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 162,240 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.

Difference between revisions of "E. H. Bentall and Co"

From Graces Guide
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[[Image:Im19091106Auto-Bentall.jpg|thumb| November 1909. ]]
[[Image:Im19091106Auto-Bentall.jpg|thumb| November 1909. ]]
[[Image:Im20110529Car-Bent-i750.jpg|thumb| 1922. bentall Pioneer 3-4 hp. ]]
[[image:Im090510B-Bentall50s.jpg|thumb| 1950s. ]]
[[image:Im090510B-Bentall50s.jpg|thumb| 1950s. ]]
[[image:Im090523L-Bentall.jpg|thumb| ]]
[[image:Im090523L-Bentall.jpg|thumb| ]]

Revision as of 16:48, 29 June 2011

1906 Q4.
1906 Q4. 8hp. Two-cylinder.
February 1907.
November 1909.
1922. bentall Pioneer 3-4 hp.
1950s.
Im090523L-Bentall.jpg
Im090523L-Bentall1.jpg
Im090523L-Bentall2.jpg
Im090604CCS-Bentall.jpg
Im0909CSF-Bentall.jpg
Im20100829Sh-Bentall.jpg
Im20100912Ex-Bentall1.jpg
Roller Mill.
Im20110529St-Bent-i255.jpg
Oil Cake Mill.

of Heybridge, Maldon, Essex

  • 1805 Company founded by William Bentall on land near to the Chelmer and Blackwater canal at Heybridge
  • 1839 The company was named as E. H. Bentall and Co when the company was managed by Edward Hammond Bentall the son of William
  • 1894 June. Royal Agricultural Society's Show. Grater, or Root Cutting Machine. [1]
  • 1906 Announced they were introducing 8, 10 and 16-hp cars. [2]
  • 1908 Started production of a range of engines initially from 2.5 to 7 hp and later extending the range to 9 hp.
  • 1912 Production of Bentall cars ceased in 1912 (some lists say 1913) after about 100 cars had been built.
  • 1912 Introduced a 1.5-hp two-stroke engine but it was soon replaced by the Pioneer model. The Pioneer range came in models from 1.5 to 12 hp.
  • 1914 Specialities: Chaff Cutters, Grinding Mills, Cattle Food preparing Machines, Petrol and Oil Engines and Engineers' Bright Steel Nuts, Bolts etc. [3]
  • 1914 The works was employing some six to seven hundred hands with the works covering an area of about fourteen acres
  • 1925 Ceased production of the vertical engine
  • 1933. In 1933, E. E. Bentall purchased the ordinary shares of the company from the receivers of Agricultural and General Engineers.
  • WWII. Production set up for the manufacture of small machine parts for the aircraft for Handley-Page. Also produced complete assemblies such as tail fins and bomb floor for the new Halifax bombers
  • 1946 Public company with Charles Bentall as Chairman
  • 1961 Manufacturers of field implements, barn machinery, self-filling drinking bowls, grain handling and storage plant, galvanised ware, brewery equipment, dairy equipment, coffee and rice plantation machinery. 500 employees. [4]

In 1961 the company was taken over by the Acrow group of companies.

  • 1984 Acrow went into receivership. The business founded nearly 180 years before closed in Heybridge.

See Also

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Sources of Information

  • [1] It's about Maldon