Área de identidad
Código de referencia
Título
Fecha(s)
- 1742-2000 (Creación)
Nivel de descripción
Volumen y soporte
117.1 linear metres
Área de contexto
Nombre del productor
Historia biográfica
Samuel Whitbread (1720-96) of Cardington, Bedfordshire, was apprenticed in 1736 to John Wightman, a leading London brewer. In 1742 he entered into partnership with Godfrey Shewell and Thomas Shewell and acquired the Goat Brewhouse on the corner of Whitecross Street and Upper Old Street in the City of London about a quarter of a mile north of where the main brewery was to become established in Chiswell Street. They traded as Godfrey Shewell and Company and by 1749 were producing 18,000 barrels of beer a year and owned 14 public houses. As well as beer, the brewery also sold its surplus yeast and spent grains from which most of the Capital's bread was made along with much of the gin. This was in addition to almost of London's livestock that were feed on brewer's grain.
Godfrey Shewell left the partnership upon his marriage in 1748. Thomas Shewell and Whitbread acquired the Chiswell Street site, known as the King's Head Brewhouse (previously The Eagle and Child, in 1750 with the acquisition of a leasehold interest on the south side of Chiswell Street extending from Whitecross Street to the Brewery gate. He built a large porter brewery (porter being strong, black beer, made from coarse barley and scorched malt). The Goat Brewhouse, Old Street, was retained to brew pale and amber beer (pale ale is brewed with lightly roasted malt, compared to the highly roasted malts used to brew porters). Thomas Shewell retired in 1761 when Whitbread bought him out for £30,000.
Additions were made to the Chiswell Street Brewery in 1758 with the cooperage, a house for the head cooper, stables and a retail beer shop being built. The Porter Tun Room was constructed in 1760 along with a new storehouse and in 1790 land was bought on the north side of the street back to Cherry Tree Alley extending in some places to Whitecross Street.
Production at the Brewery was greatly enhanced by the introduction of steam power when Whitbread purchased a Boulton and Watt steam engine in 1785 to grind malt and pump water to the boilers. This enabled the Brewery to increase production and by 1787 the output reached 150,280 barrels. Samuel Whitbread died in 1796 by which time the Brewery was producing 200,000 barrels of beer a year and was described as the best in London. Although the introduction of steam power at Whitbread's saved much labour, the brewery still employed around 200 men and 80 horses.
Brewing required a huge amount of money and the market of hops was volatile. The time delay between the buying of hops and the selling of the beer also imposed severe restrictions on the cash flow of the business. This situation was further exacerbated by the need for the Brewery to support publicans. The Company established its own maltings located in Dereham, Whittington and King's Lynn in the county of Norfolk and also grew their own hops in the Weald of Kent at Beltring and Stilstead farms and Paddock Wood with a growing area of over four hundred acres.
After the death of Samuel Whitbread I the Brewery was run by Samuel Whitbread II (1758-1815) and his father's executors until 1799 when a partnership made up of Samuel Whitbread II, Richard Sangster, clerk, Joseph Yallowley, clerk, (both executors of Samuel Whitbread I's Will) and Timothy Brown, banker, was formed. The terms of the partnership freed Whitbread from attending personally to any business. They were joined by Joseph Goodman, Jacob Whitbread (Samuel's cousin) and Sir Benjamin Hobhouse, banker in 1800. Timothy Brown left the partnership in 1810 after an accounting dispute.
At the start of the eighteenth century the majority of the Brewery's trade was with free houses with 392 licensed victuallers in London and two hundred spread throughout the rest of the country. Along with these freehouses there were also twenty-nine leaseholds. In 1812 the business amalgamated with that of Martineau and Bland of the Lambeth Brewery, King's Arms Stairs, Lambeth, adding a further 38 leaseholds to the list bringing the total number to 91. The Lambeth Brewery closed down and the stock of beer, horses and the larger part of the machinery and utensils were transferred to the Chiswell Street Brewery. The managing partners at this time were Robert Sangster, Michael Bland, John Martineau and Joseph Martineau. By 1889, when the Company was formed from the partnership, the number of licensed houses controlled and served by the Brewery totalled many hundreds.
After Samuel Whitbread II's death in 1815 (he committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor), a new partnership was formed comprising two new partners, William Wilshere and John Farquhar. John Martineau, Joseph Martineau and Michael Bland were the managing partners. William Henry Whitbread (1796-1879), the second son of Samuel Whitbread II, joined the partnership in 1819, along with Samuel Charles Whitbread (1796-1879), his younger brother. Richard Martineau joined the partnership in 1828 as a junior partner and John Cam Hobhouse (later Lord Broughton, son of Sir Benjamin Hobhouse) became a partner in 1831.
John Martineau died in 1834 "being seized with apoplexy {he} had fallen in to the vat" in the Porter Tun Room. The jury returned a verdict of "death by the visitation of God". Charles Shaw Lefevre (MP 1830-57, later Viscount Eversley, son-in-law of Samuel Whitbread II) joined the partnership in 1840. This partnership ran for twenty years. William Whitbread (d 1879), the second son of Samuel Charles Whitbread, and John Martineau became partners in 1860, followed by F Lubbock in 1875, Samuel Whitbread III (1830-1915) in 1879, and W H Whitbread, second son of Samuel Whitbread III, in 1885.
