Perry & Co.
Industry | Metalworking |
---|---|
Founded | Manchester, 1824 [1] |
Founder | James Perry |
Defunct | 1961[2] |
Fate | Acquired by British Pens, Ltd.[3] |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | Worldwide |
Products | Dip pens, Bicycle chains |
Perry & Co., Ltd was a dip pens manufacturer of England. The company was the largest in its country of origin, producing a huge range of models. Perry & Co. also manufactured bicycle chains and accessories.[4]
History
The beginning
James Perry, still a schoolmaster and being dissatisfied with the quality of existing pens, began making steel pens by hand. The firm was founded in Manchester as James Perry and Co. in 1824, but later moved to London, where they made and sold pens and pen-holders, pencils, elastic bands and ink, and dealt in stationers' supplies.[1] From 1829 all of Perry's pens were made by Josiah Mason, which was considered by the time as the finest pens manufacturer.[2] The excellence of their products swiftly raised them to the forefront of the new industry, exporting pens all over the world. By 1876 when the firm became a Limited Company, they equalled Esterbrook as being the largest manufacturers of pen nibs in the world.
Perry & Co. established
Sometime after 1847 James Perry and Co. became "Perry and Co." as the name was used in an 1866 advert.[1] In 1876 Josiah Mason's steel-pen firm came together with Wiley & Son, pen and pencil case makers, and James Perry & Co under the title of "Perry & Co Ltd", acquiring its Birmingham base at Lancaster Street Works. The firm also began the production of steel chains and accessories for bicycles.[1]
The same year the public company was registered on 28 January, to take over the businesses of Josiah Mason and A. Sommerville and Co, manufacturers of pens of Birmingham.[1]
By the late 1890s the company was having financial problems and were bought by James William Bayliss, part owner of the Bayliss-Thomas car making company.[1]
By 1914 Perry & Co specialized in steel pens and pen holders, cycle chains, free wheels, hubs, bells and cycle accessories, stationers' sundries, gold pens, solitaires, studs, sleeve links, tobacconists' and drapers' sundries and had 2,000 employees.[5]
In 1945 the company transferred its chain making and cycle coaster hub business to a subsidiary, Perry Chain Co Ltd. The pen business was continued by Perry and Co (Pens division) Ltd, while Perry and Co (Holdings) Ltd became the main parent company, with financial control of the whole Perry group.[1]
British Pens
In 1920, when Hinks Wells & Co and William Mitchell came together at the Pedigree Works in Birmingham, founded a new company called "British Pens", which added Cumberland Pencils in 1921. After World War II staff from the London Jewel Company joined them and they began to produce ballpoint pens.
In 1961 British Pens acquired the pen businesses of Perry & Co and other manufacturers like John Mitchell and Joseph Gillott's. As part of the Twinlock Group its name was changed to "Cumberland Graphics" in 1975. Byron Head, the Managing Director of William Mitchell (sinkers) and British Pens bought the two companies from Twinlock in 1982. The company still makes pens in the West Midlands.[6]
Models
Perry & Co. produced a large variety of models for different purposes, most of them designed to produce fine lines (such as Nº 25 or 341, which is still easy to find in stores of Argentina). Other models were also popular by their names, like the "Queen Mary" [7] or the "Quill Pen" (Nº 230-231-232) [8] Perry & Co. also produced different giant-sized versions of its N°2301 Indent Pen model. Those were 5" long (see thumbnail photo).
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f g Perry & Co. Brief history
- ^ a b More about the pen trade in Birmingham (Archive, 8 Jul 2011)
- ^ British Pens in Grace's Guide
- ^ The Stock Exchange Year-Book, 1908
- ^ Whitakers Red Book
- ^ The manufacturers on The Pen Room website, 21 Mar 2012 (Archive)
- ^ Queen Mary pen advertising
- ^ Quill Pen advertising