ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Agriculture.
By the
mid 16th century what woodland remained in
Wombridge and Priorslee was probably
coppiced; (fn. 7) in 1556 there were said to be 38 a. of
wood in Wombridge, worth 10s. an acre. (fn. 8) Among
the coppices in the later 17th and 18th century
were Queenswood and Wallamoor wood in Wombridge, managed by a keeper, and Snedshill coppice (82 a.) in Priorslee. (fn. 9) By 1847 only 6 a. of
wood remained in Wombridge and none in
Priorslee. (fn. 10)
Atcham furlong, presumably once open-field
land, lay 500 metres south-east of Wombridge
church in 1847. (fn. 11) Four or five ploughteams belonged to William Charlton's Wombridge tenants
in the years 1693-8; most of the parish's other
inhabitants were cottagers and colliers. (fn. 12) Little is
known of the cottage economy of Wombridge and
Oakengates but it probably differed little from
that of Wrockwardine Wood. (fn. 13) By the late 18th
century the eastern edge of Snedshill coppice
marked the eastern boundary of the main industrial area, and it remained so throughout the 19th
century. That part of Priorslee east of Snedshill
coppice remained as farmland and was little
affected by mining or industry until a few deep
pits were sunk around Priorslee village and near
Lower Woodhouse Farm in the 19th century. (fn. 14)
Considerable changes in land ownership and
management occurred in the early 20th century.
In 1901 Sir Thomas Meyrick's Wombridge estate
was sold. Rent levels had become unrealistically
low: a cottage rented from the estate for £2 was
sublet for £6 10s., and five cottages with a gross
annual rent of £4 10s. were sold in 1901 for £360.
Many tenants purchased their own properties. (fn. 15)
In 1922, because of increasing unprofitability, the
Lilleshall Co. leased out its Woodhouse and
Priorslee farms, which until then had supplied the
company's managers with milk and potatoes on
advantageous terms. (fn. 16) By 1936 motor transport
had become so common that there was reputedly
no demand in Oakengates for accommodation
grazing for tradesmen's horses. (fn. 17)
Mills.
There was an iron mill at Wombridge at
the Dissolution, probably near the priory on the
stream draining north-westwards through the parish. That was probably the site of later mills
known in the parish. (fn. 18) In 1672 Richard Adney
rented the upper and lower mills in Wombridge,
almost certainly to grind corn; probably at least
one of the mills was converted from the earlier
iron mill. (fn. 19) By 1709 there were three mills or
wheels at Wombridge, and they remained in use
until at least 1760. (fn. 20) A mill lay immediately east of
Wombridge church in 1847; it apparently closed
between 1882 and 1902, when the mill pond was
filled in. (fn. 21)
Coal and ironstone.
In 1535-6 there were two
mines on the Wombridge priory demesne, worth
£5 a year. (fn. 22) It is likely that both coal and ironstone, found in alternate bands, were raised.
James Leveson acquired the mines with the priory
demesnes (fn. 23) and reserved them when he sold the
lands to William Charlton in 1547. (fn. 24) By 1578
Andrew Charlton of Apley owned a mine in
Oakengates or Wombridge. (fn. 25) Both Leland and
Camden mentioned the mines, by then firmly
associated with Oakengates. (fn. 26) By the third quarter
of the 17th century mining was established at
Coalpit (later Ketley) Bank and probably at
Snedshill. (fn. 27)
By the early 1720s the Charltons' Wombridge
mines were let to Robert Brooks and John Lummas for £250 a year. By 1728, however, they owed
the Charltons £950 and then gave up the mines,
which were leased to Richard Hartshorne for
£200 a year. (fn. 28) Hartshorne, who had leased the
Ketley Bank mines from Lord Gower since
1715, (fn. 29) improved and expanded the local mining
industry: c. 1730 an atmospheric pumping engine
was installed at Wombridge, and by the time of
his death in 1733 he was mining in the Greenfields
and New Sough areas of the Charltons' Wombridge estate, and probably at Hollinswood and
Snedshill in Priorslee, the property of the earls
of Stafford. (fn. 30)
After 1733 Hartshorne's widow Jane (d. 1737)
apparently continued to work the Ketley Bank
and Priorslee mines (fn. 31) while the Wombridge ones
were brought directly under the control of the
Charlton estate, administered by Thomas
Dorsett. In 1747 the Charlton estate promoted
exploratory borings around Greenfields and in the
previously unexploited Horsepasture area northeast of Oakengates. In six months of 1748 coal
amounting to 2,375 stacks was raised from Wombridge, 74 per cent coming from the new Horsepasture area. The success of the local ironworks
led other estates to take an increased interest in
their mineral resources, and in 1755 the 4th earl of
Stafford's agent Francis Paddy suggested that the
granting of long leases of the Priorslee mines
would encourage the tenants to build pumping
engines. (fn. 32)
On his succession in 1754 the 2nd Earl Gower
(cr. marquess of Stafford 1786, d. 1803) expanded his family's existing holdings by long leases
from the earl of Shrewsbury and St. John Charlton, and became the main mine owner in the
district. (fn. 33) That interest became the Lilleshall Co.
