After the death of his father, he was brought up by his grandmotherHelene Amalie Krupp, who had, in 1800, purchased the Sterkrade Works. Here Friedrich endeavored to make cast steel, the secret of which was carefully guarded in England.[2]
With Gottlob Jacobs, an engineer, Krupp made his first experiments at the Sterkrade Works, and after the sale of the plant in 1808 continued his attempts independently at Essen. In 1810 he founded a small forging plant near Essen, and in 1815 formed a partnership with Friedrich Nicolai for the production of cast steel, a product which was found excellent for certain purposes, such as mint dies, stamps for buttons, etc.[3]
Yet the demand was not sufficient to keep the works in operation, and soon after 1820 Krupp was obliged to give up his house to occupy a small one-story laborer's cottage near his plant. The hut was long preserved in the midst of the gigantic Krupp works. After his death, the business was taken over by his widow Therese Krupp. Shortly before his death, he confided to his son Alfred the secret of making cast steel, which the latter developed successfully.
References
^Friedrich Carl Georg Müller, Felix Schmidt (1898). "Krupp's Steel Works". W. Heinemann. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
^"Krupp AG | German company". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 24 October 2017. In 1811 Friedrich Krupp and two partners founded in Essen a plant to produce English cast steel and related products, called a Gussstahlfabrik (cast-steel factory).