Matthew Boulton
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Matthew Boulton was an English businessman, inventor, and engineer. He lived from 1728 to 1809 and was born in Birmingham. He became famous for working with James Watt. Together, they made and put in many steam engines. These engines helped factories and mills work faster and better.
Boulton was also known for making coins. He used new ways to create millions of coins for Britain and other countries. His coins were well made and hard to copy. One special coin he made was called the "cartwheel" penny. It was used in Britain for many years.
Boulton was part of a group called the Lunar Society. This group had other important inventors and thinkers. They met often and shared ideas that helped start the Industrial Revolution. Boulton retired in 1800 but kept working on his mint until he died in 1809. Today, his picture appears on a British banknote with James Watt.
Background
Birmingham was a key place for making iron. In the early 1700s, it became easier and cheaper to work with iron because people began using coke instead of charcoal. This happened because there was less wood and lots of coal nearby in Warwickshire and Staffordshire. Iron was made in small factories near Birmingham, especially in the Black Country, including towns like Smethwick and West Bromwich. The thin sheets of iron were taken to factories around Birmingham to make small, useful items like buttons and buckles.
Matthew Boulton came from a family near Lichfield. His father, also named Matthew, moved to Birmingham and worked making buckles. Matthew Boulton was born in 1728, and he was the third child in his family.
Early and family life
Matthew Boulton grew up in a successful family. When he was young, his family moved to Snow Hill in Birmingham. The local school wasn’t good, so he went to a school in Deritend, on the other side of Birmingham. At 15, he left school. By 17, he had created a special way to put decorations on buckles. These buckles became very popular and were even sent to France before being brought back to Britain.
When Matthew was 21, he married Mary Robinson, who came from a wealthy family. Sadly, their three daughters passed away when they were very young, and Mary also passed away not long after. After her death, Matthew married her sister Anne, even though it was not allowed by church rules at the time. They had two children together. One of their descendants, Matthew’s grandson, became known for inventing an important part for airplane controls called the aileron.
Innovator
Expansion of the business
After his father died in 1759, Matthew Boulton took over the family toy business. He traveled to London to show his products. He even gave a sword to Prince Edward, which interested the Prince’s older brother, George, Prince of Wales, who later became King George III. The Prince bought one of Boulton’s products.
With money from his marriages and inheritance, Boulton looked for a bigger place for his business. In 1761, he rented 13 acres of land in Soho, which was part of Staffordshire. There, he built a home called Soho House and a factory. Soho House was first used by Boulton’s relatives and then by his business partner, John Fothergill. In 1766, Boulton asked Fothergill to leave so Boulton could live there with his family. Sadly, both Boulton’s wife and he died there—his wife Anne in 1783 and he in 1809.
On the 13 acres, Boulton closed off common land that people had used for free. By 1765, he built the Soho Manufactory, a large warehouse with a special design and space for loading and unloading goods. It also had rooms for workers. The building was designed by a local architect named William Wyatt. Boulton and Fothergill invested in the best equipment for working with metal, and their factory was seen as a marvel of modern industry. Building the main part of the factory cost a lot of money—five times more than they first thought. They spent over £20,000 to build and equip the factory by borrowing money and managing their debts.
Boulton made many products in his new factory, including silver plates for wealthy customers and a special kind of silver sheet for less wealthy people. He and his father had made small silver items before, but now they made bigger pieces. To make items like candlesticks cheaper, they used thin, stamped metal pieces that were shaped and joined together. By the late 1700s, they also made shoe buckles and seals, helping Birmingham become a center for silver and metal goods.
One problem Boulton faced was that there was no office in Birmingham to test and mark silver items. He wanted permission to have such an office in Birmingham so he wouldn’t have to send his items far away. He successfully asked the government to pass a law allowing assay offices in Birmingham and Sheffield. However, making silver items wasn’t very profitable, so Boulton focused more on making Sheffield plate, which he mostly handed over to trusted workers to manage.
Boulton also started selling vases decorated with a special kind of gold called ormolu, which was popular with wealthy people at the time. He worked with a friend, Josiah Wedgwood, to make these vases, but they later switched to using marble and other stones because ceramic couldn’t hold the decorations well. Boulton copied designs from ancient Greek art and borrowed artwork from collectors and sculptors.
Partnership with Watt
Matthew Boulton’s factory in Soho didn’t have enough power from water, especially in the summer when the water flow was low. He thought using a steam engine could solve this problem. He started talking to James Watt about this in 1766 and met him in person two years later. In 1769, Watt invented a more efficient steam engine with a separate part called a condenser. Boulton saw that this engine could power his factory and be a good business opportunity.
