A spiral carved on a stone, sealed in the dark for 4,000 years. ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ท๓ ฌ๓ ณ๓ ฟ๐ฌ๐ง
Nobody knows what it means. But once a year, the sun still finds it.
Around 3,000 BC, a Welsh farming community on Anglesey cut massive slabs of stone and raised a chamber inside a mound. Then they did something extraordinary. They aligned the passage to the rising sun on the summer solstice.
Once a year, on the longest day, sunlight threads the doorway and floods the chamber for three minutes. Then it moves on.
Inside, they carved a single stone with a tight spiral. One of the oldest carved stones in Britain. Welsh hands cut it 5,000 years ago, and to this day nobody can say what it represents.
They gathered there for two thousand years. Then they sealed the chamber and walked away. The mound held the dark until Victorian archaeologists opened the passage and the summer sun threaded the doorway again. ๐
It still does. Every June 21st, locals walk back to Bryn Celli Ddu and stand at the chamber wall, lit by the same sun through the same stone door their ancestors built.
Welsh people built it. Welsh people kept it. Welsh people still walk to it.
Help us remember who we are. Help us remember every British achievement. ๐๐
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Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
You were told mathematics began with the Greeks or the Arabs. ๐ค
Three carved chalk drums from a Yorkshire grave might prove otherwise. ๐ฅ๐ฌ๐ง
In 1889 they were found buried with a five year old child. For 130 years nobody knew what they were for. โณ
Then in 2018 researchers measured them. The proportions appear to encode a standard unit of length. ๐
Wind a cord ten times around the smallest drum and you get the โlong footโ, about 32cm. The same unit researchers believe was used to lay out Stonehenge. ๐ชจ
A fourth drum later turned up over 200 miles south in Sussex. Same measurements. The chalk ones were likely replicas of working tools carved in wood. ๐ชต
Not in a kingโs grave. Not in a treasury. Buried with a small child, so the knowledge would be remembered. ๐ฏ๏ธ
British people were measuring the world before England had a name. ๐ฌ๐ง
Long before we had a name, this island was measuring the world.
Help us make sure that our history is never forgotten again. ๐๐
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๐ฌ๐ง A British Bronze Age family sat down to dinner.
Their house caught fire and fell into the marsh.
Three thousand years on, their porridge is still in its bowl.
Cambridgeshire. The Fenland. Around 1,000 BC, a British family had built a village on wooden stilts above the marsh. Nine round houses linked by a timber walkway. One evening they sat down to eat.
๐ฅ The thatch caught. The fire moved fast. They grabbed what they could and ran. Their footprints sank into the mud below the platform.
The houses collapsed into the marsh. And the marsh held everything where it fell.
Three thousand years later, Cambridge archaeologists drained the silt. The village rose back up.
The bowl of porridge was still on the table, the wooden spoon still in it. The bread was still in the oven. The wheels were still in the shed. The dog was still by the fire.
๐ Wheels of solid oak. Glass beads worked by hand. Finely woven cloth. Bronze axes and spears and sickles. Tools any modern carpenter would recognise.
Britain's Bronze Age Pompeii. Excavated by the Cambridge Archaeological Unit in 2015 and 2016.
A British family lived here. They were not primitive. They were us.
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British history is what we have all achieved on these islands.
We tell the parts that get left out.
We are funded by people who think it matters.
Will you help us on our journey? ๐๐
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Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๐ฌ๐ง A Greek sailor named Pytheas wrote down our name in 325 BC. ๐ฌ๐ง
It is older than Rome. ๐ฎ๐น
And it is still in your mouth.
In 325 BC, a Greek sailed north. His name was Pytheas. He came from Massalia, on the south coast of what is now France. A Greek colony of merchants and navigators.
And Pytheas was the most curious man in it.
He sailed past Cรกdiz, around Iberia, and headed north. Past the limit of the known world.
And he found a sophisticated people working tin. They lived in roundhouses set into the hills. They traded tin into the wider world.
And they had a name for themselves.
They called themselves the Pretannoi. Which meant the painted people.
