J. B. Edmondson of Salford
J. B. Edmondson succeeded his father, Thomas Edmondson, in the railway ticket printing business.
1863 Slater's Directory of Manchester and Salford, 1863 lists John B Edmondson as patentee and manufacturer of machines for printing railway tickets, and railway ticket printer, Cotham Street, Strangeways. House: Kersal Mount, Vine Street, Higher Broughton. Note: Cotham Street was a short cul-de-sac, whose residents at that time included George Gent, machine maker of (Kendall and Gent) at No. 11. A few years later, Strangeways Prison would loom over Cotham Street
1895 J B Edmondson listed in Slater's Manchester & Salford Directory, 1895 (Part 2) as a railway and tramway ticket printer and manufacturer of printing machines, dating presses, ticket cases, and all other apparatus for the issuing and dating of railway and other tickets; originator and inventor of the railway ticket system. Knowsley Works, Knowsley Street, Cheetham. Note: The 1922 O.S. map shows the works to be on the north side of Knowsley Street, with the west wing facing Cambridge Street. This was close to the eastern corner of Strangeways Prison.
1913 New Patents: '23283.—A. W. Edmondson, T. J. Edmondson, W. B. Edmondson, and G. Edmondson, trading as J. B. Edmondson. Railway ticket dating presses. 15 October, 1913. [1]
See Also
Sources of Information
- ↑ Railway News - Saturday 25 October 1913