Education
Richards was educated at Monmouth and Christ’s Hospital. He studied the economy of utilizing the waste heat in blast furnace gases.
Richards was educated at Monmouth and Christ’s Hospital. He studied the economy of utilizing the waste heat in blast furnace gases.
He was an apprentice at the Rhymney Iron and Steel Works. Richards worked as assistant, and chief engineer of the Tredegar Iron Works. By 1871 he was general manager of the Ebbw Vale Iron Works, where he planned the Bessemer Steel Department.
In 1875, Richards was General Manager of the Eston Ironworks of Bolckow Vaughan and Company, North Yorkshire.
These included three hæmatite blast furnaces, and his work with Sidney Gilchrist Thomas contributed to the development of the Gilchrist-Thomas process. In 1884 he was awarded the Bessemer Gold Medal by the Council of the Iron and Steel Institute, for his work in steel manufacturing.
In 1888, he worked on the manufacture of wrought iron, at the Low Moor Works south of Bradford. He retired in 1898. Richards was President of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in 1896 and 1897, and was President of the Iron and Steel Institute, of which he was an Original Member, in 1894.
He was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant for Monmouthshire on 11 April 1902.