In 1823, he opened a hardware store at 54
High Holborn. This was followed in 1826 by a workshop to make
woodscrews based in
Sunbury-on-Thames. The Sunbury factory was powered by a
waterwheel and Nettlefold saw the importance of motive power when he took advantage of
steam power in a new factory in Baskerville Place, off
Broad Street, Birmingham. He renamed the business Nettlefold and Sons, Ltd., and it expanded rapidly in London and Birmingham. In 1854, Nettlefold acquired the opportunity to purchase a licence to manufacture to a U.S.
patent for a novel woodscrew. The licence, and the establishment of a new factory, demanded an investment of
£ 30,000. Nettlefold sought and obtained the involvement of his brother-in-law as equal partner for an investment of £10,000 and the two established a factory in
Smethwick, leaving its management to their sons, Edward John and
Joseph Henry Nettlefold, and Joseph Chamberlain. ==References==