The Fatal Alfred Herbert Scandal: How the World's Biggest Machine Tool Empire Collapsed
The Fatal Alfred Herbert Scandal: How the World's Biggest Machine Tool Empire Collapsed At its peak, Alfred Herbert Ltd was not merely a company — it was a colossus, the single largest machine tool manufacturer on the entire planet, and the beating industrial heart of Coventry. The Edgwick Works was a deafening, sprawling city of iron and steel, a place where thousands of highly skilled engineers shaped metal with a precision that quite literally built Britain's war machine through two World Wars. Walk into almost any British factory floor in the 20th century and you would find them: row upon row of distinctive green Herbert lathes, humming and cutting with quiet authority. The name Herbert was not a brand — it was a benchmark, a byword for engineering excellence that echoed from the shop floors of Birmingham to the shipyards of Glasgow and far beyond. But inside the boardroom, a catastrophic arrogance had taken root. When Japanese manufacturers began flooding the global market with CNC — Computer Numerical Control — machines in the 1970s, ushering in a revolution that would permanently transform precision engineering, the executives of Alfred Herbert did the unthinkable: they looked at the future and refused to believe it. Resting on a century of dominance, the men at the top dismissed the Japanese challenge as a passing novelty, too proud and too comfortable to act until it was far, far too late. By the time Herbert scrambled desperately to digitize, the gap was unbridgeable. A government bailout through the National Enterprise Board poured millions into a sinking ship, buying time but never buying salvation. This is the story of how the world's greatest machine tool empire destroyed itself through sheer, inexcusable boardroom complacency — how 8,000 of Britain's most skilled engineers were thrown onto the streets of Coventry when the company was brutally liquidated in the early 1980s, how the legendary Edgwick Works was torn to the ground and replaced with a retail park, and how, in the space of a single decade, Britain handed the entire global machine tool industry to Japan and Germany without a fight — a loss so total, so permanent, and so avoidable that it stands as one of the most damning industrial scandals this country has ever produced.

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