Title
Papers relating to the life and work of W.T. Henley and his companies
Reference
HEN
Production date
1850 - 1960
Creator
- W T Henley's Telegraph Works Company LimitedBiographyBiography
Telegraph, telephone and electric cable manufacturers
The company of Holborn Viaduct, London, EC1, and 13 and 14 Blomfield Street, London Wall, London EC; was founded by William Thomas Henley, who commenced the manufacture of submarine cable at North Woolwich in 1853. He went on to manufacture the shore ends of the Trans-Atlantic cable in 1865 and generally helped lay the foundations of modern communication, as we know it today.
In 1918 Henley's Tyre and Rubber Co was set up as a subsidiary to take over the tyre department, and in 1937 an Electric cable manufacturers company was established. In 1959 the company was acquired by AEI and the Woolwich factory was closed. In 1997 Henley's was acquired by TT Electronics.
Amongst the one time employees of the Company was the thriller producer Alfred Hitchcock. He worked in the advertising department of Henley's London offices, writing short stories for the in house magazine (The Henley) and providing illustrations for product marketing, until leaving in 1919 to start his career in the movies.
Henley died in 1882 but his legacy lives on in the company, which still bears his name.
Scope and Content
Comprises notes, cuttings and photographs relating to Henley's cable manufacture and laying and other businesses.
Extent
3 boxes and loose items
Language
English
Level of description
TOP
Repository name
Science Museum, London
Associated people and organisations
- Henley, William ThomasBiographyBiography
(1814-1882), electrical engineer and manufacturer
William Thomas Henley, born in Midhurst, Sussex, but moved to London in 1830 aged 16, working as a labourer in the docks. In his spare time he taught himself instrument making. About 1837 J. P. Gassiot, a keen amateur scientist, and one of Henley's early customers, recommended him to Professor Wheatstone of King's College, for whom he made telegraph equipment and electric motors. Henley found that cheap insulated wire was not readily available for making electromagnets, so he developed a wire-covering machine that insulated six wires in cotton or silk simultaneously. By 1839 he was supplying insulated wire in quantity to other instrument makers and experimentalists at about half the price of his rivals, and he used the profits to strengthen his business and to fund electrical experiments.
The Electric Telegraph Company acquired the Cooke and Wheatstone telegraph patents in 1846 and placed significant manufacturing orders with Henley, but failed to pay him. Henley responded by inventing an improved telegraph, in which pulses of electric current were produced by a combination of moving coils and permanent magnets, rather than from batteries (patent no. 12236, 1848). He won a gold medal for his equipment at the 1851 Great Exhibition. In 1852, he sold his patent rights to the English and Irish Magnetic Telegraph Company for £68,000.
Henley set up as submarine cablemaker in Greenwich in 1857, and moved to a new factory in north Woolwich in 1859. Here he manufactured the Persian Gulf cable 1651 miles long, which was the first submarine cable to be exhaustively tested during manufacture, transport, and laying. This success enabled him to win the contract for the armoured shore sections of the successful 1865 and 1866 Atlantic cables.
In 1876 a limited company was formed to carry on work under the title of W. T. Henley & Co. Ltd. When this was wound up, most of the works became the property of the Telegraph Maintenance and Construction Company, who then closed it. A small portion of the works was formed into W. T. Henley's Telegraph Works Company (Limited) in 1880, of which Henley was a director.
Henley died on the 13th of December 1882 at the age of sixty-nine, his company continued making submarine cables until the turn of the century.
- W.T. Henley and Company Limited
- W.T. Henley's Telegraph Works Company
- W.T. Henley's Electric Light and Power Company Limited
Conditions governing access
Open Access
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions
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