The 32 pounders were cast in Rotherham, Yorkshire and bored in an industrial hamlet called Burcroft were I was born. Burcroft in on the River Don between Rotherham and Doncaster. Burcorft is just below Conisborough Castle made famous by Sir Walter Scott in Ivanhoe.
The area was mainly an agricultural community until well into the 18th century when more industries came to the area. The Walker family of Masborough, Rotherham were iron founders and lead manufacturers between 1741 and 1893. A blacksmith's shop and two cottages and stable were built at Burcroft by Walkers in 1777 on they owned land in Burcroft near the River Don. In 1778 a grinding wheel and two houses were erected, and the second Newcomen engine was installed. Joseph Walker was placed in charge at Conisbrough. In 1779 they constructed a new boring mill there for the manufacture of cannon and it was here that cannon were bored for use in the Napoleonic Wars.
After the river was canalised in the mid 18th century (Locks on the river Don were put in at Burcroft in 1776) industries such as Walkers, were sited here for commercial transport rather than for water power. Waterways were cheaper to use than was road transport and the railways had not yet come into prominence. By 1805 the ironworks had passed to John and Thomas Mullins who as forgemasters began to produce scythes, sickles, hooks and other agricultural implements. They were succeeded by William Linley and in 1847 by Thomas Booth and Sons, (Thomas and George). George took over the running of the firm in 1869 and held the business until Rawding, Blackburn and Rawding bought it in 1898. They retained the name of Booth and successfully exported their tools to all parts of Africa, Asia and the Pacific. Eventually Spear and Jackson took over the firm and made all kinds of edge tools until the closure of the works in 1976. The cottage built by Walkers were demolished in the early 1960 and the final mill building was pulled down in the 1980s.
Local historians have found cannon ball on the opposite side of the river to the works indicating the the canon may have been tested on site