in 1802. (fn. 34) One of the initial Lilleshall partners was
John Bishton the elder (d. 1803), who in 1793
with Benjamin Rowley leased mines in Priorslee
from the Beaufoy family. Bishton formed a
partnership with other lessees soon after, and in
1793-4 they apparently acquired the Snedshill
mines from John Wilkinson (d. 1808), who had
held them since at least 1778. Those interests did
not come into the Lilleshall Co. when Bishton
became a partner in 1802, and were only brought
into the company in 1807 when Bishton's sons and
executors negotiated a new partnership with Lord
Granville Leveson-Gower. (fn. 35) In the 1780s Richard
Reynolds's Ketley Co. began to mine under
Wombridge, gaining access from a shaft in
Wrockwardine Wood. The enterprise had been
made possible through the draining of the area by
an underground level at Wrockwardine Wood. (fn. 36)
Although Richard Hartshorne had installed a
Coalbrookdale pumping engine at Wombridge c.
1730, it was only in the late 18th and early 19th
century, after major technological improvements,
that steam engines came to be widely used in the
coalfield. (fn. 37) One of John Wilkinson's Boulton &
Watt engines was installed at his Snedshill mines
in 1778; Richard Banks, who operated pits in
Wombridge in 1796 in association with a group of
entrepreneurs known as the Wombridge Co.,
owned the 'Wombridge water engine', and William Reynolds the 'Bank water engine' at Ketley
Bank. All were draining engines. The first pitwinding engine known to have been installed in
the coalfield began work at Wombridge c. 1789.
Designed by Richard Reynolds, it was so successful that similar engines were rapidly erected elsewhere: at Hollinswood in 1790, and at least three
at Wombridge in 1795-6. (fn. 38) By 1793 so much coal
was being raised around Oakengates that its carriage by road to Shrewsbury had become a problem, and the construction of the Shrewsbury
Canal was proposed. (fn. 39)
Deep mining began early in the 19th century.
The Lilleshall Co. opened the Lawn pit near
Priorslee on land it had purchased in 1809; in
1841, at 900 ft., it was the deepest pit in the
coalfield. The two nearby Woodhouse mines were
probably sunk in the second quarter of the
century. (fn. 40) Most of Priorslee, however, was leased
in 1840 to John Horton & Co. (fn. 41) During the earlier
19th century coal production came to be concentrated at those deep collieries although ironstone
was still got from smaller pits; in 1870 five of the
existing ten pairs of pits at Priorslee produced
ironstone. (fn. 42) In 1818 the Charltons' Wombridge
mines were leased to James Foster, and in 1852 to
John Bennett & Co. (fn. 43) Bennett died in 1870, and in
1884 his executors were working Wombridge
colliery. (fn. 44) In the later 19th century the minerals
were mainly leased to Hopley Bros. (fn. 45)
By the early 20th century there was little
mining in Wombridge. In Priorslee the Lawn pit
closed in 1906 (fn. 46) and activity was concentrated at
the two Woodhouse pits, where both coal and
ironstone were raised from shafts up to 311 yd.
deep by a workforce of over 740 in 1922. Those
pits closed in 1931 and 1940. (fn. 47)
Iron and steel.
