Records of British Alcan plc, aluminium manufacturers, London, England

Scope and Content

The collection is extensive but fragmentary. It does not include the directors minutes of the principal companies nor comprehensive runs of production or financial records. However the collection does contain large quantities of correspondence files, reports, press cuttings, legal records, photographs and artefacts and a wide range of administrative and promotional records. As well as records of the principal companies (British Alcan and British Aluminium Co Ltd) the collection includes smaller quantities of records from the following subsidiaries and associates:

  • Acetylene Illuminating Company Ltd;
  • ALCAN;
  • Alcan International Ltd;
  • Alcan Aluminium;
  • Alcan Aluminium (UK);
  • Alcan Booth;
  • Alcan Industries Ltd;
  • Alcan SA;
  • Alcan UK;
  • Alfed;
  • Almetex Ltd;
  • Aluminium Bahrain;
  • Aluminium Can Recycling Association (ACRA);
  • Aluminium Corporation;
  • Aluminium Development Association;
  • Cambridge Glass House;
  • High Duty Alloys (HDA);
  • Loch Leven Electric & Power Co Ltd;
  • Minalex Ltd, Gloucester;
  • Northern Aluminium Co;
  • T I Aluminium;
  • Alcan Smelting & Power UK, Kinlochleven.

Administrative / Biographical History

The British Aluminium Co Ltd was formed on 7 May 1894  , acquiring the British and colonial rights for the Bayer and Héroult patents for alumina extraction and aluminium reduction. Until the end of the 19th century  , aluminium was still regarded as a precious metal, due to the difficulties experienced in its extraction. This situation began to change with the discovery of two new processes: one for extracting alumina from the ore (bauxite) and the other for converting alumina into the metal aluminium by electrolysis. The extraction process was perfected by Karl Joseph Bayer of Austria between 1887 and 1892, whilst the reduction process was discovered simultaneously by Charles Martin Hall of Oberlin, Ohio, USA and Paul L. T Héroult of France, in 1886. The immediate effect of this discovery was a fall in the price of aluminium to about a quarter of its previous price. Within a few years the price had further fallen to about a twentieth of the original price.

Lord Kelvin took a personal interest in the development of the company, acting as scientific adviser, and becoming a member of the board of directors in 1898  . A key figure in the development of the company was a former student of Lord Kelvin, W Murray Morrison, who started work as an engineer at Foyers, Highland, in 1895. The electrolytic process depended upon the availability of vast supplies of cheaply produced electricity, and the Highlands of Scotland offered potential for this, in the form of hydro-electric power. The first aluminium ingots were produced at Foyers, Highland, in 1895  , and the first hydro-electric powered smelter was opened at Foyers, Highland, in 1896  , followed by two further smelters at Kinlochleven, Highland, ( 1909  ) and Lochaber, Highland, ( 1929  ), with subsidiary companies being formed for the development of each. Early attempts at mining bauxite near Larne, Northern Ireland, were unsuccessful and in 1898  the company acquired a controlling interest in Union des Bauxites of Southern France which had extensive bauxite resources. Reduction works had been built at Larne, Northern Ireland, and continued to operate using imported ore and was augmented from 1917 by a further reduction works at Burntisland, Fife.

During the First World War bauxite rights were acquired in British Guiana. In 1926 The British and Colonial Bauxite Co was formed and acquired extensive bauxite deposits in the Gold Coast, Ghana in 1928. During the Second World War communications with the deposits in Ghana were greatly improved. British Aluminium Co Ltd commenced production of carbon at Greenock, Inverclyde, in 1897  , at Kinlochleven, Highland, from 1909  and later at Lochaber, Highland. Rolling mills were situated at Milton, Cambridgeshire, and Warrington, Cheshire, in England. It acquired interests in the Norwegian aluminium industry and opened a reduction factory at Travancore, India in 1943  .

