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Forges de Caussanus à Bruniquel dans le Tarn-et-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine industriel
Forge
Tarn-et-Garonne

Forges de Caussanus

    Lieu-dit « Les Forges »
    82800 Bruniquel
Forges de Caussanus
Forges de Caussanus
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1821
Forges Foundation
1826-1830
Construction and start-up
1880
Stopping forges
1884
Reconversion to phosphate plant
1991
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Housing of workers; two entrance pavilions with the stone gate; blast furnace building; Building of the forge (Case B 8, 10, 841): inscription by order of 17 June 1991

Key figures

Jean-Baptiste Garrigou - Founder of forges Created the site in 1821 after Courbeval.
Augustin de Lapeyrière - Rector and developer Buyer in 1821, began construction in 1826.

Origin and history

The Caussanus forges, located at Bruniquel in the Tarn-et-Garonne, were founded in 1821 by Jean-Baptiste Garrigou, taking over the activity of his forges of Courbeval (created in 1807). Quickly sold to his brother-in-law Augustin de Lapeyrière, they experienced a major expansion from 1826 with the construction of a complete industrial complex: two charcoal blast furnaces, three refinery fires, rolling mills, and ancillary buildings (housing, workshops, coal halls). The activity officially started in 1830, marking the climax of the production of cast iron from the local ores of Penne and Puycelsi.

The site, characterized by a neat architecture (pyramidal massif in cut stone, classical pediment casting hall), is later attached to the Compagnie du chemin de fer de Paris à Orléans. Its decline began with the arrest of the forges in 1880, replaced by a phosphate plant (1884), then a chemical plant (Bozel-Malétra) after the Second World War, before its definitive abandonment. Classified as a Historical Monument in 1991, the Caussanus forges are today an exceptional vestige of the regional steel industry, with protected elements such as blast furnaces, entrance pavilions and workers' housing.

Together, we illustrate the technological and economic changes of the 19th century in Occitanie, where metallurgy, initially dependent on charcoal and local resources, gradually gives way to new industries. The conservation of the site, despite its partial reconversion, offers a material testimony of the steel know-how and the social organization of the factories (workers' housing, the house of the director), reflecting the lasting footprint of these activities in the territory of Bruniquel and Tarn-et-Garonne.

External links