ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Agrarian History.
The demesne of Ealing manor lay mainly in the
east part of the parish, stretching from London
Stile northward to Hanger wood. The submanor of Pitshanger, with its 140 a. of demesne,
was in the extreme north, Coldhall at West
Ealing, Gunnersbury in the east, and Boston
manor at New Brentford. (fn. 40) The demesne of
Ealing manor was exploited directly by the
bishop between 1303 and 1339 (fn. 41) but farmed by
1363 (fn. 42) and the demesne of Boston was farmed by
1377, (fn. 43) whereas that of Gunnersbury was still in
hand in 1378. (fn. 44) The fields of all five manors seem
to have been separate: only the demesne of
Coldhall and parts of Ealing demesne were
distributed in open-field strips. (fn. 45)
Crops were sown on 169 a. of Ealing demesne
in 1303 but on only 88½ a. in 1318 and 97½ a. in
1339. The main crop was rye, sown on 112 a., in
1303, but none was planted in 1318 or 1339.
Maslin and wheat were sown on 35 a. and 22 a.
respectively in 1303, 68 a. and 20 a. in 1318, and
80½ a. and 17 a. in 1339. There were 120 bu. of rye
and 14 bu. of maslin in the granary in 1303 and
the granary and grange together contained 571
bu. of rye, 914 bu. of oats, 12 bu. of wheat, 40 bu.
of peas but no maslin in 1339, when there were 2
ploughs, several carts, 4 stots and 12 oxen. (fn. 46) The
farmers sent 36 bu. of wheat and 72 bu. of rye to
Fulham in 1392-3 and 112 bu. of oats in 1410. (fn. 47)
Of the 140 a. of arable on Gunnersbury demesne
in 1378, only 60 a. were sown, suggesting a twofield system: wheat was sown on 31 a. and rye on
29 a., but the value of the crops was reduced by
flooding. (fn. 48)
Livestock was prominent on Gunnersbury
manor in 1378, when 80 a. of the demesne were
pasture and 4 a. meadow, (fn. 49) and also on Ealing
manor. A switch to stock farming may explain the
sharp fall in the sown area by 1318, (fn. 50) and the
large store of oats in 1339 was probably needed
for the 2 bulls, 27 cows, and 3 yearling calves,
which the bishop kept in addition to draught
animals, 190 sheep, and poultry. (fn. 51) A new byre
was built in 1363-4, when another was repaired. (fn. 52)
The sheep had gone in 1382, when a new lease of
the demesne included 2 carthorses, 4 stots, 4
oxen, a bull, and 19 cows, (fn. 53) but in 1392-3, when a
new lease was due, the bishop bought a further
200 sheep, (fn. 54) which remained in 1397 (fn. 55) and had
disappeared by 1409. (fn. 56) There were repairs to the
dairyhouse in 1399-1400 (fn. 57) and again to it, the
byre, and the grange in 1409-10. (fn. 58) The bishop
sold the stock to the farmer in 1411 (fn. 59) and
thereafter no animals were included in leases.
There were five free tenements on Ealing
manor in 1423: Absdons in the north, Baldswells
at Drayton, Abyndons and Denys at Ealing
village, and Sergeaunts at Old Brentford. It is
likely that there had once been 32 copyhold
tenements, (fn. 60) including at least 19 virgates of 20
rateable acres and 9 half virgates. (fn. 61) When the
holdings were created the copyhold land presumably amounted to not more than 540 a., a
total increased before 1423 by land at Castlebar
Hill. Later additions were made at the expense of
heath and woodland: Hicks on the Heath was a
new tenement carved from the waste in the 15th
century. (fn. 62) Of the 28 holdings whose acreage is
known, 9 were at Ealing, 9 at Drayton, 9 at Old
Brentford, and 1 at West Ealing. (fn. 63)
No open fields were recorded at New Brentford
and little is known of the fields of Gunnersbury,
Coldhall, and Pitshanger manors. (fn. 64) There were
many fields of varying sizes on Ealing manor, the
main ones apparently being Windmill or New
Brentford field, Old Brentford field, and Popes
field in the south part, Westfield immediately
west of Ealing village, and Great and Little
Northfield in the extreme west. The lands of
individual tenements were scattered, Old Brentford tenements not being confined to land near
Old Brentford, thereby probably contributing to
the very active land market in existence by 1383.
Several, if not most, holdings were no longer held
in 1395 by the families after which they were
named. (fn. 65) Only 7 holdings survived intact in 1423,
when 4 were held by eponymous families. There
were then 47 copyholders with estates ranging
from 1 a. to the 3 tenements of Joan Virly and 2
each held by 5 other tenants. By 1438 there were
64 copyholders and by 1445, when only Thomas
in the Hale had two tenements, there were 70. (fn. 66)
The brief existence of some large estates was due
partly to the grant of escheated lands only for one
life and partly to inheritance by Borough
English, which favoured the youngest son and so
prompted tenants to divide their lands to provide
for elder sons. Another factor was the demand for
land by Londoners, who had acquired only
manors in the 14th century: the first Londoner
holding copyhold land appeared in 1400. (fn. 67)
The large acreage of open field and the comparatively small commons suggest that the early
medieval tenants were predominantly arable
farmers. Tenants left much stock between 1399,
when John atte Cote owned at least 38 sheep, (fn. 68)
although early 16th-century wills did not indicate
the relative importance of animal husbandry. (fn. 69)
Presumably it was to stock rearing that most
farmers had turned from grain production by
c. 1528, although it is not known whether the
harvest then had been exceptional. Only 18
households in the parish had stocks of grain, 14 of
them at Ealing or Drayton and only 4 in Lower or
Old Brentford Side, and a further 5 had stocks at
New Brentford. Some of the households, moreover, had too little grain for their own bread or for
seed. Not enough corn was grown either at Ealing
or at New Brentford, which produced less than a
tenth of its needs, to keep the population in
bread. All households with grain ate wheaten
bread, sometimes supplemented with rye: 261 qr.
of wheat were in stock, compared with only 12½
qr. of rye, but there were also 85 qr. of barley and
as many as 464 qr. of oats. The move from cereal
farming was most marked at Old Brentford: there
were 648 qr. of grain in Upper Side and only 52
qr. in Lower Side, less than half the 121 qr.
grown in the much smaller township of New
Brentford. (fn. 70)
Inclosure accompanied the change from arable
farming. By the late 18th century little remained
of the open fields and in 1840 there were strips
only in the West field, North, Brentford,
Suswells, and Brencot fields. (fn. 71) The 15th-century
consolidation of holdings may have contributed
to inclosure and from the early 16th century the
growing activity of Ealing manor court revealed
tension between arable and pastoral interests. In
1553 animals were allowed to graze in open fields
from Lammas to Candlemas, (fn. 72) but at other times
were to be kept out with fences. (fn. 73) At Old
Brentford in 1511 and later animals were
forbidden to enter the fields until Michaelmas. (fn. 74)
Detailed orders were frequently made, (fn. 75) but in
1697 it was stated merely that no beasts were
allowed in common grain fields until after they
were rid and no sheep until a fortnight later. (fn. 76)
Refusals to open land for common grazing
occurred at Hicks on the Heath in 1520, 1566,
and 1578, (fn. 77) and Elwickfield in 1604, (fn. 78) and general
orders were often issued. Part of the problem
arose from inclosure: in 1605 nobody was to
inclose common field land without the consent of
other tenants and large fines were prescribed.