About 1414 Thomas Ferrour,
a Wolverhampton ironmonger, was robbed near
Oakengates of six 'sharys' and 200 horse nails,
worth 12s.; (fn. 48) it seems probable that he had purchased them locally. At the Dissolution Wombridge
priory had an iron mill (probably a water-powered
bloomery) and possibly a smithy, which were let
for £1 6s. 8d. (fn. 49)
Whether the priory's ironworks was linked in
any way to the Foleys' mill and furnace at Wombridge, working by 1663, is unknown. The Foleys'
furnace, run with their works in Brewood, sent
pig iron to many of their other iron-making
concerns in the Stour Valley area. Thomas Foley
(1616-77) paid the Charltons £60 a year for the
furnace and two mills until he transferred his
interests to his son Philip (1653-1716) in 1669,
when the stock and equipment were worth
£1,739. (fn. 50) The furnace produced 239 tons in 1669
and 289 in 1670. (fn. 51) Philip does not appear in
surviving Charlton rentals, and the two mills were
apparently let in 1672 to Richard Adney, probably for corn milling. While the furnace was
frequently listed in rentals with the mills until
1753, the low rental and lack of other evidence
suggest that the furnace probably closed soon
after 1670. (fn. 52)
Not until c. 1780 was iron making reestablished in the Oakengates area. In that year
John Wilkinson, the leading Shropshire
ironmaster of the 1770s, installed a Boulton &
Watt engine to blow his two new blast furnaces at
Snedshill, the first in the county on a site
completely independent of water power. By the
late 1780s Wilkinson had opened another furnace
nearby, on a brook at Hollinswood. It was
associated with those at Snedshill, a Newcomen
engine being installed at Hollinswood by 1793.
After what was probably a business dispute with
his brother William, Wilkinson sold the Snedshill
ironworks to John Bishton the elder, John
Onions, and others in 1793-4 and the Hollinswood furnace closed. It was the first purposebuilt coke blast furnace to go out of use in the
county; it had apparently not been commercially
successful. (fn. 53)
Bishton subsequently consolidated his family's
holding in the partnership. In 1796 the two
Snedshill furnaces reputedly made 3,400 tons of
iron, and in the quarter to midsummer 1799 there
were 758 tons of iron sold from Snedshill: 158 of
melting-pig, 533 of forge iron, and 40 of 'hard'
iron. The principal customers were Crawshay &
Co. and Boulton & Watt for melting-iron, and
John Knight (Stour Valley), John Addenbrooke
(Wollaston and Lightmoor), Wright & Jesson
(Wren's Nest near Linley), and Pemberton &
Stokes (Eardington forge) for forge iron. (fn. 54) Trade
at Snedshill was apparently similar to that at
Horsehay, where Snedshill blooms and slabs were
occasionally rolled. (fn. 55) The Snedshill ironworks,
of which at least one furnace was managed by
John Horton, was brought into the Lilleshall Co.
under a new partnership agreement negotiated in
1807. (fn. 56)
By then there was at least one other ironworks
in Wombridge, at Queenswood at the southern
extremity of the parish. A large blast furnace was
built there by the Coalbrookdale partners c. 1800
to supply the Ketley works with pig iron. By 1802
iron was being made that Boulton & Watt 'found
to answer very well'. The works' subsequent
history is not known. (fn. 57)
A major new iron-making enterprise began in
1818 when James Foster, the eminent Midland
ironmaster, leased mines at Wombridge with an
obligation to build two blast furnaces within 18
months. The original two furnaces produced over
5,000 tons of iron in 1825, and a third had been
added in 1824. In 1830 the three produced over
7,000 tons. The prosperity of the works was,
however, short-lived; in 1837 Foster bought out
his two partners in the Wombridge and the
associated Hadley works, and in 1843 began to
build his Madeley Court blast furnaces to replace
those at Wombridge, perhaps already shut. Not
the least of the problems with the Wombridge
works was apparently the inability of the
Windmill farm inclined plane (in Madeley) to
raise fully laden boats; that effectively prevented
Foster from supplying his Wombridge works and
Shrewsbury with his own coal. (fn. 58)
Production at the Snedshill furnaces declined
after the construction of the Old Lodge furnaces
at Lilleshall in 1825; only 317 tons were made in
1830 and the works seems to have closed later that
year. (fn. 59) It apparently soon reopened when a forge
was built on the site to make wrought iron under
the nominally independent partnership of
Horton, Simms, & Bull, which had close links
with the Lilleshall Co. and used its pig iron. In
1854 Samuel Horton became sole owner of the
firm, which he brought into the Lilleshall Co. in
1855 when a new Snedshill Bar Iron Co. was
founded. The firm rapidly became established as
one of the country's leading wrought iron makers,
its products including bar, flat, cable, rivet, and
horseshoe iron, boiler plates, sheets, wire rods,
and structural sections. In addition to 35
puddling furnaces, about eight charcoal hearths
were retained until c. 1873 to produce - slowly,
expensively, and wastefully - the charcoal iron
demanded by conservative customers. (fn. 60)
In 1851 the Lilleshall Co. built four blast
furnaces at Priorslee. Unlike the Donnington
Wood and Old Lodge furnaces (fn. 61) they usually
worked on hot blast, and they effectively doubled
the company's pig iron production capacity. In
1870 three of the furnaces were using hot blast to
produce 230 tons a week each while one used cold
blast to produce 140 tons. Fuel came from 42
round coke ovens, and the blast from rotative
beam engines known as David and Sampson (sic).