By the early 1950s the company was the UK market leader but was frustrated in finding export markets and new bauxite resources. Between 1955 and 1957 the company acquired interests in major plants in Canada and British Guiana (now Guyana) and in bauxite deposits in Australia but finance problems left it vulnerable and in British Aluminium Co Ltd 1958  was taken over by the two US aluminium companies Reynolds and TIAluminium . Through its failure to exploit them quickly enough the company lost its rights to the Australian deposits and its partnership with the Australian firm Comalajo . In 1961  construction of a new rolling mill was commenced at Falkirk, leading to over capacity in the UK. In 1968  the company divested its interests in Canada and decided to build a large smelter at Invergordon, Highland, a decision based on the promise of low-cost electricity from nuclear power. Invergordon commenced production in 1971  .

In Reynolds 1978  sold its stake in British Aluminium Co Ltd and TIAluminium increased its holding to 58% with 42% being floated. In 1982  the Canadian-owned Alcan Aluminium UK Ltd acquired British Aluminium Co Ltd , the resultant new company being called British Alcan Ltd . The same year saw the closure of Invergordon smelter. In 1994, the company produced 357,000 tonnes of aluminium and made a pre-tax proft of £30.9m up from a loss of £22.7m the previous year. In February 1996 it was announced that Alcan was to sell British Alcan to a group of institutional investors, Mercury Development Capital, Morgan Grenfell Development Capital and CVC Capital Partners for £300m. The new company would be known as British Aluminium Ltd.

Arrangement

The collection is arranged in sub-fonds by company and within that by record series.

Access Information

Open

Acquisition Information

Alcan Power & Smelting (UK), Kinlochleven and Lochaber, December 1994

Other Finding Aids

Printed list and item level computerised list available in searchroom.

Alternative Form Available

No known copies

Physical Characteristics and/or Technical Requirements

None which affect the use of this material

Conditions Governing Use

Applications for permission to quote should be sent to the Archivist.

Reproduction subject to usual conditions: educational use and condition of documents.

Appraisal Information

This material has been appraised in line with standard GB 0248 procedures. The collection is likely to remain unaltered.

Custodial History

Most of the material was accumulated at the London Head Office of the company before being transferred to Glasgow University Archive and Business Records Centre in 1995. The Kinlochleven material list at UGD347/34 was transferred directly from the Kinlochleven site following a survey by the Business Archives Council of Scotland.

Accruals

None expected

Related Material

No related material.

Location of Originals

This material is original

Bibliography

  • Crichton & Gregor, From Croft to Factory - The Evolution of an Industrial Community in the Highlands - A Social Study of Kinlochleven 1904-1945, Thomas Nelson & Sons, Edinburgh, 1946;
  • The History of the British Aluminium Co Ltd 1894-1955, British Aluminium Co Ltd, London, 1955;
  • Aluminium in the Hgihlands, British Aluminium Co, Inverness, c1977;
  • Mackay, GA, A study of the economic impact of the Invergordon aluminium smelter, Highlands & Islands Development Board, Inverness, 1978;
  • Scott, A, Reviewing industrial programmes: The Invergordon Smelter Case, David Hume Institute, Edinburgh, 1985;
  • Utiger, RE, Never trust an expert: Nuclear power, government and the tragedy of the Invergordon Aluminium Smelter, London School of Economics, Business History Unit, 1995.

Additional Information

Description compiled in line with the following international standards: International Council on Archives,ISAD(G) Second Edition, September 1999 and National Council on Archives,Rules for the construction of personal, place and corporate names

Scotland is the location of all place names in the administrative/biographical history element, unless otherwise stated.

Fonds level description compiled by Frank Rankin. Fonds level description expanded by Virginia Russell. [No dates available.] Converted to minimal ISAD(G) element set by Jenny Bunn, Assistant Archivist, 16 March 2000. Finding aid created by Victoria Stobo, Retroconversion Cataloguing Assistant, 15 May 2012. Catalogue edited by Michelle Kaye, Archives Assistant, July 2012 and Gemma Tougher, Assistant Archivist (Cataloguing) 9 October 2012.