Orchards proved a more permanent obstruction:
a brick wall surrounded one open-field orchard in
1616, others were recorded later. (fn. 79) Lammas
rights survived over much of Ealing until the
19th century, over London Style farm in 1833
and still later over Walpole park, although they
were not always exercised. (fn. 80) They had to be
bought out, (fn. 81) like the similar rights over the
Town Meadow and Old England at New Brentford in 1857. (fn. 82)
For grazing, 100 a. of pasture commons and
the common fields were treated jointly. A stint was
necessary by 1474, (fn. 83) offenders were frequently
prosecuted, and those exercising rights of common were limited: inhabitants of Acton were
repeatedly excluded from 1520 (fn. 84) and in 1545
those of New Brentford and Gunnersbury were
excluded from Old Brentford field. (fn. 85) From
1582 rights were denied to strangers, (fn. 86) from
1615 to lessees of land in Ealing, (fn. 87) from 1630
to servants of inhabitants, (fn. 88) and from 1652 to
out-parishioners. (fn. 89) Inhabitants of Old Brentford
were denied access to Haven Green common,
residents of Ealing village were shut out of Old
Brentford field in 1524, (fn. 90) and tenants using
Ealing common were restricted in 1525 and
1561. (fn. 91) The stint was 1½ sheep per acre of
common field arable and 3 sheep per acre of
common field meadow in 1611; owners of land in
Ealing that was not commonable might pasture
no more than 4 sheep and 2 kine and inhabitants
of new cottages on the waste had no rights. (fn. 92)
From 1630 until 1697 or later only those paying
scot and lot were entitled to common grazing. (fn. 93)
Repeated offences indicated a severe shortage of
pasture.
The shift from cereal farming apparent c. 1528
continued only slowly: 37 per cent of Ealing's
farmland was still arable in 1799. (fn. 94) The lessee of
Ealing demesne in 1533 left livestock, ploughs,
carts, harrows, and corn to his executors, (fn. 95) and
other 16th-century testators left ploughs, draught
animals, and corn. (fn. 96) At least two, in 1563 (fn. 97) and
1583, practised mixed farming. (fn. 98) It is not clear
whether the grassland which replaced arable was
for grazing or mowing. By 1590 the Brentford
fields were evidently under grass for mowing. (fn. 99)
The Boston home farm employed a dairy maid, a
hog boy, and a poultry maid in 1659. (fn. 1) Market
gardening, increasing from the late 16th century
in Old Brentford and southern New Brentford
but also to some extent in Ealing, was later
claimed to have taken over arable rather than
pastoral land. (fn. 2)
A Gunnersbury estate in 1785 contained 93½ a.
of pasture and meadow and 131 a. of arable. (fn. 3)
That was a much higher proportion of arable
than in Ealing parish as a whole, since in 1799
only 1,027 a. were under the plough: 1,377 a.
were grassland, 289 a. were market gardens, and
85 a. were gentlemen's gardens. (fn. 4) By 1814 arable
had fallen to 800 a. while meadow and pasture
had risen to 1,600 a. (fn. 5) Market gardens, whose
rents were falling, (fn. 6) covered 469 a. by 1840 when
arable remained stable at 834 a. but grassland had
also apparently grown to 1,976 a. (fn. 7) At New
Brentford in 1837 there were 121 a. of meadow
and pasture and 37 a. of arable and market
gardens. (fn. 8) Arable at Ealing and New Brentford
decreased sharply to 307 a. in 1869 and 74 a. in
1887, and had disappeared by 1927. Meanwhile,
despite inroads by building, the relative importance of grassland and market garden increased:
Ealing and Brentford still had 1,812 a. under
grass in 1887, 994 a. in 1907, and 156 a. in 1927.
Fears in 1842 that declining traffic at Brentford
would destroy the market for hay proved unfounded: (fn. 9) the area under hay reached a peak of
1,044 a. of mowing grass compared with 676 a. of
grazing grass by 1887. The position was later
reversed, until in 1927 there were 4 a. under hay
and 152 a. of pasture.
About 1790 small tithes in Ealing were
assessed on 119 cows and 1,170 sheep. The sheep
were in 11 flocks, of from 30 to 200, and the cattle
belonged to 29 owners, the largest herd numbering 14. (fn. 10) Cattle, 570 in 1808 and 800 in 1845,
were kept by Smith & Harrington, distillers,
because there were no cowkeepers near Brentford to take their grains. (fn. 11) In 1843 there were 269
agricultural horses, 324 grazing cattle, 279 cows,
and 2,822 sheep in Ealing parish. (fn. 12) The number
of horses at Ealing and Brentford fell to 242 in
1869, 162 in 1887, 81 in 1907, and 13 in 1927,
while the number of cattle fell slightly to 506 in
1869 and then rose to 612 in 1887, before
declining to 285 in 1907 and 44 in 1927. The
increase before 1887 apparently consisted of milk
cows, kept by firms such as Cotching, Son & Co.
at their model Hanger Lane farm dairy near
Ealing common in 1893. (fn. 13) By 1907 milk cattle
were less important: 170 cows were in milk or calf
and 104 were not. Sheep dwindled to 628 in 1869,
387 in 1887, and 158 in 1907, but recovered to
790 in 1917 and 450 in 1927. There were 166 pigs
in 1869, 152 in 1907, and 100 in 1927; 105 pigs
kept at the Fox and Hounds, Brentford, in 1873
and 100 kept in Clayponds Lane, South Ealing,
in 1911 were removed as a danger to health. (fn. 14) In
1927 there were still 152 a. of pasture, with 13
horses, 44 cattle, and 450 sheep, besides 100 pigs,
223 hens, and a few ducks.
Nurseried And Market Gardens.