After Watt invented the engine, he didn’t do much to make it ready for sale, so he focused on other projects. In 1772, Watt’s business partner, Dr. John Roebuck, got into financial trouble, and Boulton lent him money. In return, Boulton took a share of Watt’s invention. Boulton convinced Watt to move to Birmingham, and they started a partnership in 1775. Thanks to Boulton’s efforts, the government extended Watt’s patent until 1800. Together, they improved the engine and made it work well for factories and mines.
In 1776, they installed two engines—one for a businessman named John Wilkinson and another at a mine in Tipton. These engines worked well and brought positive attention to their partnership. Boulton and Watt didn’t build the engines themselves; instead, they had customers buy parts from different suppliers and then put the engine together at the customer’s location. They charged customers a percentage of the money they saved by using their engines instead of older, less efficient ones. This caused some disagreements because some mine owners used cheaper coal and didn’t want to keep paying for the engines.
Cornwall was an important place for their business because it had many mines. However, there were challenges there, like competition and expensive coal that had to be brought in from Wales. Boulton and Watt spent time in Cornwall helping with installations and solving problems. In 1779, they hired an engineer named William Murdoch to handle most of the installation issues, so Boulton and Watt could stay in Birmingham.
In the early 1780s, they changed Watt’s engine so it could move in a circle, which made it useful for factories and mills. This was important because water power wasn’t always available, especially in dry summers. They began getting orders from mills and breweries. One famous example was at the Whitbread brewery in London, where King George III visited and liked the engine. Boulton even used two engines to grind wheat in London, which helped show off their new invention.
Between 1775 and 1800, they made around 450 engines. Although they didn’t allow others to make engines with the same efficient design, about 1,000 older, less efficient engines were still made in Britain during that time. Boulton once told a famous writer, James Boswell, “I sell here, sir, what all the world desires to have—POWER.” The development of efficient steam engines helped create large factories and cities like Manchester.
Involvement with coinage
By 1786, many coins in Britain were fake, and the Royal Mint stopped making new coins, making the problem worse. Even copper coins were being melted down and replaced with fake ones. The Royal Mint didn’t make copper coins for almost 50 years. To fill this gap, merchants started making their own copper tokens.
Boulton got interested in making coins because it was similar to the small metal products he already made. He had a lot of copper from his mines and wanted to use it. However, he refused to make fake money and said he would only try to stop counterfeiters. In 1788, he opened the Soho Mint as part of his factory. It had eight machines powered by steam that could make between 70 and 84 coins every minute. Although he couldn’t get permission right away to make British coins, his factory soon began making coins for other places, like the British East India Company, Sierra Leone, and Russia.
The problem with fake coins kept getting worse. In 1797, the Bank of England stopped exchanging its bills for gold, and the government decided to make a lot of new copper coins. They asked Boulton to make them. He agreed and began making coins in 1797. These coins had special designs to make them harder to copy, like raised edges with tiny letters and numbers. They were nicknamed “cartwheels” because of their large size. Although these coins solved some problems, they were soon copied too. Boulton kept improving his coins to make them harder to fake, and eventually, counterfeiters gave up and focused on easier targets.
Activities and views
Scientific studies and the Lunar Society
Main article: Lunar Society
Matthew Boulton was not formally educated in science, but he learned a lot through his own curiosity and practical work. He had many correct ideas about nature and science, including electricity and astronomy. As a young man, he met famous scientists and worked with them on interesting experiments.
Boulton was part of a group of scientists and inventors called the Lunar Society. They met regularly to share ideas and experiments. This group included important figures like James Watt and Josiah Wedgwood. Their meetings helped advance science and technology during a time of great change.
Community work
Boulton was very active in his community. He helped start a hospital in Birmingham by organizing a music festival to raise money. He also supported a place where people could get medical help when they needed it.
He helped create a theatre in Birmingham and supported local music groups. Boulton was concerned about safety in the town and helped organize volunteers to keep the streets safe at night. He also supported the local military and took part in important local government roles.
Family and later life, death, and memorials
When Matthew Boulton’s wife died in 1783, he had to look after his two teenagers. His son, Matthew Robinson Boulton, and daughter, Anne, both had health problems. Even though he often travelled for business, Boulton always cared for his family.
In 1800, Boulton and his partner, James Watt, retired and gave their jobs to their sons. After retiring, Boulton stayed busy making new coins. He helped fix a problem with silver coins and worked until he became too ill. Boulton died in 1809 from kidney stones. He was buried in Birmingham, and a big memorial was put up in a local church to honor him.
Birmingham remembers Boulton in many ways. His home, Soho House, is now a museum, and so is his first workshop. Statues, special plates, and even a college are named after him. In 2009, for the 200th anniversary of his death, many events celebrated his life and work. A new banknote featured both Boulton and Watt.
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