Online Encyclopedia

JOHN NIXON (1815–1899)

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Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 719 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN NIXON (1815–1899)  ,
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English
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mining engineer and colliery proprietor, was born at Barlow, Durham, on the loth of May 1815, the son of a farmer . He was educated at the
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village school, and at an academy in Newcastle-on-
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Tyne, where he distinguished himself in mathematics . Leaving school at fourteen, he worked on his
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father's
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farm for two years, and then apprenticed himself to Mr Joseph Gray, one of the leading mining engineers in the north of England, and agent to the second
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marquis of Bute; subsequently he obtained employment as " overman " at one of the Bute collieries in Durham . In 1839 an advertisement drew him to the South Wales coalfield, where he was engaged in mine-
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surveying, and whence he proceeded to France as engineer to a
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coal and iron
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company . Returning to England, he noticed while travelling on one of the
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Thames steamers that the Welsh coal in use gave off no smoke and was preferred to north country coal both on this ground and because of its greater power-producing efficiency . His experience in France now suggested to him that a profitable market for this coal might be established among the French iron-founders and manufacturers generally who had hitherto imported English north country coal . For some time he was unable to procure any of this
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special Welsh coal . Eventually, however, by expending all his small savings he secured a cargo, freighted a small craft, and sent it across to Nantes, where with some difficulty he persuaded the
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local manufacturers to try it on the understanding that he
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bore the expense of the experiments . These tests, carried out under Nixon's
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personal directions, proved highly successful, and in due course the French government gave him a contract for Welsh coal for the French
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navy . Nixon's visit to Nantes laid the
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foundations of the Welsh steam-coal trade, English manufacturers and shipowners imitating the example of their French rivals . At first Nixon only sold the coal on commission, but eventually acquired what appeared to him a prospective field for steam-coal in the Aberdare valley, and after seven years' working at last struck a rich seam . This
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property is now known as Nixon's Navigation Collieries .

Nixon subsequently acquired or

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developed other South Wales steam collieries, which yielded him a considerable fortune . He was also the inventor of many
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mechanical improvements in colliery working . He died in
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London on the 3rd of
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June 1899 . See J . E . Vincent, John Nixon,
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Pioneer of the Steam Coal Trade in South Wales (London, 190o) .

End of Article: JOHN NIXON (1815–1899)
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