remains Executive Chairman of the Company.
Harry Swan made Managing Director
 
   
   
 


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