Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 115342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,239 pages of information and 244,492 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.

Exide

From Graces Guide
Advertising Sign.
Advertising Plaque.
1920.
1920. Ironclad-Exide.
January 1920. Exide.
January 1920.
Im2011BCCS-Exide.jpg
November 1922.
June 1923.
August 1923.
October 1925.
1926.
November 1926.
December 1927.
May 1930.
1932.
September 1933.
May 1934.
February 1935.

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October 1936.
October 1936.
February 1937.
February 1937.
August 1937.
October 1930.
December 1938.
March 1939.
1941.

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April 1944.
January 1946.
September 1947
1948.
January 1949.
March 1949.
May 1949.
September 1949.
October 1949.

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1949.
October 1949.
October 1949.
1950.
April 1951.
October 1951.
May 1952.
May 1952.
1953.
March 1953.
1954.
October 1955.
November 1958. Silver Exide.
March 1959.
Oct 1960.
Oct 1962.
April 1964.
Oct 1966.

Batteries and accumulators

The Electric Storage Battery Company, which would one day become Exide Technologies, was founded in the USA in 1888 by W.W. Gibbs, an executive at a gas company, who had seen the potential of electricity as a source of lighting. He purchased the patents of Clement Payen, a French inventor who advanced electrical storage, and began transforming those ideas into reliable commercial products.[1]

See also Wikipedia entry.

1914 Chloride made the Exide and Ironclad Exide batteries for road vehicles

1920 October. Chloride exhibited Ironclad Exide batteries for road vehicles at the Commercial Motor Exhibition at Olympia[2]

1938 Exide Company. D. P. Dunne is Chairman, E. C. McKinnon is Chief Engineer

Post-WWII Exide low tension accumulators and Drydex high tension batteries sold for use in radios (see adverts).

1989 Chloride sold the Exide Europe automotive battery business[3]


See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. [1] Exide Technologies website
  2. The Engineer of 22nd October 1920 p400
  3. The Times, May 24, 1989