Their land was called Pretannikฤ. The Pretannic Isles.
And Pytheas wrote it down.
๐ He returned to Massalia and wrote a book about it. He called it *On the Ocean*. The book itself was lost. But other writers quoted from it for the next 500 years.
And the name he wrote down for Britain survived.
The Romans wrote it as Britannia. The English wrote it as Britain. And you write it the same way today.
The name has not changed in 2,350 years.
๐๏ธ Pytheas did not find a backwater. He found a sophisticated people. Working metal at scale. Trading across the sea. And living on land they had named before Rome could write.
The Pretannoi became Britons. Their descendants became the British. And the British are still here. Still answering to the name that Pytheas carved into wax 2,350 years ago.
Britain is older than Rome. Older than English. Older than the language you speak.
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Britain is older than English itself.
Most Britons don't know.
Our work is made in Britain, for Britain.
Tell your kids. ๐
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Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๐ฌ๐ง A Norfolk farmer's plough caught something in a field in 1948. ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ
It turned out to be the largest collection of Iron Age gold ever found anywhere in the world. ๐ชโ๏ธ
Made by British smiths whose craft no one has been able to copy. ๐ฌ๐ง
Snettisham is a quiet village on the Norfolk coast. Its fields look like any field in eastern England.
But in 1948 a Norfolk farmer hit something with his plough. He thought it was bedstead metal.
It wasn't.
Over the next 40 years, archaeologists returned to that field again and again. They found 11 hoards in one field.
More than 175 complete torcs. And hundreds more fragments. The largest collection of Iron Age gold ever found. Anywhere in the world.
And one piece stood above all the others.
๐๏ธ The Snettisham Great Torc. A neck ring, one kilogram of gold and silver alloy. Twisted from 60 individual strands of wire, each made by hand.
The trumpet terminals at each end were cast in one piece. With pattern detail no modern goldsmith has fully reproduced.
The casting technique used has not been replicated.
2,000 years on, the craft still holds its secret.
The torc was made by an Iron Age British smith. Probably for the Iceni. The tribe that later rose with Boudica.
Their goldsmiths were among the most skilled in Europe. And the gold they worked was British gold. Worked on British forges by British hands.
Around 75 BC, someone buried the hoards together. A sacred deposit, or a treasury, or both. The earth held it for 2,000 years.
And then a Norfolk farmer's plough lifted it back into the light.
The smiths who made these torcs became Britons. Their descendants became the British. And the British still work metal at the top of the world. Norfolk still ploughs the field where it began.
๐ฌ๐ง Britain has been working gold for 2,000 years. The craft is still in the hands.
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Right now, somewhere in Britain, a silversmith is at the bench.
The hands have never stopped.
Our work is made in Britain, for Britain.
Inspire the next British craftsman.๐๐
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Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ๐ง In a Welsh sea cave 33,000 years ago... ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ท๓ ฌ๓ ณ๓ ฟ
A young man was buried by his people with red ochre and grave goods.
It is the oldest formal burial ever found in Western Europe. ๐ฌ๐ง๐ช๐บ
Goat's Hole cave sits high in a Welsh sea cliff on the Gower Peninsula. Above the sea, beneath the headland.
33,000 years ago, this coast looked nothing like it does today. The sea was lower. The land was colder. The Bristol Channel was mammoth steppe.
But the cave was already there.
A young man died. He was around 21 years old. Slender.
๐ฏ๏ธ And his people prepared him.
They wrapped him in cured hide. They covered him with red ochre โ a pigment they used only for the dead. They placed grave goods beside him. A carved rod of mammoth ivory. Perforated wolf teeth. Periwinkle shells from the shore.
They did not bury him quickly. They did not bury him alone. They did not bury him without his things. They buried him with grief.
Time passed. The sea rose. The cliff stayed. And the young man slept.
In 1823, the Reverend William Buckland of Oxford found the bones. And got everything about them wrong.
He decided the bones belonged to a Roman-era prostitute.
He called the burial the ๐Red Lady of Paviland๐
He was wrong on three counts.