Ealing had
an orchard in 1540 (fn. 15) and others in 1577-8 (fn. 16) and
1584. (fn. 17) Numbers thereafter increased, orchards
often being taken out of open fields, by 1616 in
Crowchmans field, (fn. 18) in 1680-1 in Popes field, (fn. 19)
and in 1738 in Little North field. (fn. 20) Some lay as far
north as the centre of the parish. (fn. 21) River Long
field and adjoining closes at West Ealing contained 1,008 fruit trees in 1767, including 850
apple trees, 63 plum, and 63 cherry. (fn. 22)
Most orchards were around Brentford. At Old
Brentford there was an orchard in 1578 (fn. 23) and at
New Brentford there was apparently an orchard
c. 1557 on what became the new market place
c. 1580. (fn. 24) Two adjoining orchards were added to
the market place c. 1620 and 1635, (fn. 25) and others at
New Brentford were recorded c. 1603 and in
1611. (fn. 26) In 1642 it was claimed that royalist
soldiers had greatly damaged the nurseries at
Brentford, taking as much as 300 bu. of apples
from a single man. (fn. 27) Orchards near the Butts
were mentioned in 1656, 1668, and 1672. (fn. 28) At
Old Brentford an orchard was planted in 1665
beside the Green Dragon to supply the choicest
fruits to London, (fn. 29) and others existed by 1669 (fn. 30)
and 1674. (fn. 31) In 1670 the 3-a. Great Orchard at
Old Brentford was stocked with 35-year old
trees: in 1673 the lessor complained that 300 had
been destroyed and the lessee claimed to have
replaced old stock with apple, pear, codling, and
quince trees. (fn. 32) Orchards south of High Street in
Old Brentford and New Brentford were recorded
in 1699 and 1707. (fn. 33) In 1702 John Gillett, gardener
of Ealing, left 3 a. lately converted to garden
ground and a further 3 a. of garden in the open
fields of Ealing. (fn. 34) In 1711 his widow leased 5 a. in
Boston Road, already planted with mulberries,
for apple and cherry trees and asparagus and
strawberries. (fn. 35) By 1774 there were orchards all
the way from Brentford to Ealing. (fn. 36)
Several Brentford gardeners achieved distinction. The stocking of all varieties of tree in 1721
by 'Mr. Green' (fn. 37) may have related to the nursery
of the Greening family of Leominster (Herefs.)
and Brentford, which between 1733 and 1742
helped to lay out or supply gardens for the duke
of Marlborough and Lords Weymouth and
Cornwallis. (fn. 38) Benjamin, elder brother of Horne
Tooke, was credited with the introduction of the
pine strawberry, (fn. 39) Mr. Bell of Brentford raised
plants from seeds from the Crimea c. 1793, (fn. 40) and
Nathaniel Swinden, author of The Beauties of
Flora Displayed (1778), was active at Brentford
End and Old Brentford c. 1768-1805 (fn. 41) and a
member of a family of local gardeners dating
from 1681 or earlier. (fn. 42) Best known, however,
were Hugh Ronalds & Sons of New Brentford.
Hugh Ronalds the elder (d. 1788) occurred in
rate-books c. 1754, (fn. 43) lived at the Butts by 1760, (fn. 44)
and was a nurseryman and seedsman in 1786. (fn. 45)
By 1774 he occupied a house adjoining the
Vicarage called Lamberts, (fn. 46) probably Noy's
House, with 2 a. between the church, the Ham,
and the Brent, (fn. 47) which was the firm's chief
nursery in 1841. (fn. 48) Ronalds occupied Butts closes
of 9½ a. between the Butts and Boston Manor
Road in 1774, (fn. 49) and his firm in 1839 also occupied
Isleworth nursery. (fn. 50) Hugh Ronalds the younger
(d. 1833) was noted for fruit trees, growing 300
varieties of apple in 1829, (fn. 51) and commemorated
in his Pyrus Malus Brentfordiensis (1831). He
supplied many plants to Kew Gardens from 1801
to 1816 (fn. 52) and his firm provided 14,000 shrubs for
Kensal Green cemetery. (fn. 53) Robert Ronalds
(d. 1880) still occupied the nursery by St.
Lawrence's church in 1863. (fn. 54)
In 1819 there were c. 3,000 a. of market garden
in the parishes around Brentford, (fn. 55) which itself
in 1850 was almost all market garden. (fn. 56) There
was little at New Brentford in 1837 (fn. 57) but most of
Ealing's 469 a. of market garden in 1840 were
nearby. (fn. 58) Brentford was the 'great fruit and
vegetable garden of London' in 1843, when it was
common to grow a low crop under the trees. (fn. 59)
Such was the practice in 1833 on London Style
farm in the extreme south-east, at 96 a. the largest
market garden in Ealing: 18½ a. of fruit trees had
green vegetables underneath, 3 a. had asparagus,
and 10 a. had soft fruit; vegetables and soft fruit
were also grown independently. (fn. 60) In 1844 a lessee
covenanted to leave 960 raspberry, currant, and
gooseberry bushes beneath the apple and pear
trees on a 9½-a. market garden. (fn. 61) Much labour
was needed: it was estimated that 35-40 people
per acre were employed during the fruit season in
1819 (fn. 62) and 30 per acre in 1843. Many of the
workers were women, who in 1843 were twice as
numerous as men. (fn. 63)
Market gardens formed 23 per cent of the
2,900 a. of farmland at Ealing and New Brentford
in 1887. (fn. 64) As the cultivated area contracted, the
proportion of market garden rose to 38 per cent in
1907 and 65 per cent in 1927. There were 275 a.
of orchard, of which 117 a. had soft fruit under
the trees, in 1887 and 152 a. of orchard, of which
90 a. had soft fruit below, besides 74 a. of soft
fruit grown separately, in 1907. There were 164
a. of orchard and 88 a. of soft fruit in 1917 but
only 66 a. of orchard and 5 a. of soft fruit in 1927.
Green vegetables covered 405 a. in 1887, 294 a. in
1917, and only 50½ a. in 1927. Root crops were
important until 1887, and as many as 347 a. in
1877 and 389 a. in 1887 produced unspecified
'green crops'. Cabbages were widely grown by
1897 and rhubarb in 1917.
Market gardening was concentrated at Old
Brentford by the period 1907-27, when the area
was entered separately. Between 83 and 85 per
cent of Old Brentford's cultivated acreage was
market garden, compared with 20 to 36 per cent
in the Upper Side of Ealing and an insignificant
proportion at New Brentford up to 1917; in 1927,
however, 49 a. of orchard and 5 a. of soft fruit
survived among the 62 a. cultivated at New
Brentford. Well known gardeners included
Robert Addey of Ealing Road, who grew c. 15
cwt. of mushrooms each week in season. (fn. 65) Informal dealing at Kew Bridge Road led in 1893 to
the building of an enclosed market (fn. 66) and as late as
1903 many gardeners' wagons left High Street
for Covent Garden, whence they returned with
manure. (fn. 67)
Mills.
