Varley Pumps and Engineering: Difference between revisions
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1938 Cmdr Varley had the idea of using midget submarines to place limpet mines on ships and persuaded the Admiralty eventually to try it out; these submarines sank the Tirpitz in 1943. | 1938 Cmdr Varley had the idea of using midget submarines to place limpet mines on ships and persuaded the Admiralty eventually to try it out; these submarines sank the Tirpitz in 1943. | ||
By 1954 [[Varley Pumps and Engineering]] was a subsidiary of Food Machinery and Chemical Corporation (FMC) of USA | By 1954 [[Varley Pumps and Engineering]] was a subsidiary of [[Food Machinery and Chemical Corporation]] (FMC) of USA | ||
1954 Acquired '''C. F. Douglas and Co''', of The Strand, London, agents for the parent company<ref>The Times, Nov 08, 1954</ref> | 1954 Acquired '''C. F. Douglas and Co''', of The Strand, London, agents for the parent company<ref>The Times, Nov 08, 1954</ref> |
Latest revision as of 10:38, 20 February 2020





Varley Pumps and Engineering Ltd. of Weston-super-Mare, Somerset (1943).
of 97 Standard Road, North Acton, London NW10.
1923 Commander C. H. Varley (1890-1949), submariner, retired from the Royal Navy to work on designing hydraulic machinery[1].
1932 Founded Varley Pumps at North Acton, London
1938 Cmdr Varley had the idea of using midget submarines to place limpet mines on ships and persuaded the Admiralty eventually to try it out; these submarines sank the Tirpitz in 1943.
By 1954 Varley Pumps and Engineering was a subsidiary of Food Machinery and Chemical Corporation (FMC) of USA
1954 Acquired C. F. Douglas and Co, of The Strand, London, agents for the parent company[2]