After Viscount Eversley died in July 1889 the business was registered as a limited liability company, Whitbread and Company Limited, with Samuel Whitbread III as chairman. Brewery business had been conducted by partnerships for ninety years, the total number of partners during this period being thirty, seven of whom were members of the Whitbread family.
Throughout the latter part of the nineteenth century the Brewery expanded purchasing additional land and buildings on the north side of Chiswell Street. A tunnel under the road connected the cellars on both side of the street that occupied around five acres of space underground and the total length of the beer mains in the Brewery stretched from between two and a half to three miles. Along with the rooms normally associated with a brewery, research and control laboratories had also been built following inspiration by Louis Pasteur who undertook research at the Brewery in 1871. By 1905, at the height of production when the brewery was at its fullest extent, the freehold area of Chiswell Street was over five acres.
Production at Chiswell Street rose rapidly again with the success of bottled beer which began in 1868 following a reduction on the duty on glass. The new bottling stores were located in Worship Street, Finsbury but bottled beer proved so popular that the bottling stores had to move to larger premises at 277 Gray's Inn Road in 1869. By the middle of 1889 the Brewery was producing 336,000 barrels up to nearly 700,000 barrels by mid-1900 with profits equalling £205,000. To meet the demand for bottled beers depots were opened in Lewisham, Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool, Weston Rise, Cardiff, Manchester, Totteham, Newcastle, Poole, Hull, Leicester, Nottingham and Kingston and a new headquarters office was opened at 27 Britannia Street, London, in 1900. The first overseas depot in Brussels established in 1904, expanding to include Antwerp in 1906 followed by Liege in 1910, Paris in 1912 and Ghent in 1913. By the time the depot in Ghent was in operation more than half of the brewery's output of close to one million barrels was being bottled.
Circumstance and legislation brought in during the Great War saw production limited to 18 million barrels at the start of 1917 and then halved by March to less than a third of pre-war output. By 1918 production had fallen to 400,000 barrels and was only 100,000 barrels higher eighteen years later. Over 1000 Whitbread employees had enlisted in the War and 95 were killed either in action or from wounds sustained.
Following the purchase of the Forest Hill brewery in the early 1920s, Whitbread began experimenting with brewing 'bright' beer where the beer was matured and filtered before bottling to prevent sedimentation. The technique was a success and rolled out to the whole Whitbread brand. In the 1920s Whitbread also introduced the Double Brown which was designed to rival Guinness and was almost a recreation of Whitbread's original porter.
In the mid-1920s Whitbread was experiencing a slump in trade. Sales were down overall by an average of 34%, twice that experienced by the trade as a whole. In response Sydney Nevile, the managing director, decided upon an avid advertising campaign using popular celebrities such as Gertie Lawrence and Ronald Squire and hired a publicity manager in the form of Hal Douglas Thomson, a newspaper advertising executive. He also attempted to widen the range of products available with additions such as cider and to develop exports to the colonies although the latter was not particularly successful. However it was the popularity of Mackeson's milk stout which buoyed sales in the the late 1930s and although still a long way off their 1913 peak they were a third higher than in 1932.
Unlike the Great War of 1914-18, general beer production across the country rose rapidly during the Second World War with Whitbread's production up 50% to 914,000 barrels by 1945 - almost beating the 1912 record of 989,000. Despite mass devastation of buildings in the surrounding area due to fire raids, Whitbread's own fire brigade was able to protect the Chiswell premises. Even after the great raid on 29th December 1940, production at the plant restarted after only four days. Between 1939-1945, 565 (90%) of Whitbread's licensed public houses in London were damaged by the Blitz, with 29 completely destroyed and an additional 49 so badly damaged that they had to close.
By 1948, the Company was employing 5,000 people. In addition to Brewery workers, by the 1950s over 5000 people were employed in the cultivation and harvesting of the hop bines that were grown by the Company in Kent. New breweries were built at Luton, in 1969, Samlesbury, Lancashire, in 1972 and Magor, Gwent in 1978. The Chiswell Street Brewery ceased brewing in 1976. In 1989 the Company operated 6 breweries at Castle Eden, Durham; Magor, Gwent; Exchange Brewery, Bridge Street, Sheffield; Court Street, Faversham, Kent; Monson Avenue, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire; and Cuerdale Lane, Samlesbury, Preston, Lancashire.
During the final decades of the 20th Century, Whitbread seriously invested in the food and lodgings sectors. The Beefeater brand was launched in 1974 and Brewers Fayre followed five years later. Whitbread introduced Pizza Hut and TGI Friday's to Britain in the 1980s and adding continental-style high street brands like Costa, Cafe Rouge and Bella Pasta in the nineties. During that time Whitbread Hotel Company developed from a small number of three and four-star coaching inns and country houses, establishing Travel Inn in 1987 and securing the UK rights to the Marriott brand in 1995.
