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Charles Wooley Bage (1751 - 1822)

Charles Wooley Bage
Born in Derby, Derbyshire, Englandmap
Ancestors ancestors
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married 10 Jan 1809 in St. Peter, Derby, Derbyshire, England, United Kingdommap
Descendants descendants
Father of
Died at about age 71 [location unknown]
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Profile last modified | Created 14 Dec 2022
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Biography

Flag of Derbyshire (adopted 2006)
Charles Bage was born in Derbyshire, England.
Notables Project
Charles Bage is Notable.

Charles was born in 1751. He passed away in 1822.
He designed the first ever iron framed building, the Ditherington Flax Mill, on the outskirts of Shrewsbury town centre, built between 1796-1797. He built the 1st, 3rd and 8th steel framed buildings in the world. Cotton mills had a great tendency to catch fire and he pioneered fire-proof mill buildings working with Jedediah Strutt (1726-1797).

Research Notes

Father - Robert Bage 1729 - 1801 born Darley St Alkmonds
Mother - Elizabeth Woolley 1733 - 1805 born Mickleover
Charles Woolley Bage, the noted pioneer of fire-proof mill structures, originated from Darley Abbey where his family had been involved in paper manufacture for two, or perhaps three, generations. His father Robert, 1728-1801, followed his own father George into papermaking at Darley Abbey later moving to Elford, Staffordshire where he established a papermaking business. He was famous amongst his contemporaries as an exponent of the English novel and his reputation was not confined to Britain; several of his works were translated into German. He was also part of the Midland’s intellectual network which included Erasmus Darwin and the other members of the Lunar Society. In 1764 Bage and Erasmus Darwin became partners in the Wychnor ironworks which, when it was sold in 1781, left Bage in serious debt. It was this experience, he claimed, which drove him to write light novels. Charles spent his early formative years at Darley Abbey and in Derby. His career took him to Shrewsbury as a wine merchant and there he fell in with a group of men of unusual ability which included Samuel Butler the Headmaster of Shrewsbury School and Thomas Telford the engineer. However, he did not lose contact with his Derbyshire friends and William Strutt was closely associated with his work on revolutionary iron building techniques, heating designs and the construction of fire-proof mills. The supreme monument to Bage’s talent is the Shrewsbury Mill known as Bage’s Flax Mill built in 1796-7 for John Marshall, and Thomas and Benjamin Benyan. The houses adjacent to the mill which made use of the cluster design were explicitly designed for overseers. It is difficult to escape the conclusion that their antecedents, like Bage’s own, are to be found in Darley Abbey.

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