C. Brandauer and Co: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Im1895POLon-Brandauer.jpg|thumb| 1895. ]] | [[Image:Im1895POLon-Brandauer.jpg|thumb| 1895. ]] | ||
[[image:Im18960307ILN-Brandauer.jpg|thumb| March 1896. ]] | [[image:Im18960307ILN-Brandauer.jpg|thumb| March 1896. ]] | ||
[[Image:Brandauer-1902.jpg|thumb|1902]] | [[Image:Brandauer-1902.jpg|thumb|1902]] | ||
[[Image:Im1904BRB-Brand.jpg|thumb| 1904. ]] | |||
[[Image:Im19121109W-CB.jpg |thumb| November 1912. ]] | [[Image:Im19121109W-CB.jpg |thumb| November 1912. ]] | ||
[[Image:Im19130118W-CB.jpg |thumb| January 1913. ]] | [[Image:Im19130118W-CB.jpg |thumb| January 1913. ]] |
Revision as of 15:43, 22 May 2016




















Pens of 403-7 New John Street West, Birmingham
1862 Company founded.
1862 Brandauer was founded when they took over the business of Ash Petit and Co.
1880s - 1900 Made knibs for pens. (Exhibit at Birmingham Thinktank museum).
1901 Private company.
1961 Manufacturers of light pressings in steel, stainless and non-ferrous metals for the engineering and allied industries. Also manufacture steel pens. 125 employees. [1]
2007 Still trading and is today a 5th generation family company of international standing. It began as a manufacturer of high quality pen nibs which it sold world wide in great volume maintaining a reputation for their excellence for over a century of supply. Inheriting and adding to those skills the business then evolved into a world-class engineering company, specialising in the manufacture of complex components, in difficult materials, for a wide range of industry sectors.
See Also
Sources of Information
- Birmingham’s Industrial Heritage by Ray Shill. Published by Sutton Publishing 2002. ISBN 0-7509-2593-0