A steam hoist lifted the charge. (fn. 62)
Three Basic Bessemer converters were installed
soon after 1879 at Priorslee, producing c. 700 tons
of 'Lilleshall Steel' ingots a week. By 1886 the
primary rolling of steel was being undertaken,
possibly using a mill moved from Snedshill, to
produce structural sections as well as billets and
blooms for re-rolling at Snedshill. (fn. 63) About that
time the Snedshill company was absorbed into the
Lilleshall Co. (fn. 64)
In the early 1900s the Lilleshall Co.'s iron and
steel operations were rationalized. Thereafter pig
iron and steel were made at integrated works at
Priorslee while wrought iron was made at Snedshill. New plant installed at Priorslee at that time
included a Siemens open-hearth furnace to
supplement the Bessemer converters; it was slow
but, unlike the Bessemer, would accept any
amount of scrap in the raw material. In 1910
carbon refractories in the blast furnace hearths
were installed, an innovative development. (fn. 65)
With the closure of Blists Hill (in Madeley) in
1912 the blast furnaces at Priorslee became the
only ones left in Shropshire. That year the
Lilleshall Co. made an agreement with the
German company Distillation AG to erect coke
ovens and a by-products and benzole plant. It was
Shropshire's only 20th-century integrated cokeovens and by-product plant to use chamber-type
ovens in place of the open heaps or circular ovens
that had served the iron industry since the days of
Abraham Darby (I). (fn. 66)
While there was no similar investment at
Snedshill, the works remained sufficiently
important in 1916 to be one of only two outside
the Black Country that were members of the
Marked Bar Association, effectively a price-fixing
body. By 1920 capital expenditure had been
suspended at Priorslee, and by 1922 both works
were on a three-day week as cheap foreign steel
took over the home market. In 1922 the
converters at Priorslee were shut, and thenceforth
steel was only rolled there. Wrought iron too was
being dumped in Britain, and c. 1925 the
Snedshill works closed. Those measures,
particularly the closure of the Priorslee
steelworks, lowered demand for Priorslee iron and
by 1926 only one furnace was in use. (fn. 67)
In 1948 a separate company, the Lilleshall Iron
& Steel Co. Ltd., was set up in anticipation of
iron and steel nationalization. The new company,
which took over the blast furnaces and steel
rolling mills, was in public ownership from 1951
until 1953 when the Lilleshall Co. re-purchased
the works. After 1947, however, pig iron
production nationally had become increasingly
concentrated at a few large steelworks, and Priorslee changed over to foundry iron production,
which used a large proportion of scrap, especially
baled tin cans, in the charge. In 1959 the one
furnace remaining in blast was blown out; like the
whole works it would have required major structural refurbishment, and in general there had
been little modernization at Priorslee after the
early 1900s. (fn. 68)
The closure meant that the furnace's waste gas
could no longer be burnt off to provide steam
power to the Priorslee steel re-rolling mill.
Accordingly the mill was electrified in 1960 in the
same year that it was joined with Spartan Steel &
Alloys Ltd. of Birmingham to form the
Shropshire Steel Co. Ltd., which rolled stainless
steel there. (fn. 69) The Priorslee rolling mill, the last in
Shropshire, closed in 1982.