Ealing demesne in 1318 had a windmill, (fn. 68) which was rebuilt in 1363-4. (fn. 69) The new
one was destroyed in or before 1409 and was still
out of order in 1418-19, (fn. 70) but may have been
repaired by 1431, when it was again broken. (fn. 71)
Another windmill stood in Old Brentford near
Boston Manor Road in 1698 and 1703 (fn. 72) and had
given the name Windmill field to the former New
Brentford field by 1670. (fn. 73) A watermill had been
built over a common sewer at Old Brentford by
1564. (fn. 74)
In 1377 there was a horsemill on Boston
manor. (fn. 75) In 1738 the lord leased the right to a mill
on the Brent. (fn. 76) Presumably it was that mill,
recorded from 1746, (fn. 77) which stood at the west
end of the Butts from 1777 (fn. 78) until its demolition
in 1905. (fn. 79) It was one of five mills existing in 1792:
others were associated with malthouses south of
High Street and the turpentine and starch
works. (fn. 80) Mills at Old Brentford also served the
distillery, (fn. 81) malthouses, and breweries.
Fishing.
In 996 King Ethelred granted half
of a fishery in the Thames at Brentford to the
church of St. Peter and St. Paul, Winchester. (fn. 82)
Although the pope confirmed the rights of
Winchester cathedral priory in 1205, (fn. 83) they
apparently fell into disuse. In 1162 the sheriff of
Surrey accounted for the king's fishery at Brentford (fn. 84) and by 1173 Henry II had granted it to the
prior of Merton (Surr.). (fn. 85) In 1252 fishing was
permitted only as in the time of the king's
ancestors. (fn. 86) After suing the chapter of St. Paul's
in 1233, (fn. 87) the prior conceded limited rights to St.
Paul's and its tenants of Sutton manor, Chiswick,
at a distance from his own weirs at Brentford and
Mortlake. (fn. 88) In 1241 the sheriffs of Middlesex and
Surrey were to seize the tackle of those infringing
the prior's fishery, and in 1242 a net was to be
restored to Robert de Beauchamp. (fn. 89) Merton's
fishing rights were confirmed in 1340. (fn. 90)
The bishop of London as lord of Ealing had a
fishery at Old Brentford by 1257, when the king
ordered the keepers sede vacante to provide
8,000-10,000 lampreys and other fish. (fn. 91) The
fishery was called Brentford weir by 1424. Then
and in 1470 it included a weirditch and adjoining
meadow, (fn. 92) which in 1517-18 was described as 10
perches square within the Thames and was
presumably an islet. (fn. 93) In 1339 the bishop owned
a boat for the fishery at Brentford. (fn. 94) In 1313 and
1470 he covenanted to provide the lessee with
materials each year for repairs. (fn. 95) In 1262-3 the
fishery yielded 13s. 4d. in half a year. (fn. 96) It had
been destroyed by rebels in 1458 but was repaired by 1464. (fn. 97) It was not recorded after 1509,
when it had not been leased for a long time. (fn. 98)
A common fishery in the Brent had been
appropriated by Thomas Maidstone in 1381. (fn. 99)
The abbot of Westminster was said to have a
fishery there in 1450 (fn. 1) and the chapel of All Angels
held one from Brentford bridge to the Thames at
the Dissolution. The chapel's fishery was granted
in 1547 to Edward Seymour, duke of Somerset, (fn. 2)
and presumably reverted to the Crown on his
attainder. In 1583-4 it was claimed that the
fishery had been held in turn from c. 1550 by Sir
John Thynne, Mr. Godwin, and Mr. Buckfolde,
who leased it to inhabitants of Isleworth; they
fished both sides of the river until the lessee of
Boston manor, claiming the fishing on the Brentford side, took away their equipment. (fn. 3) In 1585
the fishery of the former chapel was conveyed to
Henry Buckfolde, Thomas Allycock, and others, (fn. 4)
and in 1598 Allycock conveyed it to Henry
Butler. (fn. 5) Fishing rights in the Brent were mentioned in the 17th century (fn. 6) and rights perhaps
once belonging to Boston manor were alienated
by James and Henry Hawley in 1738. (fn. 7)
In 1423 tenants of Ealing manor rented three
fisheries in the Thames, one of them attached to
Sergeaunts free tenement (fn. 8) and presumably
among those conveyed in 1521 to John and Alice
Pattishall. (fn. 9) About 1712 a fisherman of Old Brentford held several lodges on the Thames, where he
caught eels. (fn. 10) Thomas of Brentford, fishmonger,
held property in London in 1327 (fn. 11) and a London
fishmonger rented land by the Brent at Old
Brentford in 1466. (fn. 12) Royalists were accused of
burning boats and cutting nets there in 1642. (fn. 13)
Ealing parish paid in 1723 to replace the boat and
tackle of an Old Brentford fisherman. (fn. 14) Pollution
from Brentford gasworks had destroyed most of
the fish by 1828, when many fishermen's apprentices were idle. (fn. 15) In 1845 it was claimed that the
number of families supported by fishing had
fallen from 100 to 20 over fifty years, with
disturbance by steamboats and increasing
sewage. (fn. 16) In 1848 it was also claimed that there
had been no fish for ten or twelve years, because
of the steamboats and gasworks. (fn. 17)
Markets And Fairs.
At the request of Queen
Margaret a weekly market and a fair for six days
at New Brentford on the feast of St. Lawrence
(10 August) were granted to the priory of St.
Helen, Bishopsgate, in 1306. (fn. 18) All the prioress's
rights were leased in 1534 to John Rollesley, by
whom the market was conveyed to Hugh Eston,
who obtained confirmation from Elizabeth I.
Eston conveyed his interest to Jerome Hawley,
lessee of Boston manor, who brought a lawsuit
over the market between 1579 and 1587 (fn. 19) and
whose family apparently paid no rent to the
Crown until both market and fair were abolished
in 1610. A new licence was issued to James
Hawley, after local protests, and a weekly market
and six-day fairs on 1 May and 1 September were
granted in 1635 and confirmed in 1666. (fn. 20)
Stallholders were restricted by the narrowness
of New Brentford's High Street until Eston
moved them north to an orchard which he had
acquired behind the Crown. The square which
became Market Place existed there by 1635 and
was later enlarged and furnished with a market
house. (fn. 21) New Brentford was called Great or
Market Brentford by 1593 (fn. 22) and trade thereafter
prospered with the growth of traffic to London
by road and river, while Brentford fair was
mentioned in Samuel Butler's Hudibras of 1663.