The Whitbread Beer Company was sold to Belgian brewer Interbrew in May 2000. First Quench (off-licences business) was sold in September 2000 to the Japanese investment bank Nomura (then jointly owned with Punch Group). Whitbread continues as a company with interests in hotels, restaurants and health and fitness clubs.
Whitbread acquired many companies during its brewing history including the following:
1891: H and V Nicholl's Brewery Company Limited, Anchor Brewery, Lewisham Road, Lewisham, London. Ceased to brew and premises converted into Whitbread's first branch bottling and distribution centre.
1896: Gripper Brothers, Bell Brewery, High Road, Tottenham, London (est. 1760)
1899: Matthews and Canning, Anchor Brewery, Britten Street, Chelsea, London (closed 1907)
1900: Abridge Brewery Company Limited, Anchor Brewery, Abridge, Essex
1902: Jones and Company, Steam Brewery, Brewery Road, Bromley, Kent
1920: Notting Hill Company Limited, Portland Road, Notting Hill, London with 80 tied houses
1921: F S Stowell Limited (est. 1878), later Stowells of Chelsea Limited, (wine and spirit merchants)
1924: Forest Hill Brewery Company Limited (later Whitbread's Properties Limited), Langton Rise, London
1927: Frederick Leney and Sons Limited, Phoenix Brewery, Wateringbury, Kent
1929: Jude Hanbury and Company Limited, Kent Brewery, Wateringbury, Kent
1948: Flitton's Brewery Limited, Stotford Brewery, Stotford, Bedfordshire
1951: Amey's Brewery Limited, Borough Brewery, Frenchmen's Road, Petersfield, Hampshire with 20 tied houses
1955: Dale and Company Limited, The Brewery, Gwydir Street, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire in 1955
1958: Scarsdale Brewery Company Limited, Spa Lane Brewery, Chesterfield, Derbyshire
1961:Tennant Brothers Limited, Exchange Brewery, Bridge Street, Sheffield, South Yorkshire and 700 tied houses; and John R Fielder, Titchfield Brewery, Titchfield, Hampshire (est. 1774)
1962: Norman and Pring Limited, City Brewery, Exeter, Devon with 100 tied houses; Starkey, Knight and Ford Limited, High Street, Bridgewater, Somerset with 400 tied houses and Flowers Breweries Limited, Phoenix Brewery, Park Street, Luton, Bedfordshire (closed 1969)
1963: J Nimmo and Son Limited, Castle Eden Brewery, Castle Eden, Durham and West Country Brewery Holdings Limited, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
1964: Dutton's Blackburn Brewery Limited, Salford Brewery, Bow Street, Blackburn, Lancashire (closed 1978)
1965: E Lacon and Company Limited, Flacon Brewery, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (closed 1968)
1966: James Thompson and Company Limited, Dalton Road, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria (est. 1871), wine and spirit merchants; Rhymney Breweries Limited, The Brewery, Rhymney, Mid Glamorgan (closed 1978)
1967: Isaac Tucker and Company Limited, Turk's Head Brewery, West Street, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, and 50 tied houses; Archibald Campbell, Hope and King Limited, Argyle Brewery, Chambers Street, Edinburgh, Lothian (closed 1970) and 73 tied houses; Threlfalls Chesters Limited, The Brewery, Trueman Street, Liverpool, Merseyside (closed 1982); Evan Evans Bevan Limited, Cale of Neath Brewery, Neath, West Glamorgan (closed 1971) and Fremlins Limited, Pale Ale Brewery, Earl Street, Maidstone, Kent
1968: Bentley's Yorkshire Breweries Limited, Eshaldwell Brewery, Woodlesford, Leeds, West Yorkshire (closed 1972); Richard Whitaker and Sons Limited, Seedlings Mount Brewery, Corporation Street, Halifax, West Yorkshire (closed 1969); John Young and Company Limited, Ladywell Brewery, North High Street, Fisherrow, Musselburgh, Lothian (closed 1969); Cobb and Company (Brewers) Limited, Margate Brewery, King Street, Margate, Kent; Combined Breweries (Holding) Limited, Ramsgate Brewery, Ramsgate, Kent; Strong and Company of Romsey Limited, Horse Fair Brewery, Romsey, Hampshire, with 950 tied houses
1969: R White and Sons Limited, London, soft drinks manufacturers
1971: Brickwoods Limited, Portsmouth Brewery, Admiralty Road, Portsmouth, Hampshire with 670 tied houses
1975: Long John International Limited, Scotch whisky distillers (est. 1825) with 4 distilleries at Tormore, Speyside, Laphroaig, Islay, Glenugie, Peterhead, Grampian, and Glasgow, Strathclyde, and Coates Plymouth Gin, Plymouth, Devon
Institución archivística
Historia archivística
The records of other subsidary companies were distributed according to location on the closure of the Whitbread Archives in 2000.
