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 162,258 pages of information and 244,500 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.

De Grave, Short and Co

From Graces Guide
Revision as of 09:16, 4 April 2017 by PaulF (talk | contribs)
Brass Scales. 'De Grave, Short and Co'.
Brass Scales Detail.
1879. Standard measures of length.

of 59 St Martin's-le-Grand; and 102 Naylor Road, London S. E. 15.(see scales)

From 1817 to 1844 the business was known as De Grave and Son, at 59 St Martin's-le-Grand.

From 1845 it was De Grave Short and Co, presumably involving Samuel Robinson Short

1845 presumably William Fanner joined and the firm became De Grave, Short and Fanner[1]

By 1851 William Fanner, scale maker, was living at 59 St Martins with his family[2]

1851 De Grave, Short and Fanner exhibited at the Great Exhibition

1871 William Fanner died

1882 Listed. De Grave, Short and Co. scale, weight & measure makers to Her Majesty's standards department, board of trade, royal mint, general post office & the assay office, goldsmiths' hall, manufacturers of bullion, assay & chemical balances & weights (prize medals, 1851 & 186z), 59 St. Martin's-le-Grand EC'[3]

1885 De Grave, Short and Co were awarded a prize at the Inventions Exhibition for improvements in balances[4]

1889 Dissolution of the Partnership between Henry Munday Clark and William Christopher Fanner, carrying on business under the style or firm of De Grave, Short, and Co, at No. 59, St. Martin's-le-Grand, in the city of London, as Scale, Weight, and Measure Makers and Vendors[5]

1920 The firm were tenants of a factory in Peckham[6]

1922 The firm became part of Averys

1925 Averys acquired L. Oertling

1934 Albert William Harrington joined De Grave Short, Peckham, as a trainee in Small Beams

1935 Harrington moved to the Oertling section; fast progress to foreman in balance assembly.

1942 Harrington began making balances in his garden shed. At some unknown date this grew into commercial making, selling through H. M. Stanley. He was still employed at Oertling.

c.1946 Harrington left Oertling; he was by then foreman in fine balance repairs at No. 23 Charterhouse Street, beneath the De Grave Short showroom. With Henry Morton Stanley he set up Stanton Instruments Ltd.


See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. Science Museum website
  2. 1851 census
  3. 1882 Post Office Directory
  4. The Times, Aug 13, 1885
  5. London Gazette 3 May 1889
  6. The Times May 04, 1920