The old market house was replaced c. 1850 by a
town hall and market house, in front of which
markets continued to be held. (fn. 23) Suppression of
the fair was sought before 1845 (fn. 24) and Brentford
Town Hall and Market House Co. in 1890 was
accused of often allowing the market to be used
for 'semi-fair purposes'. (fn. 25) The county council
acquired the licence in 1891 and, after pressure
from the U.D.C. and its successor, the fair was
finally abolished in 1932 and the market in
1933. (fn. 26)
In the late 19th century market gardeners set
up stalls in the roadway north of Kew bridge,
causing such traffic congestion that in 1893 the
local board bought 2 a. of the Gunnersbury
House estate for a market, which opened on the
north side of Chiswick High Road in 1893. A
large building of yellow brick with terracotta
dressings was built in 1905, after the site had
been extended, and, as Brentford Market, remained in use until 1974, when the traders
moved to Southall. In 1980 the former covered
market served as a skateboard park. (fn. 27)
At Ealing a fair was held on the green in 1822,
when William Cobbett was diverted by crowds of
Cockneys on their way there. (fn. 28) The fair, of
unknown origin, was held from 24 to 26 June (fn. 29)
until its suppression in 1880. (fn. 30)
Trade And Industry: Ealing.
Inhabitants
had business connexions with Londoners by
1344, when a London goldsmith owed money to
John of Bristol of Ealing, himself a debtor to
citizens in 1346 and 1353 and to Queen Philippa's
butler in 1350. (fn. 31) More dealings were recorded in
1360, with a Londoner, (fn. 32) and in 1410, with men
from Westminster and Holborn. Four out of five
Ealing tradesmen executed in 1443 were also of
London; one was also of King's Lynn (Norf.),
another of Bury St. Edmunds (Suff.), and a third
of Horndon-on-the-Hill (Essex). In 1469 an
Ealing fisherman had dealings with an Enfield
maltman. (fn. 33)
There was a tailor in 1293-4 (fn. 34) and from 1388
apparently always a carpenter. (fn. 35) A ploughwright
was recorded in 1408, a chapman in 1410, a smith
in 1414, a tanner in 1437, (fn. 36) a painter, a scrivener,
and a baker in 1443, (fn. 37) and a thatcher in 1455. (fn. 38) In
the 1650s there were references to a butcher, a
miller, a fellmonger, a cordwainer, a cheesemonger, a tallowchandler, three tailors, and a
brickmaker, (fn. 39) in 1668 to a sawyer, a bricklayer,
and a brewer, and in 1670 to a hempdresser. By
1704 there was a barber. (fn. 40) All were individual
craftsmen in a predominantly agricultural parish;
the only industries were small-scale brewing and
brickmaking and tilemaking.
Lewis Furnell had a brewhouse at Ealing in
1728 (fn. 41) but in 1733 only a malthouse remained. (fn. 42)
Other malthouses occurred between 1780 and
1796, at Gunnersbury, (fn. 43) and in 1739. (fn. 44) A house at
Ealing village, leased to T. P. Oakley in 1806, had
been converted by 1810 into the Lion brewery,
which had failed by 1822. (fn. 45) Another brewhouse,
late of Dr. Nicholas, existed on the rectory estate
in 1838. (fn. 46) William Griffiths was a brewer at
Ealing Dean in 1845 and 1855 (fn. 47) and David
Nolden in Ealing Road in 1853. (fn. 48)
There were frequent references to brickearth
and in 1668 there was a brickworks in the open
fields. (fn. 49) A kiln stood in tilekiln close east of
Hanger Lane from 1654 until at least 1761; (fn. 50) it
was omitted from leases after 1804 (fn. 51) and a pond
occupied most of the field in 1810. (fn. 52)
Late 19th-century growth was mainly residential, and new firms were all small, including
W. J. Cocks's bicycle factory at no. 32 High
Street in 1893 (fn. 53) and a mineral water works at
Gower House, St. Mary's Road, in 1894. (fn. 54) In
1901 the largest employers of men were the
building trade, with 1,458, and the transport
industry, with 995. There were 495 clerks and
still 405 workers in agriculture. (fn. 55) Numbers in the
building industry rose to 1,935 in 1911 but fell
back to 1,458 in 1921, while those in transport
increased steadily to 2,161 in 1921. By then 2,774
clerks formed the largest single group, although
they were less prominent than in some suburbs,
such as Hornsey. (fn. 56) Other important trades in
1921 were related to interior decoration and
clothing. Women worked mainly in domestic
service and laundries. Servants numbered 4,616
in 1901, 5,545 in 1911, and 4,004 in 1921.
Laundries, including the Ealing Park laundry
of Darwin Road, which advertised its drying
grounds c. 1903, employed 387 in 1901 and c. 500
in 1911. (fn. 57) Of the 16,589 residents who worked
elsewhere in 1921, 11,479 travelled to the City,
Westminster, and other parts of London, and
4,194 to Acton, Brentford, or elsewhere in
Middlesex. Of 4,715 workers who commuted
into Ealing, presumably most were employed in
domestic service or shops.
Twentieth-century Ealing came to be largely
hemmed in by industry along Western Avenue
and the Great West Road, at Park Royal, Acton,
and Brentford. Since the First World War several
firms have moved into Ealing without seriously
affecting its generally residential character.
W. Ottway and Co., scientific instrument
makers, occupied workshops, warehouses, and
offices off New Broadway by 1908. (fn. 58) They manufactured components and sighting equipment for
the Ministry of Defence in 1966, as a subsidiary
of the Hilger & Watts group, but closed in 1968. (fn. 59)
Wolf Electric Tools, founded in 1900, opened
the Pioneer works in Hanger Lane in 1935 and
acquired extra office and factory space on an
adjoining site in 1976. The firm, innovators in
making certain portable electric tools, in 1978
had 850 people at the works, which was also its
headquarters. (fn. 60)
Film production began in Ealing in 1904,
when William George Barker bought West
Lodge, Ealing Green, with 3 a. adjacent to
Walpole park. Studios, said to be the largest in
England, (fn. 61) were built by Barker Motion Picture
Photography Ltd. and in 1920 acquired by
General Film Renters, which leased them to
various companies. The site was bought in 1929
by Union Studios, which quickly failed, (fn. 62) and
then by Associated Talking Pictures, which built
a sound studio in 1931 and turned a house on
Ealing Green into offices and the main entrance. (fn. 63)
Michael Balcon became head of production in
1938 and the company, called Ealing Studios
Ltd., made films which included, after the
Second World War, the famous Ealing comedies.
