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Britain's Last Bell Foundry

The once thriving and lively world of bell casting has fallen almost silent in this modern age, finds art historian and broadcaster James Fox, the author of Craftland. Yet one mighty foundry still rings out, loud and clear: John Taylor & Co. in Loughborough.
John Taylor & Co. is Britain’s last bell foundry and said to be the largest in the world. This fortress-like complex of buildings, crowned by rust-red chimneys and elaborate bell towers, occupies a whole block of central Loughborough, assailing its neighbors with a din of roaring extractor fans, screaming machines, and clanking bronze.
But the town’s residents have grown so accustomed to the noise that they only complain when it unexpectedly ceases.
The foundry’s origins can be traced back to the 14th century when a distinguished bell-founder called Johannes de Stafford established a foundry in nearby Leicester. His business passed through five families over the next 400 years until Robert Taylor, the son of a grocer, took it over in the 1780s. In 1859, Robert Taylor’s grandsons built a large modern foundry, which, apart from a few Victorian additions, is almost unchanged today. The company reached its apogee in the second half of the 19th century, thanks to the rapid growth of Britain’s cities and a great boom in church-building.
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To read the rest of this article, and tour the bell foundry, order Cabana Issue 24.
This article is an adapted extract from Craftland: A Journey Through Britain’s Lost Arts and Vanishing Trades, written by James Fox and published by The Bodley Head.
Images by Miguel Flores-Vianna