The bones were not Roman. They were Paleolithic.
The bones were not female. They were male.
And the bones were not a prostitute. They were a young man buried by his people with dignity and grief.
The people who buried him did not vanish. Their descendants moved across these islands as the climate changed.
They became Britons. Their descendants became the British. And the British still bury their dead with care.
๐ฌ๐ง Dignity is one of the oldest things on these islands. And the people who feel it are still here.
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The Red Lady is not a lady.
He is our oldest link to the world that made us.
This video was made in Britain. So our children inherit what made us.
We can't do it without you. ๐
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Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๐ฌ๐ง You have been told Britain was a backwater before Rome. ๐ฌ๐ง
But people walked from the Alps to reach this island 2,400 years before Rome arrived. ๐๏ธ
They came carrying gold no one in Britain had ever seen. ๐ช๐
In 2002, Wessex Archaeology dug at Boscombe Down near Amesbury, Wiltshire. They opened the richest Bronze Age grave ever found in Britain.
More than 100 objects buried with him. Five Beaker pots. Sixteen finely worked flint arrowheads. Copper knives. Stone wristguards. And two small folded sheets of gold. The earliest gold ever found in Britain.
๐๏ธ He was in his mid-forties. Robust. Broad-shouldered. And carrying an old wound. A leg infection that had bent his bones.
And yet he had walked here. From what is now Switzerland. More than a thousand miles, walked on a damaged leg, to a country he had chosen.
His teeth gave him up. Tooth enamel holds the chemistry of the water you drank as a child. And his chemistry was wrong for Britain. The strontium and oxygen pointed to the cold-climate valleys of the Alps. He was born more than a thousand miles east of where he died. But buried in Britain.
He came to a people who had been here for thousands of years.
Stonehenge was being completed. Bronze was new technology. A bronze-worker could become wealthy on these islands. He was not running from something. He had come toward something. And he stayed.
๐ฌ๐ง The British were already here. Long before him. Long after him. They have been here for thousands of years. And they are still here.
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Our story is older than his.
Older than Rome. Older than the pyramids.
Help us put our story where our children can find it. ๐๐
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Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
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๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ 50,000 people marched on London.โ๏ธ
The government said it wasn't that many. ๐ฌ๐ง
It was much, much more.
This is not the first time ๐
It is 1381. England. You wake. The frost is on the ground. You are a serf.
You cannot leave your village without permission. You cannot marry without permission. You cannot sell your own labour. The land you work belongs to a lord you have never met.
Your father was a serf. His father was a serf. You have been told your son will be a serf too.
So you were told.
But something had cracked ๐ The Black Death had taken half of England thirty years before. Labour was scarce. Wages had risen. For three decades, ordinary people had been quietly getting richer. The powerful hated it.
Every law they made, the people walked around.
Then John of Gaunt, the king's uncle and the richest man in England, taxed every adult the same shilling to pay for the war in France ๐ฐ
The Poll Tax.
In four years, they tried it three times. The third one was one too many.
In May 1381, a tax commissioner arrived in the Essex village of Fobbing. The villagers drove him out. The king sent soldiers. The villagers drove them out too.
You hear what happened at Fobbing. You hear what happened next.
Essex rose first. Then Kent. Then the eastern counties. Villages emptied.
In Kent, a man called Wat Tyler took command โ๏ธ His first move was to break open Maidstone Prison and free a radical priest called John Ball.
By the time they reached Blackheath, just south of the Thames, they were 50,000 strong.
That night, John Ball climbed onto a cart and asked a question that would echo for 600 years:
"When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman?" ๐
They burned the Savoy Palace ๐ฅ Gaunt escaped on horseback to Scotland.
The next morning, the king rode out to meet them. Richard II. Fourteen years old. Just a boy on a horse, in front of 50,000 armed peasants.
He agreed to everything. End serfdom. End forced labour. End the Poll Tax. He had clerks write charters of freedom sealed with the royal seal ๐
You hold one in your hands. Freedom.
You have won.