The studios were sold in 1955 to the B.B.C.,
which still used them in 1980, while Balcon
bought Nile Lodge in Queen's Walk as his
headquarters and produced further Ealing
comedies elsewhere until 1958. (fn. 64) B.B.C. Enterprises had offices in Villiers House, Haven Green,
in 1980.
Several large companies had offices in Ealing in
1980. Those in Uxbridge Road included Percy
Bilton at Bilton House, Transworld Publishers
(Corgi books) at Century House, no. 61, Consolidated Pneumatic Tools Co. at no. 97, and Curry's,
the electrical retailers, at no. 46. Taylor Woodrow
occupied Western House, at the corner of
Western Avenue and Hanger Lane. (fn. 65)
Trade And Industry: Brentford.
One inhabitant owed money to a Londoner in 1367 (fn. 66)
and another to a Salisbury man in 1383. Others
stood surety to a man from Sittingbourne
(Kent) in 1390 and to an Uxbridge chapman
in 1441, (fn. 67) and from 1469 many had dealings with
Londoners. (fn. 68) In 1501 a yeoman had property at
Holborn, Knightsbridge, and Brentford, (fn. 69) in
1510 a London grocer was also of Brentford, (fn. 70)
and in 1591 a haberdasher traded at both London
and Brentford. (fn. 71)
The main road and the two rivers produced
distinctive occupations. The road was lined with
inns and served by local carters, carriers, and
later stagecoachmen. (fn. 72) The rivers gave rise to
basket makers, fishermen, and watermen. Osiers
were cultivated on aits in the Thames by 1397, (fn. 73)
the Godwins in early 18th-century New Brentford (fn. 74) and the Bowdens from 1791 to 1843 being
the leading basket makers. (fn. 75) Fishing and water
transport, sufficiently common in 1666 to justify
the appointment of a pressmaster, (fn. 76) were the
chief occupations in 1733, (fn. 77) although there had
long been many others. A baker occurred in
1255, (fn. 78) a draper in 1384, (fn. 79) a ploughwright in
1410, (fn. 80) a mason in 1423, (fn. 81) a cardmaker in 1429, (fn. 82)
and a butcher in 1497. (fn. 83) By c. 1600 trades included
those of tanner, chapman, baker, tiler, miller, and
shoemaker; (fn. 84) between 1606 and 1628 a chandler,
clothmaker, cordwainer, saddler, poulterer,
butcher, brewer, glover, merchant, and vintner
were also recorded. (fn. 85) Other occupations included
those of a cooper in 1642, (fn. 86) mealman in 1653, (fn. 87)
hempman and bricklayer in 1654, fellmonger,
wharfinger, weaver, glazier, shipwright, (fn. 88)
tobacco pipemaker, surgeon, clockmaker, hempmaker, distiller, apothecary, and lodesmith by
1670, (fn. 89) woollen draper, gunsmith, bargeman,
tobacconist, and cowleech by 1678, (fn. 90) and flaxdresser, upholsterer, scrivener, pattenmaker,
barber, haberdasher, excise officer, coalfactor,
stationer, and stonecutter by 1719. (fn. 91) In 1720
there were 60 different trades at New Brentford
alone, including those of stagecoachman, hatter,
milliner, pewterer, and bodicemaker, (fn. 92) and, as in
1774, (fn. 93) many shops. Brentford had 10 academies,
14 bakers, 18 bootmakers, 17 coalmerchants, 13
market gardeners, and 29 victuallers in 1826 (fn. 94)
and 62 listed trades in 1834. (fn. 95)
Many of the earliest industries, mentioned
more fully below, were extractive. They included
gravel digging, (fn. 96) lime burning, brickmaking, and
tilemaking, and all owed their growth to river or
canal transport. Tanning also required a plentiful
supply of water and the gunpowder whose storage
caused alarm in 1700 (fn. 97) was presumably brought
to Brentford by boat. The growth of malting and
allied trades from the late 17th century depended
on the existence of New Brentford's corn market.
From the mid 18th century granaries proliferated (fn. 98) and extractive industries expanded until in
1791 there was a large distillery, a large flour mill,
and extensive brick, tile, and pottery works. The
main road was important (fn. 99) and so too, from the
1790s, was the Grand Junction Canal. The same
industries were employing great numbers in
1800. (fn. 1) By 1816, however, the brick and pottery
works were depressed (fn. 2) and in 1819 recent industries, presumably Corson's turpentine works
and Johnson's starch mill, were said to have
disappeared. (fn. 3) Almost immediately new industries were introduced including a gasworks (fn. 4)
and the Grand Junction waterworks, (fn. 5) and in
1826-7 Montgomery's sawmills and the soap
factory were noted. (fn. 6) The distillery, gasworks,
and soap works attracted more attention than the
kilns, breweries, and malthouses in 1845. (fn. 7) Most
industry had moved out of New Brentford and
the distillery at Old Brentford had closed by
1859, but Brentford dock was opened and the
gasworks was increasingly dominating High
Street. New factories included Beach's jam factory, the Star Chemical works at the Ham by
1872, (fn. 8) a foundry north of High Street in 1912, (fn. 9)
the York Mineral Water Co. in 1909, (fn. 10) Water
Softeners Ltd. in 1911, (fn. 11) and by 1921 an indiarubber factory employing 344 people. (fn. 12) Since
most were small businesses, the chief firms in
1898 were much as in 1859. (fn. 13) All the lesser
breweries had closed by 1908, Montgomery's
timberyard by 1911, and the Royal brewery in
1923, leaving only the gasworks and the waterworks and firms mostly with under 50 employees
by 1933. (fn. 14)
Closures were counterbalanced by the opening
of factories along the Great West Road. Hudson
Essex Motor Co.'s factory was authorized in
1925, (fn. 15) the Firestone Tyre Co.'s works opened in
1929, (fn. 16) the factories of Trico-Folberth, Smith's
potato crisps, (fn. 17) Sperry Gyroscope, and R. B.
