Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,257 pages of information and 244,498 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Allen and Hanburys

From Graces Guide
Bynol Malt and Oil.
July 1887.
July 1887.
July 1887.
1891.
1893.
June 1893.
October 1893.
October 1893.
1895.
January 1899.
1905.
1905. Allenbury's Diet.
October 1908.
October 1908.
1910.
August 1910.
June 1911.
June 1911.
March 1919. Allenbury's Diet.
July 1919.
1921.
1921.
November 1924.
November 1927.
December 1928.
January 1929. Vapo-Cresolene.
January 1929. Diet.
1931.
June 1933.
December 1933.
January 1934.
December 1934.
December 1934.
December 1934.
December 1934.
April 1935.
April 1935.
January 1936.
September 1936.
November 1938.
March 1939.
May 1939.
June 1939.
December 1939.

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December 1939. Haliborange.
September 1940.
July 1945.
March 1949.
November 1951.
1956.
1957.
December 1960.
1961.
Pastilles tin.
Rusks.
Malted rusks tin.

Allenbury's of Bethnal Green, London, E2. Telephone: Bishopsgate 3201 (12 lines). Cables: "Allen Hanburys, London". (1947). An important part of their production was special dietary products for invalids and children, including Allenburys Malted Rusks.

1715 Silvanus Bevan established Plough Court Pharmacy off Lombard Street

By 1736 Silvanus was in partnership with his younger brother Timothy (1705-87).

c.1765 After Silvanus's death the firm became Timothy Bevan and Sons, Druggists and Chymists. They sold medicines, either from imported or home-grown materials, and some medical equipment. The shop was carried on by Timothy's youngest son Joseph Gurney Bevan (1753-1814).

1792 William Allen joined as a clerk.

1795 Allen was made partner. Bevan passed the company to Samuel Mildred (1759-1839) and William Allen, which was then renamed Mildred and Allen

1797 Mildred retired but Allen continued in a partnership with his fellow Quaker, Luke Howard (who took charge of their new laboratory in Plaistow). The company became known as Allen and Howard

1805 the laboratory was moved to Stratford

1806 Allen and Howard separated their business interests; the company was renamed William Allen and Co. Howard founded his own firm (see Howards and Sons).

1808 Daniel Hanbury joined the pharmacy (sponsored by his uncle, William Allen)

1824 Daniel Hanbury and Cornelius Hanbury were taken into partnership as was John Thomas Barry (1789-1864), originally a clerk with the firm which became Allen, Hanburys and Barry.

1841 William Allen died

1856 Thomas retired. The firm became Allen and Hanbury. The Hanbury family ran the firm for many generations.

1868 Daniel and Cornelius Hanbury (cousins) became the two active partners in Allen and Hanbury's (on retirement of Daniel's father).

1870s Company's main products were cod liver oil, malt products, pastilles, jujubes and milk food for infants.

1874 A new plant was established at Bethnal Green, London, with foods and surgical instruments an important part of the business.

1893 The company was registered on 13 December, to acquire the business of wholesale and retail chemists and manufacturers of the firm of the same name. [1]

1896/8 Bought the old mill at Ware to construct their Ware factory; their packaging showed views of the River Lea at Ware.

1923 The company started to manufacture insulin, and its annual turnover had reached £1 million.

1947 Listed Exhibitor British Industries Fair. Manufacturers of a complete range of Stainless Steel Surgical Instruments, Operation Tables, Hospital Sterilizers and Furniture. "Bonochord" Hearing Aids of the Deaf. Surgical Sutures. (Olympia, Ground Floor, Stand No. A1032) [2]

1951 Lixen brand.

1958 Acquired by Glaxo but continued as Allen Hanburys until 1978.

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908
  2. 1947 British Industries Fair p10
  • [1] Business History of Speciality Retailers
  • [2] Francis Frith Website
  • Trademarked. A History of Well-Known Brands - from Aertex to Wright's Coal Tar by David Newton. Pub: Sutton Publishing 2008 ISBN 978-0-7509-4590-5
  • Archives of the British chemical industry, 1750-1914: a handlist. By Peter J. T. Morris and Colin A. Russell. Edited by John Graham Smith. 1988.