GB 0074 LMA/4453 1742-2000 Collection 117.1 linear metres Whitbread and Co Ltd , brewers
Samuel Whitbread (1720-96) of Cardington, Bedfordshire, was apprenticed in 1736 to John Wightman, a leading London brewer. In 1742 he entered into partnership with Godfrey Shewell and Thomas Shewell and acquired the Goat Brewhouse on the corner of Whitecross Street and Upper Old Street in the City of London about a quarter of a mile north of where the main brewery was to become established in Chiswell Street. They traded as Godfrey Shewell and Company and by 1749 were producing 18,000 barrels of beer a year and owned 14 public houses. As well as beer, the brewery also sold its surplus yeast and spent grains from which most of the Capital's bread was made along with much of the gin. This was in addition to almost of London's livestock that were feed on brewer's grain.
Godfrey Shewell left the partnership upon his marriage in 1748. Thomas Shewell and Whitbread acquired the Chiswell Street site, known as the King's Head Brewhouse (previously The Eagle and Child, in 1750 with the acquisition of a leasehold interest on the south side of Chiswell Street extending from Whitecross Street to the Brewery gate. He built a large porter brewery (porter being strong, black beer, made from coarse barley and scorched malt). The Goat Brewhouse, Old Street, was retained to brew pale and amber beer (pale ale is brewed with lightly roasted malt, compared to the highly roasted malts used to brew porters). Thomas Shewell retired in 1761 when Whitbread bought him out for £30,000.
Additions were made to the Chiswell Street Brewery in 1758 with the cooperage, a house for the head cooper, stables and a retail beer shop being built. The Porter Tun Room was constructed in 1760 along with a new storehouse and in 1790 land was bought on the north side of the street back to Cherry Tree Alley extending in some places to Whitecross Street.
Production at the Brewery was greatly enhanced by the introduction of steam power when Whitbread purchased a Boulton and Watt steam engine in 1785 to grind malt and pump water to the boilers. This enabled the Brewery to increase production and by 1787 the output reached 150,280 barrels. Samuel Whitbread died in 1796 by which time the Brewery was producing 200,000 barrels of beer a year and was described as the best in London. Although the introduction of steam power at Whitbread's saved much labour, the brewery still employed around 200 men and 80 horses.
Brewing required a huge amount of money and the market of hops was volatile. The time delay between the buying of hops and the selling of the beer also imposed severe restrictions on the cash flow of the business. This situation was further exacerbated by the need for the Brewery to support publicans. The Company established its own maltings located in Dereham, Whittington and King's Lynn in the county of Norfolk and also grew their own hops in the Weald of Kent at Beltring and Stilstead farms and Paddock Wood with a growing area of over four hundred acres.
After the death of Samuel Whitbread I the Brewery was run by Samuel Whitbread II (1758-1815) and his father's executors until 1799 when a partnership made up of Samuel Whitbread II, Richard Sangster, clerk, Joseph Yallowley, clerk, (both executors of Samuel Whitbread I's Will) and Timothy Brown, banker, was formed. The terms of the partnership freed Whitbread from attending personally to any business. They were joined by Joseph Goodman, Jacob Whitbread (Samuel's cousin) and Sir Benjamin Hobhouse, banker in 1800. Timothy Brown left the partnership in 1810 after an accounting dispute.
At the start of the eighteenth century the majority of the Brewery's trade was with free houses with 392 licensed victuallers in London and two hundred spread throughout the rest of the country. Along with these freehouses there were also twenty-nine leaseholds. In 1812 the business amalgamated with that of Martineau and Bland of the Lambeth Brewery, King's Arms Stairs, Lambeth, adding a further 38 leaseholds to the list bringing the total number to 91. The Lambeth Brewery closed down and the stock of beer, horses and the larger part of the machinery and utensils were transferred to the Chiswell Street Brewery. The managing partners at this time were Robert Sangster, Michael Bland, John Martineau and Joseph Martineau. By 1889, when the Company was formed from the partnership, the number of licensed houses controlled and served by the Brewery totalled many hundreds.
After Samuel Whitbread II's death in 1815 (he committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor), a new partnership was formed comprising two new partners, William Wilshere and John Farquhar. John Martineau, Joseph Martineau and Michael Bland were the managing partners. William Henry Whitbread (1796-1879), the second son of Samuel Whitbread II, joined the partnership in 1819, along with Samuel Charles Whitbread (1796-1879), his younger brother. Richard Martineau joined the partnership in 1828 as a junior partner and John Cam Hobhouse (later Lord Broughton, son of Sir Benjamin Hobhouse) became a partner in 1831.
John Martineau died in 1834 "being seized with apoplexy {he} had fallen in to the vat" in the Porter Tun Room. The jury returned a verdict of "death by the visitation of God". Charles Shaw Lefevre (MP 1830-57, later Viscount Eversley, son-in-law of Samuel Whitbread II) joined the partnership in 1840. This partnership ran for twenty years. William Whitbread (d 1879), the second son of Samuel Charles Whitbread, and John Martineau became partners in 1860, followed by F Lubbock in 1875, Samuel Whitbread III (1830-1915) in 1879, and W H Whitbread, second son of Samuel Whitbread III, in 1885.