Pullin soon afterwards, and Macleans by 1938. (fn. 18)
By 1938 Brentford had manufacturing chemists
and makers of scientific instruments, motor cars,
aeroplane accessories, and other products, providing virtually full employment. (fn. 19) The turnover
of firms was extremely rapid: Beechams, the
Jantzen Knitting Co., the Raleigh Cycle Co., and
the British Oxygen Co. (B.O.C.) had premises in
the Great West Road in 1954, (fn. 20) by which date
manufacturers were being replaced by warehouses and offices, which employed many fewer
local people. (fn. 21) Few factories remained in 1978,
when buildings included the large headquarters
of Mowlem, Honeywell Information Systems,
and Beechams, the offices of Brentford Nylons, (fn. 22)
and the distributive centres of Mercedes-Benz
(G.B.), Honda, Agfa Gevaert, Peugeot Automobile U.K., and Fiat. The central portion of
Wallis, Filbert & Partners' white Firestone factory, which 'for sheer panache had no equal in
Britain', was demolished in 1980. (fn. 23)
Brentford gasworks closed in 1964, followed
by the Grand Junction waterworks, Brentford
dock, and the Brentford Soap Co., leaving no
large-scale industry in Brentford town itself.
Remaining firms, such as the Grafton Paper
Manufacturing Co. in Brook Lane, (fn. 24) were relatively small. By the late 19th century Brentford
had also been supplanted as a retail centre of
more than local importance.
Water freight was presumably received at
Brentford long before the first watermen were
recorded in 1613. (fn. 25) Fruit, bricks, (fn. 26) and probably
fish were shipped to London in the 17th century,
the return cargoes including dung by 1609, when
there was a dung wharf, (fn. 27) and coal, used by 1679
for brickmaking. (fn. 28) By 1733 water carriage was a
leading occupation. (fn. 29) In 1782 corn was an important cargo (fn. 30) and in 1791 boats carried market
produce to Hungerford (Berks.) and Queenhithe
(Lond.) by every tide. (fn. 31) Coal, in the absence of
local wood, was probably also used for lime, tile,
and pottery kilns and for malting. In 1791 coke
powered William Johnson's starch mill (fn. 32) and
from 1821 it was processed at Brentford gasworks. (fn. 33) Several coal warehouses existed from
the 1790s, (fn. 34) when coal from the Midlands probably supplanted that brought via London. In
1841 boats wrecked at Brentford included 2 from
Tipton (Staffs.) loaded with coal, 2 others from
Tipton with coal and peas, 2 from Bloxwich
(Staffs.) with hoop iron, and 2 from Stourbridge
(Worcs.) with wheat. There were also 3 large coal
barges at Brentford End, 5 large barges with
wheat and linseed, and a barge with slate and
stone from Nuneaton (Warws.); other craft came
from Wolverhampton, Brierley Hill (Staffs.),
and Tipton. (fn. 35) In 1879 a wide boat, 27 narrow
canal boats, and 4 tugs, were registered at Brentford, the narrow boats mainly for use on the
Grand Junction canal, on which 6 would go to
Birmingham, 1 to South Staffordshire, and 2 to
Oxford; 8 carried general merchandise, 2 iron, 3
grain, 2 coal, 12 building material, and 2 ammunition. (fn. 36) As many as 35 canal boats were
recorded at Brentford in 1891 and 36 in 1911, but
only 9 in 1921. (fn. 37) Water traffic in 1930 was
declining every year. In 1975 the barges of the
Thames & General Lighterage Co., the largest
company on the Thames, travelled mainly between Brentford and London docks. (fn. 38) The
Grand Union canal at Brentford was then still
heavily used for freight. (fn. 39)
Wharves, such as the Hollows, (fn. 40) were first
recorded in the 17th century and ultimately lined
the whole waterfront. They became increasingly
elaborate and permanent, such as T. B. Rowe's
canal basin. (fn. 41) Town Meadow dock, rented by
Brentford U.D.C. in 1875 and bought soon afterwards, (fn. 42) was unused in 1929; a plan to renovate it
in 1930 was opposed by Clements Knowlinge,
whose Goat, Victoria, and Ferry wharves could
handle most craft but were frequently idle. (fn. 43)
Tunnel Cement, a subsidiary of Portland
Cement, distributed cement from Essex in the
1950s, (fn. 44) and Clements Tough, a subsidiary of the
Dickenson Rob Group, in 1977 still provided
handling and warehousing at Ferry Lane. (fn. 45) In
1978 many other wharves at Brentford were
disused.
Brentford dock was erected by the G.W.R. to
the designs of I. K. Brunel and opened in
1859, (fn. 46) to connect river and canal traffic with the
railways. The site in Isleworth and New Brentford, bought in 1855 from James Montgomery,
timber merchant, consisted of Old England, on
the western bank of the Brent and eastern bank of
the Grand Junction canal at their junction with
the Thames, together with land west of the canal
and east of the Brent. (fn. 47) Brunel's covered wooden
dock was destroyed by fire in 1920 and replaced
by 1923 by a steel and iron structure. From 1918
the Thames frontage was adapted for boats of up
to 300 tons and in 1923 craft ranged from heavy
down-river barges to light canal boats, including
sailing barges. There were customs and weighing
facilities, a coal-tip, and 3 sidings and 1,000
waggons to serve the south and west of England,
South Wales, and the Midlands. (fn. 48) A great variety
of goods, together with coal for ships in the Pool
of London, was still handled in 1964, when the
dock was closed. (fn. 49)
Boat building was attested by a shipwright at
Old Brentford in 1659 (fn. 50) and by the devise of a
copyhold boatyard there in 1731. (fn. 51) In 1853 Mr.
Sims had a barge building yard at the Ham, New
Brentford, (fn. 52) and in 1898 Messrs. Radford had a
barge and waggon works at the confluence of the
Thames and Brent. (fn. 53) Works were built at Old
Brentford for the Thames (later Thames &
General) Lighterage Co. in 1881 (fn. 54) and enlarged
in 1926 by slipways on Lot's Ait. (fn. 55) A 34-ton tug
to tow strings of 7 barges from London docks to
Brentford was built there in 1958 (fn. 56) and although
boat building ceased c. 1965 (fn. 57) the yard in 1978
remained an active maintenance yard for the
company. E. C. Jones & Son were building
Bantam boats, small tugs to manouvre barges in
confined spaces, in 1953 (fn. 58) and survived in 1978.
Tanning was recorded in 1591 (fn. 59) and 1714. (fn. 60) A
tanyard on the Brent, west of Market Place and
north of St. Lawrence's church, was continuously
occupied between 1720 and 1853. (fn. 61) James Band,
from a family of Bermondsey tanners, established
his own firm of parchment makers at a tannery in
Boston Road near Park chapel in 1845. The firm
moved c. 1910 to Plough Yard, the premises being
extended during the Second World War. There
were 70 employees c. 1960 and 80c. 1975 but only
15 in 1978, by which date they also produced
chamois leather and all kinds of vellum. (fn. 62)
Soap making was practised at Old Brentford c.