About 1951 the Fairmile Engineering Co. of
Bradford, then under Lilleshall Co. ownership,
took over the latter's bulletproof-rivet shop at
Priorslee, which had been established in 1939. A
steel stockholding business was established, and
from the mid 1960s Lilleshall Stockholders Ltd.
benefited from the rapid growth in steel's
distribution through stockholders. (fn. 70)
In the later 19th and in the 20th century
companies other than the Lilleshall Co. engaged
in iron making and iron founding in Wombridge
and Oakengates, but in general their operations
are ill-documented. In 1854 a forge was built for
the Wombridge Iron Co. a little way north of
Wombridge church on the former site of Foster's
ironworks. The company was owned by John
Bennett. Products included merchant bar, guide
iron, and wire rod (fn. 71) and in 1873 the company
reputedly had ten puddling furnaces and three
mills and forges. (fn. 72) Between 1891 and 1895 ownership of the company probably passed to
Rollason & Slater of Birmingham, wire manufacturers. The works closed in 1902. (fn. 73)
John Maddock manufactured nails in Stirchley
in 1869 and moved to Oakengates in 1878 when
John Maddock & Co. was founded. At the firm's
Great Western Nail Works a wide variety of
malleable iron products was made, such as boot
protectors. Later bicycle parts, cylinder blocks,
and axles were cast for the early cycle and motor
trades, necessitating extensions of the works into
Station Road. About 1938 the company
bought the Lilleshall Co.'s old Snedshill works
and laid down there what was reputedly one of the
most modern casting foundries in Europe. After
the war pipe fittings became the principal manufacture. In 1983 parts for commercial vehicles
were the main product. William Lee Ltd. took the
works over in 1980. There were 200 employees in
1891, 575 in 1960, and 86 in 1983. (fn. 74)
Other little-documented companies included
the Hollinswood Iron Works (fl. 1856), (fn. 75) perhaps
the predecessor of the Eagle Iron Co. (fl.
1870-91) that produced shovels in West Street,
St. George's, and was one of the main local
suppliers of iron to C. & W. Walker of
Donnington. The Eagle Iron Co. was later taken
over by the Snedshill Co. (fn. 76) Martin & Sons, iron
founders, of Slaney Street, Oakengates, operated
between 1879 and 1891 and were perhaps
succeeded by the Nitram Foundry Co. (fl.
1909-26). (fn. 77) The Shropshire Iron Co.'s works in
Hadley were extended into Wombridge in 1873. (fn. 78)
The Capewell Horse Nail Co. Ltd. had a works at
Trench Pool c. 1909- c. 1917. (fn. 79)
Gasel Ltd., iron founders, were open in
Leonard Street, Oakengates, c. 1952, (fn. 80) and c.
1960 H. L. Cornaby Ltd. of Oakengates made
grey iron and nickel alloy castings for all trades. (fn. 81)
Both had ceased by 1983 but Boliver Preece &
Co., a small engineering firm founded in 1923,
remained at the Charlton forge, Oakengates. (fn. 82)
Other industries.
Clay was available both as a
local drift deposit and as a waste product from
mining. Bricks were generally made locally on site
as required, whether for industrial or housing
construction. There were brick kilns in the mid
18th century at Oakengates and by the 1780s at
Hollinswood, where two former ovens were
inhabited in 1793. (fn. 83) In the early 19th century
there were two groups of kilns at Mumporn Hill,
known as the upper and lower brickworks, and a
further kiln on the site later occupied by Chapel
Street. (fn. 84) By 1850 the Lilleshall Co.'s Snedshill
brickworks was established in that area, making
not only red bricks but also tiles, quarries, white
bricks, fire bricks, and land drainage pipes from
fireclay. (fn. 85) The company got fireclay from its own
pits. (fn. 86) In the early 1900s the brickworks was
improved and salt-glazed pipes and refractory
bricks were added to the product range; glazed
bricks were made from 1917. 'Belfast' glazed
sinks, used nationally in new council estates, were
a profitable line from 1918. New kilns and glazing
technology were introduced in the 1930s. Nevertheless coal nationalization in 1947 reduced the
supply of deep mined clay, which became difficult
to obtain although some was got from a private pit
at Ketley Bank. Moreover the growing popularity
of plastic and stainless steel sinks in the 1950s
reduced demand, and c. 1960 the Snedshill works
was one of the enterprises taken into the Lilleshall
Co.'s Building Materials Division. Ceramic
manufacture ended there in 1977. (fn. 87)
In 1878 the Lilleshall Co. was making concrete
blocks at Snedshill, and in 1903 a concrete works
was built on the site of the former Snedshill blast
furnaces to make blocks, fencing posts, and slabs.