After Viscount Eversley died in July 1889 the business was registered as a limited liability company, Whitbread and Company Limited, with Samuel Whitbread III as chairman. Brewery business had been conducted by partnerships for ninety years, the total number of partners during this period being thirty, seven of whom were members of the Whitbread family.
Throughout the latter part of the nineteenth century the Brewery expanded purchasing additional land and buildings on the north side of Chiswell Street. A tunnel under the road connected the cellars on both side of the street that occupied around five acres of space underground and the total length of the beer mains in the Brewery stretched from between two and a half to three miles. Along with the rooms normally associated with a brewery, research and control laboratories had also been built following inspiration by Louis Pasteur who undertook research at the Brewery in 1871. By 1905, at the height of production when the brewery was at its fullest extent, the freehold area of Chiswell Street was over five acres.
Production at Chiswell Street rose rapidly again with the success of bottled beer which began in 1868 following a reduction on the duty on glass. The new bottling stores were located in Worship Street, Finsbury but bottled beer proved so popular that the bottling stores had to move to larger premises at 277 Gray's Inn Road in 1869. By the middle of 1889 the Brewery was producing 336,000 barrels up to nearly 700,000 barrels by mid-1900 with profits equalling £205,000. To meet the demand for bottled beers depots were opened in Lewisham, Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool, Weston Rise, Cardiff, Manchester, Totteham, Newcastle, Poole, Hull, Leicester, Nottingham and Kingston and a new headquarters office was opened at 27 Britannia Street, London, in 1900. The first overseas depot in Brussels established in 1904, expanding to include Antwerp in 1906 followed by Liege in 1910, Paris in 1912 and Ghent in 1913. By the time the depot in Ghent was in operation more than half of the brewery's output of close to one million barrels was being bottled.
Circumstance and legislation brought in during the Great War saw production limited to 18 million barrels at the start of 1917 and then halved by March to less than a third of pre-war output. By 1918 production had fallen to 400,000 barrels and was only 100,000 barrels higher eighteen years later. Over 1000 Whitbread employees had enlisted in the War and 95 were killed either in action or from wounds sustained.
Following the purchase of the Forest Hill brewery in the early 1920s, Whitbread began experimenting with brewing 'bright' beer where the beer was matured and filtered before bottling to prevent sedimentation. The technique was a success and rolled out to the whole Whitbread brand. In the 1920s Whitbread also introduced the Double Brown which was designed to rival Guinness and was almost a recreation of Whitbread's original porter.
In the mid-1920s Whitbread was experiencing a slump in trade. Sales were down overall by an average of 34%, twice that experienced by the trade as a whole. In response Sydney Nevile, the managing director, decided upon an avid advertising campaign using popular celebrities such as Gertie Lawrence and Ronald Squire and hired a publicity manager in the form of Hal Douglas Thomson, a newspaper advertising executive. He also attempted to widen the range of products available with additions such as cider and to develop exports to the colonies although the latter was not particularly successful. However it was the popularity of Mackeson's milk stout which buoyed sales in the the late 1930s and although still a long way off their 1913 peak they were a third higher than in 1932.
Unlike the Great War of 1914-18, general beer production across the country rose rapidly during the Second World War with Whitbread's production up 50% to 914,000 barrels by 1945 - almost beating the 1912 record of 989,000. Despite mass devastation of buildings in the surrounding area due to fire raids, Whitbread's own fire brigade was able to protect the Chiswell premises. Even after the great raid on 29th December 1940, production at the plant restarted after only four days. Between 1939-1945, 565 (90%) of Whitbread's licensed public houses in London were damaged by the Blitz, with 29 completely destroyed and an additional 49 so badly damaged that they had to close.
By 1948, the Company was employing 5,000 people. In addition to Brewery workers, by the 1950s over 5000 people were employed in the cultivation and harvesting of the hop bines that were grown by the Company in Kent. New breweries were built at Luton, in 1969, Samlesbury, Lancashire, in 1972 and Magor, Gwent in 1978. The Chiswell Street Brewery ceased brewing in 1976. In 1989 the Company operated 6 breweries at Castle Eden, Durham; Magor, Gwent; Exchange Brewery, Bridge Street, Sheffield; Court Street, Faversham, Kent; Monson Avenue, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire; and Cuerdale Lane, Samlesbury, Preston, Lancashire.
During the final decades of the 20th Century, Whitbread seriously invested in the food and lodgings sectors. The Beefeater brand was launched in 1974 and Brewers Fayre followed five years later. Whitbread introduced Pizza Hut and TGI Friday's to Britain in the 1980s and adding continental-style high street brands like Costa, Cafe Rouge and Bella Pasta in the nineties. During that time Whitbread Hotel Company developed from a small number of three and four-star coaching inns and country houses, establishing Travel Inn in 1987 and securing the UK rights to the Marriott brand in 1995.
The Whitbread Beer Company was sold to Belgian brewer Interbrew in May 2000. First Quench (off-licences business) was sold in September 2000 to the Japanese investment bank Nomura (then jointly owned with Punch Group). Whitbread continues as a company with interests in hotels, restaurants and health and fitness clubs.
