One of the most important figures in the history of Doagh, and a true entrepreneur in Ulster’s manufacturing history, was John Rowan.
A former pupil at William Galt’s Sunday school and avid browser of the library’s books, Rowan operated the Speedwell forge, which he established in Doagh in 1824. Here he was assisted by his sons and a small team of skilled workers. In the Ordnance Survey Memoir for Doagh it was noted that:
This establishment is kept in the neatest order and exhibits considerable economy of time and labour. All manner of fittings for machinery, steam engines, farming implements and ordinary smith work are executed here in a superior manner. Mr Rowan is a self-taught mechanic, and all his workmen (including his three sons), 16 in number, have served their apprenticeships to him.46
In the early 1830s Rowan began to devise and build a steam-powered road vehicle. The first mention in the press of this steam coach dates from February 1835 when it was reported that Rowan had ‘just completed a Steam Coach, on an entirely new principle’.47
It was believed that the steam coach would be ready for trial around the middle of April and would hopefully commence road journeys immediately afterwards. It was brought to Belfast on 1 January 1836 where it drew huge crowds of amazed onlookers.
On 5 January Rowan drove it through the streets of Belfast, again to great excitement with a band adding to the merriment. Unfortunately for Rowan, he found potential investors more interested in the railway transportation and failed to secure their support.