Furnace slag from Priorslee was used as
aggregate. In the 1920s the works expanded and a
wide range of pre-formed blocks and other structural elements began to be produced. About 1960
the works was taken into the company's new
Buildings Materials Division, and 'Dorran' bungalows began to be made. In 1977 Lilleshall
Homes Ltd. was sold and concrete making by the
Lilleshall Co. ended. (fn. 88)
Lime was produced at Snedshill before 1788
and in the early 19th century, and there were
sandstone quarries east of St. George's. (fn. 89) Several
sandpits were dug to get the drift sand between
Trench Pool and Oakengates in the later 19th and
20th century. (fn. 90)
Glass making began in the coalfield in the mid
1670s when Abraham Bigod, a glass maker from
Amblecote (Staffs.), built a glasshouse near
Snedshill. Window panes and bottles were still
made there in 1696, (fn. 91) but the glasshouse was
'decayed' and out of use by 1720. (fn. 92)
Products and by-products of the local mining
and iron and steel industries were at times used by
firms established to exploit them. In the late 18th
century there was a sulphuric acid works at
Wombridge, which used iron pyrites from local
coal as the basic raw material. About 1799 John
Biddle began to make alkali there using the
process developed in France by Malherbe and
Athénas. It was apparently unsuccessful and the
works evidently closed about the time (1800-3)
that Biddle's interest in the Wrockwardine Wood
glassworks began. (fn. 93)
About 1890 a coal distillation plant was built at
Priorslee, apparently with German backing. The
Lilleshall Co. bought the plant in 1920 and
established a new private subsidiary, the
Lilleshall Coal Distillation Co. Ltd.; the products
were coke, benzole, naphthalene, and ammonium
sulphate. Demand for coke, the main product, fell
as blast furnace output declined. The works
closed c. 1928 and such coke as Priorslee needed
was subsequently purchased from outside
suppliers. (fn. 94)
In 1912 an asphalt plant was built at Priorslee;
it used tar from the coke ovens. At the same time
crushing and screening plant was built to convert
slag to agricultural fertilizer. (fn. 95) The Lilleshall Co.
also owned the Basic Slag Works, Trench Pool,
which it bought from Sir Thomas Meyrick in
1901. The works was still open during the First
World War. (fn. 96)
Between c. 1900 and c. 1909 a Chemical Works
(late H. & E. Albert) made phosphate powder
fertilizer next to the Basic Slag Works. (fn. 97)
In the 1940s Russells Rubber Co. Ltd. set up a
factory in the former Capewell nail works, making
rubber components for motor vehicles. In 1980
there were c. 400 employees. (fn. 98)
From 1973 Telford development corporation
provided new factory sites on its Stafford Park
industrial estate, Priorslee. (fn. 99)
Market and fairs.
About 1826, when William
Charlton of Apley began to patronize
Oakengates, (fn. 1) a market place was formed on the
south (or Shifnal) side of Watling Street near
Pain's Lane. Like so many developments around
Oakengates at that time, the provision of a market
owed much to entrepreneurs connected with the
Lilleshall Co. The first market place and shambles belonged to John Horton of Priorslee Hall
and by 1842 another, smaller, market had been
built by Richard Corfield, publican of the Ewe
and Lamb, on property let to Horton by the lord
of Shifnal manor, the 8th Baron Stafford, in what
was becoming the centre of the town. (fn. 2) The lords
of Shifnal seem not to have enforced any market
rights (fn. 3) in Oakengates. (fn. 4) In 1842 accommodation
was said to be still insufficient and there were
proposals to build another market in the town
centre, opposite the Lion inn. (fn. 5) In 1869 the market
hall was rebuilt, (fn. 6) probably by shareholders. (fn. 7) Four
fairs a year evidently retained some commercial
character c. 1850 but pleasure fairs eventually
took their place. (fn. 8) From the 1850s, after the arrival
of the railways, the town centre market too
became a popular social occasion on Saturday
evenings. (fn. 9) Traders also used Market Street,
whose coincidence with the Shifnal-Wombridge
boundary prevented the sanitary authorities from
exercising due control over the market.
Oakengates had a reputation as a good pig market,
and industrial workers sold their pigs direct to the
pork butchers. About 1890 butcher's meat and
vegetables from the surrounding countryside were
a staple. No tolls or dues were collected then, but
c. 1935 the Green, at the west end of Market
Street and in Wombridge manor, was said to be
partly in private ownership and subject to market
tolls. (fn. 10)
The Saturday night street market maintained
its popularity throughout the district until
extinguished in 1939. Saturday remained market
day after the Second World War, and in 1963 the
market was moved to a site off New Street that
was owned by the urban district council and soon
afterwards became the forecourt of the new town
hall. An annual 'old tyme' market was instituted
some years before 1975 and was still held in
1982. (fn. 11)