The next day at Smithfield, the Lord Mayor of London stabbed Wat Tyler in the throat ๐ก๏ธ The king rode forward alone and persuaded the crowd to follow him out of London.
Then he revoked every promise.
"Serfs you are. And serfs you shall remain."
1,500 rebels were executed. John Ball was hanged, drawn and quartered at St Albans. The king was there to see it.
The dream is dead. Or so it looks.
But they thought they had lost. They had not ๐
The Poll Tax was never collected again in their lifetime. Or their children's lifetime. It would be 609 years before any government in England dared to try it again.
Within a hundred years, serfdom in England had effectively died out.
Not because the powerful chose to free their people. Because the powerful had learned what happened when they refused ๐๏ธ
The lesson did not die. The Putney Debates. The Levellers. The Chartists. The Tolpuddle Martyrs. The Suffragettes. Every uprising drew on what happened at Smithfield.
In 1990, a Prime Minister tried to bring the Poll Tax back. 200,000 people marched on London again. Following the same route the peasants took 600 years earlier.
The tax was withdrawn within a year. Within months, the Prime Minister was gone.
The powerful learned the same lesson. They always learn the same lesson.
Every right we have today was taken, not given. By people like the 50,000 on Blackheath.
๐ Read the full story, get the lesson plan, share the facts โ
https://t.co/16ieEBMbiK
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They are still here ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ
In every protest. In every refusal. In every "enough" spoken to a power that demanded too much.
Same faces. Same blood. Same island ๐ฌ๐ง
This is our island. This is our story. This is our culture to keep ๐
Every story we tell, a supporter paid to keep alive.
Without them, these stories stay in the past.
Without you, the next one never comes out.
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Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
In 600 AD, an English king wrote the first law in our language.
He priced your thumb at 20 shillings and your finger at just 9. ๐คฏ
He gave women the right to own property. ๐ฌ๐ง
He bound himself, the king, by the very first judgement.
Six hundred years before Magna Carta.
Three hundred years before England was a nation.
His name was Aethelberht. King of Kent.
He wrote it in English. Not Latin. Not the language of the Church.
Around 90 judgements. From the hair on the head to the nail on the toe โ every injury had a price.
Knocking off a man's hat cost 6 shillings. Twice the price of a punch on the nose. ๐ฉ
And then it did something extraordinary. โจ
A widow could keep half her husband's estate.
She could leave with her children.
She could choose.
In the year 600.
The original was lost. โ๏ธ
But one English monk at Rochester saved it in 1120.
UNESCO calls it the birth of English as a language of the page.
The English have been writing their own laws ever since. ๐
If you want to preserve the past and help write the next chapter ๐
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Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๐ฌ๐ง Caesar called them barbarians. They had already made THIS. ๐ก๏ธ
In 1857, dredgers clearing the Thames near Chelsea Bridge pulled something from the silt ๐
They washed it clean.
A bronze shield. 27 red glass studs. Worked by hand ๐ก๏ธ
The dredger had never seen anything like it.
This is the story of the Battersea Shield ๐ฌ๐ง
It was sent to the British Museum ๐๏ธ The curators dated it to the late Iron Age. 2,000 years old. Older than England. Older than Rome's arrival here.
Who made it?
Britons did. At a workbench in a roundhouse, by firelight ๐ฅ They beat the bronze. They set the red glass. It took months.
But this shield was not for battle โ๏ธ The bronze was too thin to stop a blade.
It was made to be given.
Their rivers were sacred. At dawn ๐ they raised the shield. And gave it to the Thames ๐
It sank.
The Romans wrote them down โ๏ธ Julius Caesar ๐ wrote that the barbaric Britons painted themselves blue. But this shield was already centuries old when he wrote that. Its makers knew how to set red glass into bronze.
2,000 years passed. Rome came. And went. Saxons came. Normans came. England rose. Britain rose. The shield stayed where it was.
Until 1857.
Now it hangs in the British Museum ๐๏ธ
It is one of many.
