Brooke, Simpson and Spiller
of 9 Fenchurch St, London
of Hackney Wick
of Greenford Green
of 50 Old Broad St., London (1877)
Patentees and manufacturers of aniline dyes - successors of one of the first British firms to manufacture synthetic (coal-tar) dyes.
1868 Nicholson and Maule retired from Simpson, Maule and Nicholson and the firm was sold to Edward Brooke (a manufacturing chemist from Manchester), another partner being William Spiller (c.1836-1926) who had been the firm's chemist. His brother John Spiller (1833-1921) joined the firm as consulting chemist from this date.[1]
The firm then became known as Brooke, Simpson & Spiller
1872 Edward Brooke was nominated for the position of Sheriff of the City of London[2]
1874 Acquired the Greenford Works of Perkin and Sons[3], which Perkin sold in the face of continuing competition in synthetic alizarin.
They failed to make alizarin a successful business.
1875 Appointed Raphael Mendola to the colour works at Hackney Wick[4]
1876 Sold to Burt, Boulton and Haywood the dyestuffs works at Greenford Green where alizarin manufacture had originally been developed by W. H. Perkin. Burt transferred the manufacture of alizarin to Silvertown.
Brooke, Simpson & Spiller continued in business at their Atlas works, though less successfully than before, perhaps because of the withdrawal of Nicholson as director or of A. W. Hofmann as consultant, but they continued to employ some very able chemists, including A. G. Green, R. Meldola and E. Hickson.
From 1878 the firm was joined by W. S. Simpson (1856-1941), a nephew of G. Simpson.
1878 Exhibited Dyes, colouring matters, and other productions from coal tar at the 1878 Paris International Exhibition[5]
1885 Gold medal at the Inventions Exhibition for improvements in the manufacture of coal tar colours[6]
1886 The business was converted into a public company
1886 Public quotation of the company's shares[7]
c.1888 John Spiller retired
1903 Company taken out of liquidation[8]
1903 W. S. Simpson left and formed his own British Aniline Dye and Chemical Works Ltd.
1904 'Brooke, Simpson, and Spiller Limited, was formed in March, 1886, to acquire the business of the firm of the same name at Hackney Wick, N.E., who claimed to be the inventors of British aniline dyes, and traded as drysalters, &c. In September, 1901, the company went into liquidation, and in December, 1902, the shareholders were called together to authorise the liquidators to apply to the Court for order staying proceedings in the winding-up, with a view to the reduction the capital by 80 per cent, and the resuscitation of the company. On 11th March, 1903, the Court made the necessary order, and in the following month the capital was cut down from £150,000 to £30,000, the nominal the shares being reduced from £5 to £l. Considerable comment was made the time the somewhat rare phenomenon a company which had gone into liquidation, except for the express purpose of reconstruction, emerging with new lease of life. Prom the directors’ report just issued, accompanying accounts for the 18 months to 31st March, 1904, it would seem that the sanguine hopes of the liquidator, who nursed the company through its protracted trance, have been raised in vain. Not only has the trading resulted loss of some £2,000 although no profit and loss account is published to explain how this has come about — but the directors are proposing issue £20,000 of 10 per cent. Cumulative Preference shares. It appears that they have already issued to themselves certain debentures to secure themselves against loss under a guarantee which they have given to the company’s bankers to cover an overdraft.'[9]
1905 Company liquidated. The Atlas works were acquired by Claus and Ree
See Also
Sources of Information
- Archives of the British chemical industry, 1750-1914: a handlist. By Peter J. T. Morris and Colin A. Russell. Edited by John Graham Smith. 1988.