Whitbread acquired many companies during its brewing history including the following:
1891: H and V Nicholl's Brewery Company Limited, Anchor Brewery, Lewisham Road, Lewisham, London. Ceased to brew and premises converted into Whitbread's first branch bottling and distribution centre.
1896: Gripper Brothers, Bell Brewery, High Road, Tottenham, London (est. 1760)
1899: Matthews and Canning, Anchor Brewery, Britten Street, Chelsea, London (closed 1907)
1900: Abridge Brewery Company Limited, Anchor Brewery, Abridge, Essex
1902: Jones and Company, Steam Brewery, Brewery Road, Bromley, Kent
1920: Notting Hill Company Limited, Portland Road, Notting Hill, London with 80 tied houses
1921: F S Stowell Limited (est. 1878), later Stowells of Chelsea Limited, (wine and spirit merchants)
1924: Forest Hill Brewery Company Limited (later Whitbread's Properties Limited), Langton Rise, London
1927: Frederick Leney and Sons Limited, Phoenix Brewery, Wateringbury, Kent
1929: Jude Hanbury and Company Limited, Kent Brewery, Wateringbury, Kent
1948: Flitton's Brewery Limited, Stotford Brewery, Stotford, Bedfordshire
1951: Amey's Brewery Limited, Borough Brewery, Frenchmen's Road, Petersfield, Hampshire with 20 tied houses
1955: Dale and Company Limited, The Brewery, Gwydir Street, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire in 1955
1958: Scarsdale Brewery Company Limited, Spa Lane Brewery, Chesterfield, Derbyshire
1961:Tennant Brothers Limited, Exchange Brewery, Bridge Street, Sheffield, South Yorkshire and 700 tied houses; and John R Fielder, Titchfield Brewery, Titchfield, Hampshire (est. 1774)
1962: Norman and Pring Limited, City Brewery, Exeter, Devon with 100 tied houses; Starkey, Knight and Ford Limited, High Street, Bridgewater, Somerset with 400 tied houses and Flowers Breweries Limited, Phoenix Brewery, Park Street, Luton, Bedfordshire (closed 1969)
1963: J Nimmo and Son Limited, Castle Eden Brewery, Castle Eden, Durham and West Country Brewery Holdings Limited, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
1964: Dutton's Blackburn Brewery Limited, Salford Brewery, Bow Street, Blackburn, Lancashire (closed 1978)
1965: E Lacon and Company Limited, Flacon Brewery, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (closed 1968)
1966: James Thompson and Company Limited, Dalton Road, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria (est. 1871), wine and spirit merchants; Rhymney Breweries Limited, The Brewery, Rhymney, Mid Glamorgan (closed 1978)
1967: Isaac Tucker and Company Limited, Turk's Head Brewery, West Street, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, and 50 tied houses; Archibald Campbell, Hope and King Limited, Argyle Brewery, Chambers Street, Edinburgh, Lothian (closed 1970) and 73 tied houses; Threlfalls Chesters Limited, The Brewery, Trueman Street, Liverpool, Merseyside (closed 1982); Evan Evans Bevan Limited, Cale of Neath Brewery, Neath, West Glamorgan (closed 1971) and Fremlins Limited, Pale Ale Brewery, Earl Street, Maidstone, Kent
1968: Bentley's Yorkshire Breweries Limited, Eshaldwell Brewery, Woodlesford, Leeds, West Yorkshire (closed 1972); Richard Whitaker and Sons Limited, Seedlings Mount Brewery, Corporation Street, Halifax, West Yorkshire (closed 1969); John Young and Company Limited, Ladywell Brewery, North High Street, Fisherrow, Musselburgh, Lothian (closed 1969); Cobb and Company (Brewers) Limited, Margate Brewery, King Street, Margate, Kent; Combined Breweries (Holding) Limited, Ramsgate Brewery, Ramsgate, Kent; Strong and Company of Romsey Limited, Horse Fair Brewery, Romsey, Hampshire, with 950 tied houses
1969: R White and Sons Limited, London, soft drinks manufacturers
1971: Brickwoods Limited, Portsmouth Brewery, Admiralty Road, Portsmouth, Hampshire with 670 tied houses
1975: Long John International Limited, Scotch whisky distillers (est. 1825) with 4 distilleries at Tormore, Speyside, Laphroaig, Islay, Glenugie, Peterhead, Grampian, and Glasgow, Strathclyde, and Coates Plymouth Gin, Plymouth, Devon
The records of other subsidary companies were distributed according to location on the closure of the Whitbread Archives in 2000.
Received in 2001 as a gift (B01/090).
Records of Whitbread and Company Ltd, brewers, with the papers of its subsidiary companies originally based in the London area, 1742-2000. These records will primarily be of interest to those concerned with the foundation and development of breweries or with the history of family businesses. A large collection of plans of properties, including public houses (LMA/4453/F/08), along with the Whitbread Archivist's research files (LMA/4453/G/05) will also be of interest to local historians researching specific public houses in the London area. Genealogical information about Whitbread employees is available in the Salaries Books (LMA/4453/E/01) and Pensioners Books (LMA/4453/E/04).
