Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,711 pages of information and 247,105 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.

A. P. Halliday and Co: Difference between revisions

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of 6 Bank Place, Salford, Manchester  
of 6 Bank Place, Salford, Manchester  


1849 [[Henry Davis Pochin]] joined [[James Woolley, Sons and Co|James Woolley]] and Mr Halliday in the partnership
1849 [[Henry Davis Pochin]] joined [[James Woolley, Sons and Co|James Woolley]] and Mr [[Andrew Paton Halliday|Halliday]] in the partnership


1851 A. P. Halliday was an inventor who exhibited at the Great Exhibition
1851 A. P. Halliday was an inventor who exhibited at the Great Exhibition


1855 Patent to Henry Davis Pochin, of Salford, of the firm of '''Halliday, Pochin, and Co.''', Manufacturing Chemists, for
1853 Halliday died
the invention of "improvements in the treatment of certain compounds of alumina, and the application of the same in printing, dyeing,
 
tawing, paper making, and such like purposes."
1855 Patent to Henry Davis Pochin, of Salford, of the firm of '''Halliday, Pochin, and Co.''', Manufacturing Chemists, for the invention of "improvements in the treatment of certain compounds of alumina, and the application of the same in printing, dyeing, tawing, paper making, and such like purposes."


1858 After Wooley’s death, Pochin continued as sole partner.
1858 After Wooley’s death, Pochin continued as sole partner.

Revision as of 13:25, 29 September 2023

of 6 Bank Place, Salford, Manchester

1849 Henry Davis Pochin joined James Woolley and Mr Halliday in the partnership

1851 A. P. Halliday was an inventor who exhibited at the Great Exhibition

1853 Halliday died

1855 Patent to Henry Davis Pochin, of Salford, of the firm of Halliday, Pochin, and Co., Manufacturing Chemists, for the invention of "improvements in the treatment of certain compounds of alumina, and the application of the same in printing, dyeing, tawing, paper making, and such like purposes."

1858 After Wooley’s death, Pochin continued as sole partner.

Pochin's business was later called H. D. Pochin and Co

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