Stone by stone. Shield by shield ๐ก๏ธ
Made by Britons. Inherited by the British ๐ฌ๐ง
Will you help us spread our history to those who need to hear? ๐๐
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Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
There was a time when every adult in Britain owned at least one woollen jumper that had been knitted by a relative.
An Aran in cream bรกinรญn, smelling faintly of lanolin because the wool had never been scoured. A Fair Isle in eight muted colours from the dyer in Lerwick. A Guernsey in tight navy worsted from a port on the Channel. The yarn came off sheep grazing the same hillsides a great-grandfather had grazed sheep on. It was carded, spun, and knitted by a woman who had been doing it since she was nine.
The jumper lasted twenty years. It was warm when wet. It was naturally flame-retardant and did not melt onto your skin if a spark from the galley stove landed on it, which was not a hypothetical concern on a fishing boat.
The mill towns of Yorkshire and the Borders ran on this. Bradford alone had seventy-three worsted mills by 1836 and considerably more by 1900. Hebden Bridge, Halifax, Hawick, Galashiels, every river valley a chimney, every chimney a wage packet for the village around it.
Most of them are flats now. Or coffee shops. Or empty.
The decline started in the 1950s. By 1995 the British Wool Marketing Board had ninety-one thousand registered producers. By 2015 it had forty-six thousand. A British sheep fleece in 2026 is, in many cases, worth less than the cost of paying the shearer to remove it. Some farmers compost the wool. Some pay to have it taken away as agricultural waste. The same fleece their grandfathers had clothed the country with is being treated as a disposal problem.
The jumper in your wardrobe is now polyester, manufactured in Bangladesh from petroleum, shedding microplastic fibres into the washing machine on every cycle, most of them ending up in the ocean and staying there for the next three hundred years.
The sheep is still on the hillside. Still growing the fleece. Still needing the shear.
Waiting for someone to remember what it was for.
๐ฌ๐ง In 1670, 12 Englishmen REFUSED. ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟโ
To convict an innocent man.
A London judge tried to break them. He locked them in a Newgate cell for 3 weeks. No food. No water. No light. No fire.
They held the line.
This is the story of Bushel's Case.
On 14 August 1670, soldiers raided a Quaker meeting on Gracechurch Street, London. The Conventicle Act of 1664 had banned non-Anglican worship. The soldiers arrested William Penn, a young Quaker preacher, and his older companion William Mead. The charge: unlawful assembly.
They were taken to the Old Bailey.
12 London merchants were sworn to judge them. The foreman was a merchant named Edward Bushel.
The judge demanded guilty.
The jury returned NOT GUILTY.
The judge refused the verdict. He sent them back.
They returned the same.
And again. Three times.
The judge fined each juror 40 marks in British pound sterling, or imprisonment. They refused to pay. He sent all 12 to Newgate.
3 weeks. No meat. No drink. No fire. No tobacco.
They held the line.
Edward Bushel applied for a writ of habeas corpus. The case came before Chief Justice Sir John Vaughan in the Court of Common Pleas.
In November 1670, Vaughan ruled:
No jury can be punished for its verdict. Ever.
The 12 walked free.
And every jury after them carried the line that 12 London merchants held in 1670.
At the Old Bailey today, their names are carved into the wall.
The stones remember.
They were Englishmen. They held the line in spite of every opposing force.
The British spirit.
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We built the world's freedoms.
Charter by charter. Jury by jury.
12 held the line for us.
Will you help hold the line for the next generation? ๐๐
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Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
An appreciation post for the 1.5 billion cattle currently on Earth, quietly holding the whole thing together while receiving nothing but criticism in return.
Consider, for a moment, what these animals actually do:
- They turn grass, a thing no human can digest, into steak, a thing every human thrives on
- They graze the two-thirds of farmland that grows nothing else, asking for no thanks and receiving none
- They carry the most bioavailable iron, B12, and zinc on the planet, and deliver it on the hoof
- They produce butter, which on its own would justify the entire arrangement
- They fertilise the soil for free, through a process we are all too polite to describe in detail
- They build topsoil and sequester carbon into pasture, while being blamed, somehow, for the reverse
- They give us tallow, leather, marrow, suet, and gelatine, with no waste and no complaints
- They restore land that crops have exhausted, turning the worn-out and the marginal back into something living
- They stand in the rain for years on end and never once bring it up
Ten thousand years of domestication. Ten thousand years of being the most useful animal in the field, the foundation of the food system, and a keystone of every landscape lucky enough to hold them.
