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The Bow Quarter was a former factory site with a long history. Has been converted into apartments. Would like to know if any books have been published on the subject

2006-12-21 01:29:23 · 3 answers · asked by PAMELA G 1 in Arts & Humanities History

3 answers

The Bow Quarters are an apartment complex since about 1990, I think. I found 2 books on B & M:

Beaver, Patrick, (1985). The Match Makers: The Story of Bryant & May. London: Henry Melland Limited.

Threlfall, Richard E. (1951). The Story of 100 years of Phosphorus Making 1851 - 1951, Oldbury: Albright & Wilson Limited.

2006-12-21 01:40:24 · answer #1 · answered by jcboyle 5 · 0 1

Bow Quarter is a luxurious apartment complex, located in Bow, London. It consists of 733 one and two bedroom apartments and penthouses, together with a handful of unique workers cottages built around late 1800's. Set in seven acres of landscaped grounds, amenities include a residents' gym, swimming pool, jacuzzi, steam room, sauna, bar and restaurant as well as a convenience store and postal facilities.

The building was originally the Bryant and May Factory matchstick factory, site of the Match Girl's strike in the 1880's, led by Annie Besant which was part of the overall suffragette movement, and one of the defining moments in trade union history. The Bow Quarter also recently featured in a BBC documentary on gated communities.

It is located less than 300 metres from the London 2012 Olympic Stadium.

Previous residents have included John Barrowman and Steve Strange.

Author and tv presenter Danny Wallace recently declared his flat within the Bow Quarter a sovereign micronation with the name of Lovely.

Bryant and May
Bryant and May was a United Kingdom company involved in making matches. Their original factory was located in Bow, London. They later opened other match factories in the United Kingdom and Australia; and owned match factories in other parts of the world.

The company, Bryant and May, was founded by two Quakers William Bryant and Francis May, a former grocer, in 1852 with the specific aim of making only Safety Matches. However the public were initially unwilling to buy the more expensive safety matches so they also had to make the traditional Lucifer Matches. They were influential in fighting against the dreadful disease known as Phossy jaw caused by white phosphorus used in the manufacture of the early matches. They were the target of the Matchgirls Strike of 1888, which won important improvements in working conditions.

They survived for over seventy years as an independent company, but Bryant and May as an individual company no longer exists. They bought out other British match makers; then they merged, firstly, with other match companies and, secondly, with consumer products companies; and were taken over. However, the Registered Trade name Bryant and May still exists. As do the other Registered Trade Names of the other, formerly independent, companies within the group. Swedish Match still exists.


Formation of Bryant and May
Bryant and May started in 1861, on a site in Bow, which had once been used for the manufacture of candles, crinoline and rope, but had fallen into disrepair.

Survival by merger
To protect its position Bryant and May merged with or took over its rivals.

In 1901 the American match maker The Diamond Match Company bought an existing match factory in the United Kingdom, at Bootle, near Liverpool, and installed a continuous match making machine that could produce 600,000 matches per hour. Their matches were sold under the Captain Webb, Puck and Swan Vestas Brand Names. Bryant and May could not compete, so in 1905 they bought the assets and goodwill of the British Diamond Match Company; and the (American) Diamond Match Company acquired 54.5 percent of the share capital of Bryant and May.

In 1913 Bryant and May also took over the Gloucester match maker Morland and Sons, who made and sold matches under the trade name Englands Glory.

In 1926 Bryant and May combined with a British match importer and the Swedish Match Company to become the British Match Corporation.

In 1929 the British Match Corporation set up a jointly-owned company with Albright and Wilson: The A & W Match Phosphorus Company. It took over a small part of Albright and Wilson's Oldbury site, which was being used to make amorphous phosphorus and phosphorus sesquisulfide.

In 1973 the British Match Corporation merged with Wilkinson Sword to form the new company Wilkinson Match.

Wilkinson Match was then taken over by an American company who shortly afterwards became bankrupt.


Closure
The original Bow match factory was closed in 1979, when it still employed 275 people; unlike some of the other match factories little recent investment had taken place. The Australian match factory, in Melbourne, closed in the 1980s.

Some parts of the company involved in match making survive as the Swedish company Swedish Match. Other parts of the merged company involved in shaving products survive, and still use the Trade Name Wilkinson Sword in Europe; and the Snick Trade Name elsewhere.

2006-12-21 09:44:50 · answer #2 · answered by Basement Bob 6 · 0 0

There are ample hits on Google especially about the famous strike etc. The factory was still there in the early 1960's close to the Bow Flyover...............

2006-12-21 09:36:30 · answer #3 · answered by thomasrobinsonantonio 7 · 0 1

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