Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 115342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,259 pages of information and 244,500 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.

Difference between revisions of "Wood-Milne"

From Graces Guide
 
Line 15: Line 15:
of 6 to 8 Manchester Avenue, Aldersgate Street, London, EC (1914)
of 6 to 8 Manchester Avenue, Aldersgate Street, London, EC (1914)


of Preston and Golden Hill Lane, Leyland.
of Preston and of Ajax Rubber Works, Golden Hill Lane, Leyland.


1896 Company established by '''T. H. Roberts'''.
1896 Company established by '''T. H. Roberts'''.

Latest revision as of 10:40, 24 April 2019

1910.
March 1913.
May 1913.
March 1916.
April 1916.
September 1916.
January 1919.
January 1919.
December 1919.
January 1920.

of 2 and 3 Central Buildings, Westminster, London, SW1

of 6 to 8 Manchester Avenue, Aldersgate Street, London, EC (1914)

of Preston and of Ajax Rubber Works, Golden Hill Lane, Leyland.

1896 Company established by T. H. Roberts.

The Golden Hill Lane factory was opened in Leyland by Wood Milne Rubber Company, which was owned by the Roberts family of Farington House.

They also took over the adjacent land, formerly known as Mr William Higham's Hay and Straw Works. The hay and straw business provided the carting establishments with food and bedding for their horses. The raw material was purchased from local farmers and often the hay was chopped and steamed. The process producing a very strong yet not unpleasant smell, which filled the air along that part of Golden Hill Lane.

The variety of items made by the Wood Milne Company included rubber heels, soles and tips, pneumatic tyres and inner tubes for motor cars and motorcycles, solid band tyres for motor vehicles, belts for motor cycles, foot pumps for motor tyres and golf balls.

1907 Incorporated as a limited company: Wood Milne Rubber Company.

1914 Manufacturers of rubber heels, motor car and motorcycle tyres. Specialities: rubber heels, tips, pneumatic tyres, solid tyres, shoeshines, golf balls, footpumps for motor tyres and general rubber goods. [1]

1919 Advertised solid band tyres, jointly with George Spencer, Moulton and Co

1922 Listed Exhibitor. Manufacturers of India Rubber Sports Balls; Golf Balls; Spenwood Rubber Tiling. (Stand No. H.6) [2]

1924 Wood Milne Ltd was acquired by British Goodrich Rubber Co, a subsidiary of the American company, in order to manufacture the rubber goods in England.

1934 The parent company became the British Tyre and Rubber Co.

The name B.T.R. Industries came about in 1957 when the old B.T.R. (British Tyre and Rubber Co) ceased production of tyres and felt that the old name was inappropriate.

They moved into their new factory on Centurion Way, Farington in the same year, the Golden Hill factory surviving into the 1970s.


See Also

Loading...

Sources of Information

  • [1] Golden Hill Lane