Eagle Ironworks, Oxford

The company specialised in iron castings including lamp-posts, manhole covers, ornamental ironwork and agricultural machinery.

[1][6] William Grafton became a partner and in 1830 Carter moved to the Eagle Foundry in Leamington Hastings, Warwickshire.

[1] The company responded by adding a new smith shop and foundry to the Eagle Ironworks, designed by local architect William Wilkinson and completed in 1879.

[1] In the decade after becoming a limited company, Lucy's accordingly increased and diversified the Eagle Ironworks buildings, including a north-lit factory extension designed by George Gardiner and completed in 1901.

[11] Early in the 20th century the poet and short story writer A. E. Coppard (1878–1957) worked at the Eagle Ironworks, as recounted in his autobiography It's Me, O Lord!

[13] The story includes a fictitious "Randolph Lucy", a 17th-century alchemist with an eagle-demon who had his laboratory on nearby Juxon Street.

Gateway to the former Lucy's Eagle Ironworks on Walton Well Road in Oxford .
Iron eagle on a gatepost at the former Eagle Ironworks.
A utility plate in Beaumont Street bearing the name Lucy & Co.
The Oxford Canal from Walton Well Road in 2010. The modern apartments by the canal to the left have replaced the former Lucy's Ironworks.