Corporate records include: minute books; memorandum and articles of association; partnership documents; articles, agreements, trusts and ordinary shares papers; agreements received books; contract books; Directors' fees journals; registers of seals; Sir Sydney O Neville: correspondence and papers; other correspondence and notebooks; agreements; correspondence and related papers; Royal warrants; policy files and partners' correspondence.
Financial records include: account books; balance sheets and accounts; Britannia Street statement of expenditure books; cash and accounts books; deposit ledgers; depreciation ledgers; general journals and ledgers; loan diaries and ledgers; partners ledgers; private ledgers and journals; rest books; securities ledgers; share registers; pocket books for order, rent and cash. Sales records include: beer returns; complaints books; excise books; export ledgers; sales and nominal ledgers; estate trade books; summaries and statistics and Take Home Division.
Production records include: ale brewing books; brewing process; butt books; cask ledger; cellar ledger; notebooks; F G S Baker's notebooks; fermentation books; porter brewing books; purchase ledgers and stock books; sample and sediment reports; starting books and transport and plant. Staff records include: salaries books and lists of employees; employment policy and related papers; accident books and health and pensioners books.
Records relating to premises include: deeds of title: Chiswell Street Brewery; deeds of title: public houses, beer houses and off-licences; deeds received and receipts for deeds books; property ledgers, land valuation and plan drawings of properties; rent ledgers; repairs ledgers; Northern Brewery Project; plans and charts; Chiswell Street Redevelopment and correspondence.
Records relating to advertising and the history of Whitbread include: advertisement albums; newspaper cuttings; photograph albums; histories and articles; archivists' research files and letters in response to advertising campaigns.
Records of subsidiary companies including: Whitbread Properties Limited
Whitbread (London) Limited
Whitbread International Limited
F S Stowells Limited
Ealing Welwyn Restaurants Limited
Forest Hill Brewing Company Limited
Improved Public House Limited
R White and Son Limited
Central Catering Limited
Manor Park Gripper Brothers Limited: Bell Brewery, Tottenham (later Tottenham Depot)
Railway Tavern Limited
Goodhews Limited
H and V Nicholl Limited, The Anchor Brewery, Lewisham
Theydon Hall Farm (later Threshers and Company Limited)
Jude Hanbury and Company Limited
Frederick Leney and Sons Limited
Mackeson and Company Limited Dale Brewery
Top Star Taverns Limited
Amey's Brewery Limited Chelsea Brewery
Douglas Ritchie Limited
LMA/4453/A CORPORATE;
LMA/4453/B ACCOUNTS;
LMA/4453/C SALES;
LMA/4453/D PRODUCTION;
LMA/4453/E STAFF;
LMA/4453/F PREMISES;
LMA/4453/G ADVERTISING, MEMORABILIA AND PERSONAL RECORDS;
LMA/4453/H-Z OTHER BREWERY COMPANIES.
Please note: For ease of cataloguing, these records were assigned reference numbers according to the interim list provided by Whitbread. In some cases, this has resulted in numbers being assigned to records that were never received.
These records are available for public inspection, although records containing personal information may be subject to access restrictions.
Copyright rests with the City of London.
English
Fit
Please see online catalogues at: http://search.lma.gov.uk/opac_lma/index.htm
Further archives of the company relating to operations and predecessors outside London are found at local county archives. For example subsidiary companies in Kent are held at Centre for Kentish Studies and East Kent Archives Centre. Please see the National Register of Archives on The National Archives website for more details and contact information.
Histories published by Whitbread include: Whitbread's Brewery founded 1742: an illustrated history of the House of Whitbread (1934); Whitbread's Brewery incorporating 'The Brewer's Art' (1951); This is Whitbread (1979) and Monckton, Whitbread's Breweries: a chronological survey of the evolution of one of the oldest groups of breweries in Britain (1984).
See also L Richmond and A Turton, The Brewing Industry: A guide to historical records (1990), LMA Library reference 60.43 RIC.
Compiled in compliance with General International Standard Archival Description, ISAD(G), second edition, 2000; National Council on Archives Rules for the Construction of Personal, Place and Corporate Names, 1997. July to October 2009 Communication process Advertising Public houses Finance Financial administration Accounting Sales accounting Industrial economics Industrial policy Mergers Business records Information sources Documents Financial records Management operations Business acquisitions Architecture Buildings Commercial buildings Breweries Brewers Food industry personnel Personnel People by occupation People Industrial facilities Facilities Company archives Property Whitbread and Co Ltd , brewers Godfrey Shewell and Co , brewers Whitbread and Company Plc , brewers London England UK Western Europe Europe
Origen del ingreso o transferencia
Received in 2001 as a gift (B01/090).
Área de contenido y estructura
Alcance y contenido
Records of Whitbread and Company Ltd, brewers, with the papers of its subsidiary companies originally based in the London area, 1742-2000. These records will primarily be of interest to those concerned with the foundation and development of breweries or with the history of family businesses. A large collection of plans of properties, including public houses (LMA/4453/F/08), along with the Whitbread Archivist's research files (LMA/4453/G/05) will also be of interest to local historians researching specific public houses in the London area. Genealogical information about Whitbread employees is available in the Salaries Books (LMA/4453/E/01) and Pensioners Books (LMA/4453/E/04).