They are not the problem with the planet's future. They are, quite plainly, the shape of it.
We repaid all of this by putting them on the front of climate reports.
Magnificent animals. Owed an apology.
๐ฟ๐ฌ๐ง Every spring, in some corners of ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟEngland๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ, a strange thing still happens.
A priest walks through the streets in robes.
Behind him, a group of children carry long willow wands taller than themselves.
They stop at certain stones, certain trees, certain spots on the pavement.
And they beat them.
๐ณ This is a ceremony called Beating the Bounds. It is at least a thousand years old.
A thousand years ago, there were no maps. The land was learned by foot.
Anglo-Saxon villages walked their boundaries every spring to remember where their parish ended and their neighbour's began.
A boundary that you had walked, you could remember. A boundary that you had beaten with a stick, you could remember even better.
โ๏ธ The ceremony had legal weight. If a parish boundary was disputed in court, men who had walked it as boys could give evidence.
One man's seventy-year-old memory was enough to settle a parish lawsuit.
๐ฅ In 1645, Oliver Cromwell banned it. The Puritans thought the procession too Catholic.
The Restoration brought it back.
๐ In most of England, the ceremony faded with the coming of accurate maps.
But in certain places, it never stopped.
At St Michael at the North Gate in Oxford. At All Hallows by the Tower in London. At Helston in Cornwall. At the Tower of London itself.
In some parishes, the ceremony has been walked for over 600 years without interruption.
The same parishes. The same boundary stones. The same willow wands. The same simple act of remembering where you are.
โ๏ธ We did not need a state to teach us our land.
We taught ourselves.
๐ฌ๐ง The British write their own history. ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ณ๓ ฃ๓ ด๓ ฟ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ท๓ ฌ๓ ณ๓ ฟ๐
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
Help us remember who we are.๐๐
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Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๐ฌ๐ง๐ฌ Open your kitchen drawer. Pick up a knife.
The metal you are holding was invented by a Sheffield steelworker's son.
His name was Harry Brearley. He was born in Sheffield in 1871. He left school at 12 and went to work in the same steelworks as his father. โ๏ธ
He educated himself in chemistry at night, by candlelight, in evening classes.
By his early forties, he was running the Brown-Firth Research Laboratory.
In 1912, the British military gave him a problem. Their rifle barrels were wearing out too quickly from the heat of repeated firing. They needed a steel that could survive higher temperatures.
He was solving a different problem.
On 13 August 1913, Brearley cast an alloy with 12.8% chromium. He took a polished sample. He left it on a workbench. Weeks later, he came back.
๐ฅ Every other sample had rusted. His one had not.
A steel that would never rust.
He took it to his employers. They were not interested. He took it to the Sheffield cutlers. They told him it could not be sharpened. The talk of the town was that Harry Brearley had invented a knife that would not cut.
He persisted.
โ๏ธ He found a cutler called Ernest Stuart at the Portland Works who tested the steel with vinegar and lemon juice. The blade did not stain.
Stuart suggested a new name for it. Not rustless steel.
Stainless steel.
Within a decade, Sheffield was the stainless steel capital of the world. Within a century, stainless steel was in every kitchen, every hospital, every operating theatre, every kitchen sink, every skyscraper, every spacecraft. ๐
Harry Brearley never grew rich from his invention.
He did not invent for money. He invented for the country.
He died in 1948, still in Sheffield, still working class.
โ๏ธ Every modern thing that does not rust began in a Sheffield laboratory. By accident. In the hands of a steelworker's son.
๐ฌ๐ง The British write their own history. They always have.
Help us remember who we are. Help us remember every British achievement. ๐๐
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Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง