Pauling & Co.
Pauling & Co. Logo | |
Limited company and latterly (after 1978) Public company | |
Industry | Civil Engineering Contractors |
Fate | Became a nanotechnology company in 2010 |
Predecessor | Firbank, Pauling & Co., Pauling and Butler, Pauling, Elliot & Co. |
Successor | Pauling ltd |
Founded | 1894 |
Founder | George Pauling |
Defunct | 2 April 2002 Re-registered 2010 |
Headquarters | Nottingham, Westminster, England |
Number of locations | wide, primarily Southern Africa and the Middle East |
Key people | George Pauling, Sir John Gibson |
Products | Nanowarmth, NanoMed |
Subsidiaries | Pauling (Middle East) Ltd, Pauling (Oman) L.L.C. |
Pauling & Co. was a major British civil engineering contractor renowned chiefly for building the railways of Southern Africa. .
History
Pauling & Co. was founded by George Craig Sanders Pauling[1] in 1894. Pauling had previously built railways since 1875, trading variously as Firbank, Pauling & Co., Pauling and Butler in South Africa and Rhodesia as well as in Greece, Puerto Rico, from Haifa to Damascus and in England as Pauling and Elliot. Whilst undertaking civil engineering projects in England his partnership with Elliot was dissolved in 1894 and he formed Pauling & Co. and completed this contracting work.
By 1895 Pauling returned to South Africa and Rhodesia. Between 1900 and 1918 Pauling & Co. built hundreds of miles of railway in Rhodesia, Angola and Nyasaland and they were a major contributor to the development of the railways of Southern and Central Africa, including the greater part of Cecil Rhodes' unfinished Cape to Cairo Railway scheme.
Having been restructured in 1931, Pauling & Co. entered into partnership with contractor John Watson Gibson[2] in 1933 forming Gibson and Pauling (Foreign) Ltd. in 1933 to build the Jebel Aulia Dam on the White Nile in Sudan. On the successful completion of the Jebel Aulia Dam, Gibson became managing director of Pauling & Co., a position he held until his death in March 1947.
During the Second World War Paulings undertook construction work for the war effort including Royal Ordnance factories and they were one of the 25 principal civil engineering contractors to build the Phoenix concrete caissons that formed the breakwaters to the Mulberry harbours.[3]
In 1946 Pauling & Co. were employed by United Africa Company to undertake ground clearance for the ill fated Groundnut scheme.[4]
In the 1970s and 1980s Paulings undertook civil engineering schemes in the Middle East, particularly in the United Arab Emirates and Oman . In 1976 they were awarded the Queen's Award for Industry for export.[5]
Companies House records that Pauling Ltd. was dissolved on 2 April 2002.
Major Projects
Railways
- 6,310 miles of railway of which 5,922 were in Africa from formation through to 1939 and which formed the greater part of the Cape to Cairo Railway and the Benguela railway; In Britain the Northholt to High Wycombe between 1901-1905; the first 100 kilometres of the Tete Railway in Mozambique 1939.[6]
Hydro Electric Works
- For the Tata Company in Bombay, including the construction of 3 large dams.[6]
Harbours
- Kilindini Harbour, Kenya, Beira Harbour, Mozambique and the first part of Lobito Harbour, Angola.[6]
Dams
- Mazoe Dam, Zimbabwe and Magoto Dam[7] and, through an associated company, the Jebel Aulia Dam on the White Nile in Sudan for the Egyptian Government at a cost of over £E2,000,000 - 1933-1937; St. Saviour’s Dam for the Guernsey States Water Board,[8] and San Felipe Dam in the Argentine, constructed by Pauling Argentina Lda.[6]
War Work
- Royal Ordnance Factory 17, Featherstone, Staffordshire 1941;[9] 9 No. A1 Phoenix Caissons for the Mulberry Harbours constructed in Southampton Graving Dock No. 5 -1943-1944.[3]
Roads And Airports
- Central Section, Abu Dhabi -Alain Highway; Alain Roads; Abu Dhabi International Airport Runway and Taxiways - 1974.
Other works
- Construction of steel prefabricated housing for post World War II reconstruction. The Groundnut Scheme Ground Clearance, Tanganyika, 1946.[4]
References
- ↑ Robert Brown and Anita McConnell, ‘Pauling, George Craig Sanders (1854–1919)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 28 April 2010
- ↑ Howard Gibson and Leo D'Erlanger, ‘Gibson, Sir John Watson (1885–1947)’, rev. Robert Sharp, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 28 April 2010
- 1 2 Hartcup, p. 94
- 1 2 D.R. Myddleton (2007). They Meant Well, Government Project Disasters (PDF). London: Institute of Economic Affairs. pp. 72–73. ISBN 978-0-255-36601-4.
- ↑ "Queen's Awards for export and technology". The Times. 21 April 1976. p. 22 col B. Issue 59684.
- 1 2 3 4 The source for Paulings pre World War II projects is "Pauling & Co. (Display Advertising". The Times. 1 August 1939. p. 33 col A. Issue 48372.
- ↑ Possibly one the Nkumpi dams near Magoto, South Africa
- ↑ "Obituary: Harold Whitson". Glasgow Herald. 13 July 2013. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
- ↑ "Disused Depot". Collected Interests. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
Sources
- Hartcup, Guy (2006). Code name Mulberry, the planning, building & operation of the Normandy harbours. Barnsley, Pen & Sword Military. ISBN 1-84415-434-3.
Further reading
- Pauling, George (1926). David, Buchan, ed. The chronicles of a contractor: being the autobiography of the late George Pauling. Books of Rhodesia. ISBN 0-86920-276-6.
- Robert Brown and Anita McConnell, ‘Pauling, George Craig Sanders (1854–1919)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 28 April 2010
- Howard Gibson and Leo D'Erlanger, ‘Gibson, Sir John Watson (1885–1947)’, rev. Robert Sharp, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 28 April 2010
- George Tabor, 'The Cape to Cairo Railway and River Routes', Genta Publications 2002 (ISBN 0954484703) contains a full history of Pauling & Co's work in Africa.