Corporate records include: minute books; memorandum and articles of association; partnership documents; articles, agreements, trusts and ordinary shares papers; agreements received books; contract books; Directors' fees journals; registers of seals; Sir Sydney O Neville: correspondence and papers; other correspondence and notebooks; agreements; correspondence and related papers; Royal warrants; policy files and partners' correspondence.
Financial records include: account books; balance sheets and accounts; Britannia Street statement of expenditure books; cash and accounts books; deposit ledgers; depreciation ledgers; general journals and ledgers; loan diaries and ledgers; partners ledgers; private ledgers and journals; rest books; securities ledgers; share registers; pocket books for order, rent and cash. Sales records include: beer returns; complaints books; excise books; export ledgers; sales and nominal ledgers; estate trade books; summaries and statistics and Take Home Division.
Production records include: ale brewing books; brewing process; butt books; cask ledger; cellar ledger; notebooks; F G S Baker's notebooks; fermentation books; porter brewing books; purchase ledgers and stock books; sample and sediment reports; starting books and transport and plant. Staff records include: salaries books and lists of employees; employment policy and related papers; accident books and health and pensioners books.
Records relating to premises include: deeds of title: Chiswell Street Brewery; deeds of title: public houses, beer houses and off-licences; deeds received and receipts for deeds books; property ledgers, land valuation and plan drawings of properties; rent ledgers; repairs ledgers; Northern Brewery Project; plans and charts; Chiswell Street Redevelopment and correspondence.
Records relating to advertising and the history of Whitbread include: advertisement albums; newspaper cuttings; photograph albums; histories and articles; archivists' research files and letters in response to advertising campaigns.
Records of subsidiary companies including: Whitbread Properties Limited
Whitbread (London) Limited
Whitbread International Limited
F S Stowells Limited
Ealing Welwyn Restaurants Limited
Forest Hill Brewing Company Limited
Improved Public House Limited
R White and Son Limited
Central Catering Limited
Manor Park Gripper Brothers Limited: Bell Brewery, Tottenham (later Tottenham Depot)
Railway Tavern Limited
Goodhews Limited
H and V Nicholl Limited, The Anchor Brewery, Lewisham
Theydon Hall Farm (later Threshers and Company Limited)
Jude Hanbury and Company Limited
Frederick Leney and Sons Limited
Mackeson and Company Limited Dale Brewery
Top Star Taverns Limited
Amey's Brewery Limited Chelsea Brewery
Douglas Ritchie Limited
Valorización, destrucción y programación
Acumulaciones
Sistema de arreglo
LMA/4453/A CORPORATE;
LMA/4453/B ACCOUNTS;
LMA/4453/C SALES;
LMA/4453/D PRODUCTION;
LMA/4453/E STAFF;
LMA/4453/F PREMISES;
LMA/4453/G ADVERTISING, MEMORABILIA AND PERSONAL RECORDS;
LMA/4453/H-Z OTHER BREWERY COMPANIES.
Please note: For ease of cataloguing, these records were assigned reference numbers according to the interim list provided by Whitbread. In some cases, this has resulted in numbers being assigned to records that were never received.
Área de condiciones de acceso y uso
Condiciones de acceso
These records are available for public inspection, although records containing personal information may be subject to access restrictions.
Condiciones
Copyright rests with the City of London.
Idioma del material
- inglés
Escritura del material
- latín
Notas sobre las lenguas y escrituras
English
Características físicas y requisitos técnicos
Further archives of the company relating to operations and predecessors outside London are found at local county archives. For example subsidiary companies in Kent are held at Centre for Kentish Studies and East Kent Archives Centre. Please see the National Register of Archives on The National Archives website for more details and contact information.
Instrumentos de descripción
Please see online catalogues at: http://search.lma.gov.uk/opac_lma/index.htm
Área de materiales relacionados
Existencia y localización de originales
Existencia y localización de copias
Unidades de descripción relacionadas
Área de notas
Identificador/es alternativo(os)
Puntos de acceso
Puntos de acceso por materia
- Proceso de comunicación
- Proceso de comunicación » Publicidad
- Finanzas
- Finanzas » Administración financiera
- Finanzas » Administración financiera » Contabilidad
- Economía industrial
- Economía industrial » Política industrial
- Economía industrial » Política industrial » Fusión de empresas
- Fuente de información
- Documento
- Operación administrativa
- Arquitectura
- Arquitectura » Edificio
- Personal
- Instalación industrial
Puntos de acceso por lugar
Puntos de acceso por autoridad
Tipo de puntos de acceso
Área de control de la descripción
Identificador de la descripción
Identificador de la institución
Reglas y/o convenciones usadas
Compiled in compliance with General International Standard Archival Description, ISAD(G), second edition, 2000; National Council on Archives Rules for the Construction of Personal, Place and Corporate Names, 1997.
Estado de elaboración
Nivel de detalle
Fechas de creación revisión eliminación
Idioma(s)
- inglés