Morgan Advanced Materials Explained

Morgan Advanced Materials plc
Former Name:The Morgan Crucible Company plc (19342013)[1] [2]
Type:Public limited company
Foundation:1856
Hq Location:York House, Sheet Street
Hq Location City:Windsor, Berkshire
Hq Location Country:United Kingdom
Industry:Manufacturing
Revenue: £1,114.7 million (2023)[3]
Operating Income: £117.0 million (2023)
Net Income: £56.3 million (2023)
Num Employees:8,230[4] or. 8,550 (2022)[5]

Morgan Advanced Materials plc is a company which manufactures specialist products, using carbon, advanced ceramics and composites. The group is headquartered in Windsor, United Kingdom, and has 70 sites across 18 countries.[6] It is listed as public limited company on the London Stock Exchange and is a component of the FTSE 250 Index.

History

From formation to flotation

The six Morgan brothers (William, Thomas, Walter, Edward, Octavius and Septimus) began as importers and exporters in the City of London trading as "Druggist Salesmen and Hardware Merchants". An American crucible, made to a new process, was shown at the Great Exhibition of 1851 and seen by the brothers. The distinguishing feature of the “new process” involved mixing the clay with graphite, then usually known as plumbago or black lead, giving it much greater durability. The brothers obtained the sole agency for the British Empire from the manufacturers, Joseph Dixon, and in 1856 formed the Patent Plumbago Crucible Company, acquiring a site in Battersea for its manufacture. One of the features of the early years was extensive international scope of the business, both in the marketing of the crucible and the search for the ideal graphite – first in Ceylon and then Madagascar. By the 1870s, the firm, then trading under the easier name of Morgan Crucible, was said to be the largest manufacturer of crucibles in the world.[7]

In 1890, Morgan Crucible became a company; it was no longer a family concern although the shares remained in the hands of directors and senior executives, and it remained so until 1946. By 1900, the staff at Battersea totalled over 420 and the company was continually exploring other avenues for its graphite expertise. In the early 1900s lengthy development work was undertaken on electric bushes and by the end of World War I it was an established part of the business. Other refractory products, including furnace linings, were developed and in 1947 production moved to a new factory in Neston as Morgan Refractories. Other carbon specialisations included lighting carbons and resistors, the latter being large enough to move into a new factory in County Durham in 1948.[7]

At the private AGM in August 1946, the Chairman announced "a departure from our 60-year-old policy of retaining the whole of the equity in the hands of workers and ex workers." There was to be a public listing on the London Stock Exchange with the issue of new shares but it was expected that the employees would still control the majority of the equity.[8] The fundraising was duly completed the next month; the company was described as the largest manufacturer of plumbago crucibles in the world and also holding “a leading position as manufacturers of carbon products used on rotating electrical equipment”.[9]

Flotation to late 20th century

In 1939 the company's subsidiary Morganite Crucible opened its works at Norton in Worcestershire.[10] During the Second World War this facility employed European Voluntary Workers who were accommodated at Bowbrook House in nearby Peopleton.[11] In 2010 the site, which had recently been closed, was sold for use as an industrial estate; in part of the site, Molten Metal Products Ltd was set up by former Morgan employees Dave Hill and Jim Ritchie, to distribute Morganite products and manufacture Morgan furnaces under licence.[12]

In 1954 the company became one of the first businesses in the UK to computerise its financial records, with the first order of a HEC4 computer, operational in 1955.[13] In 1964 the first commercial sale of the ICT 1900 series computer was to the company.[14]

In 1964 the company acquired Steatite & Porcelain Products from Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI): this company, based in Stourport, had been established as Ernst Hildebrant Limited in 1907 and had been owned by ICI in 1941.[15]

A joint venture of Morgan's Thermal Ceramics division and the Carborundum Universal company, part of the Indian industrial conglomerate Murugappa Group, has existed since 1982.[16]

21st century

The company changed its name to Morgan Advanced Materials in February 2013 to reflect the fact that it produces a variety of different products and supplies to many different industries.[17]

In September 2020 the company's headquarters moved from the Quadrant to York House, also in the centre of Windsor.[18]

In February 2023, the company announced that it had been hit by a cyber-security incident which had taken some of its systems offline and may cost it up to £12 million.[19]

Corporate structure

The group is divided into five business units: Thermal Ceramics (23 locations), Molten Metal Systems (5 locations), Electrical Carbon (16 locations), Seals and Bearings (11 locations) and Technical Ceramics (17 locations).[20] [21]

In 2021, 27.4 percent of employees worked in the United States of America, 28.5 percent in Europe (UK: 9.5 percent) and about 14 percent in China.[22]

A total of four (global) development centers (Centre of Excellence, CoE) have been opened since 2008:[23] [24]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1934-04-11 . Morgan Advanced Materials PLC overview - Find and update company information - GOV.UK . 2024-01-30 . . en.
  2. Web site: Terms and conditions . 2024-01-30 . Morgan Advanced Materials . en-GB.
  3. Web site: Preliminary Results 2023. Morgan Advanced Materials. 13 March 2024.
  4. Web site: 2022 Annual Report. Morgan Advanced Materials. 150. 29 January 2024.
  5. Web site: 2022 Annual Report. Morgan Advanced Materials. 34. 29 January 2024.
  6. Web site: Who we are. Morgan Advanced Materials. 29 January 2024.
  7. Richard Bennett, Battersea Works, 1856-1956, 1956, London
  8. The Times 7 August 1946
  9. The Times 30 September 1946.
  10. Web site: Help for staff to find new jobs. 21 September 2007. BBC. 3 March 2020.
  11. Web site: Peopleton. 2013-06-04.
  12. Web site: Disused factory unit proves to be sound investment. 2011-03-03. 2013-06-04.
  13. Web site: HEC4 at Morgan Crucible. vk2bv.org. 31 March 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140419062144/http://www.vk2bv.org/sb/hec4.htm. 19 April 2014.
  14. Web site: Some Customers Details. ICT Archive. 2 March 2021.
  15. Web site: Steatite and Porcelain Products. Grace's Guide. 24 April 2024.
  16. Web site: Thermal Management Solutions for a Sustainable World . www.murugappamorgan.com.
  17. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/cd7e14c2-7687-11e2-ac91-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2wjzkQ0BK Morgan Crucible no more
  18. Web site: Morgan Advanced Materials. Companies House. 7 November 2020.
  19. News: Shares in British engineering company dive as it announces cost of cyberattack. 7 February 2023. The Record. 9 March 2023.
  20. Web site: 2022 Annual Report. Morgan Advanced Materials. 28 January 2024.
  21. Web site: Locations – Morgan Advanced Materials. Morgan Advanced Materials. 2023-01-23.
  22. Web site: 2021 Annual Report. Morgan Advanced Materials. 31. 29 January 2024.
  23. Web site: History – Morgan Advanced Materials. Morgan Advanced Materials. 2023-01-23.
  24. Web site: Carbon Science Research Centre of Excellence opens at Innovation Park. Penn State News. 2020-01-12.