1603, when tenants were not to put soap-ash on
the waste. (fn. 63) William Seagar managed a soap
works there from 1764 or earlier (fn. 64) until c. 1792,
when it passed to Roger Griffin and Peter
Warren. (fn. 65) Another firm, in which Griffin,
Alexander Corson, and others were partners,
went bankrupt by 1796. (fn. 66) Lawrence Rowe
acquired land in 1800 near Ferry Lane, (fn. 67) presumably to the west, (fn. 68) and by 1827 Brentford was
the main centre of hard soap production in southeastern England. (fn. 69) A prominent landmark c.
1827 (fn. 70) and described as very extensive in
1845, (fn. 71) T. B. Rowe & Co.'s Thames Soap Works
occupied a large site between Ferry Lane, Town
Meadow, and the Thames in 1888. (fn. 72) The factory
was acquired by Messrs. Lever in 1916 and
closed in 1933. Employees then opened the
Brentford Soap Co. at the former Beehive
brewery in Catherine Wheel Yard, New Brentford, where 150 worked by 1958 (fn. 73) and which,
after a fire, reopened temporarily in 1961.
A brickmaker of New Brentford contracted in
1502 to supply 400,000 bricks to Syon abbey. (fn. 74)
In 1671 bricks were shipped to London (fn. 75) and in
1687 an Ealing brickmaker had 180,000 bricks in
stock. (fn. 76) In 1774 hundreds of loads were stockpiled and so much brickearth had been dug
around Brentford that the surrounding fields
were stated, wrongly, to be exhausted. (fn. 77) Brickmaking was often carried on with tilemaking: in
1679 tile kiln close adjoined Ferry Lane, Old
Brentford, (fn. 78) and in 1731 there was a tile kiln
south of Old Brentford High Street. (fn. 79) The
Barrett family, brickmakers in 1729 and 1748,
were noted for pantiles. (fn. 80) The partnership of
Trimmer and Clarke, which managed a tile kiln
in 1776, (fn. 81) already existed in 1742, (fn. 82) presumably
for the same purpose, and had an extensive
business in 1791. (fn. 83) Conducted from 1786 by
Samuel Clarke and from 1807 by John Clarke,
the old tile kiln, together with a new one, was run
from 1800 by Messrs. Trimmer, (fn. 84) who had their
own tile kilns from at least 1772 until 1835 over
the boundary in Chiswick, with access from Kew
Bridge Road. (fn. 85) By 1834 part of the business had
been taken over by George Robinson, (fn. 86) who had
acquired the rest by 1845 (fn. 87) and managed the tile
kiln and brickfield by the Potomac pond in
Gunnersbury park until at least 1861. (fn. 88) Bricklayers, working only in the summer, were said to
be well paid and responsible for increasing crime
in 1828. (fn. 89)
Potters were working in New Brentford in
1691, 1693, and 1699. (fn. 90) Thomas Edwardes
owned a pottery at Bull Lane, Old Brentford, in
1766, which was let to Messrs. Johnson and
Turner from 1770, to Daniel Turner alone from
1772 to 1781, and then to members of his family
until c. 1820. (fn. 91) The business expanded greatly
between 1774 (fn. 92) and 1791 (fn. 93) but the stock was
auctioned in 1820, probably because of the
failure of T. W. Turner (d. 1833). (fn. 94) It had been
taken over by 1823 by Trimmers (fn. 95) and by 1840
by George Robinson, (fn. 96) who had relinquished it
by 1849, (fn. 97) and was managed by George Wood in
1853 (fn. 98) and J. T. Greenwood in 1870-2. (fn. 99)
Another pottery at Old Brentford was managed
by Daniel Roberts from 1773 and a Mr. Shepherd
in 1790. (fn. 1) James Ashford ran Coleshole pottery,
Old Brentford, in 1853 (fn. 2) and James Collier was a
tile and pottery maker in 1859 (fn. 3) and 1870. (fn. 4)
Garden pots were still made by traditional
methods c. 1946. (fn. 5)
Lime burning was practised in 1659 by Robert
Tunstall, whose kiln near the Hollows, Old
Brentford, supplied builders and farmers in both
Middlesex and Surrey (fn. 6) and was probably the one
mentioned in 1669. (fn. 7) Robert Tunstall, cooper,
owned several lime kilns at the Hollows, Old
Brentford, in 1679 (fn. 8) and a namesake in 1790
leased two lime kilns, probably at the Hollows, to
James Trimmer, (fn. 9) described as a lime burner in
1791. (fn. 10) Mr. Watkins was a lime merchant of
Brentford in 1845. (fn. 11)
Timber was bought at Brentford by Westminster abbey in 1607. (fn. 12) A timber yard between
High Street and the Brent, New Brentford, in
1638 and 1667 (fn. 13) had disappeared by 1693, (fn. 14)
having been leased by Robert Tunstall, cooper,
who himself kept 100 loads of timber in stock
in 1667. (fn. 15) Another timber yard, recorded in
1690, was occupied in turn by William Baldwin,
carpenter and builder of houses in the Butts, and
Robert Mundy. (fn. 16) Yet another yard faced the Half
Acre, New Brentford, in 1717 (fn. 17) and a new one
was established near the Butts and Windmill
Lane by 1735. (fn. 18)
A wharf between the Brent and High Street,
Old Brentford, was later said to have been a
timber yard from c. 1750. (fn. 19) It belonged by 1790
to the Shairpe family, (fn. 20) who leased it in 1806 to
William Anthony and James Montgomery and
in 1818 to Montgomery alone, then described as
timber merchant of Old Brentford. (fn. 21) Montgomery, who in 1826 also dealt in coal, (fn. 22) occupied
2¾ a. in 1840 (fn. 23) and bought the freehold in
1853. (fn. 24) In 1845 he had a spacious wharf and
sawmills, employing many people and with a
range of buildings and stock greater than any
other in Middlesex. (fn. 25) The business continued as
James Montgomery & Son until 1911, when the
site was sold to Water Softeners Ltd. (fn. 26)
A timber yard by the Brent was managed
by Messrs. Joseph and Dawson in 1841 (fn. 27) and
another at the Hollows, between High Street and
the Thames, Old Brentford, was offered for sale
in 1907. (fn. 28)
Malthouses, breweries, and distilleries, relying
on Brentford's corn market, were noteworthy
from the late 17th century, some maltsters being
also dealers in corn and coal. New Brentford had
the greater number of businesses but the larger
firms were at Old Brentford.
Most of New Brentford's malthouses were
attached to inns, including ones at Catherine
Wheel Yard in 1679, (fn. 29) at the Royal Oak, Market
Place, in 1702, and at White Horse Yard, off
Market Place, in 1702 (fn. 30) and 1738. (fn. 31) The latter
was disused in 1768 (fn. 32) and many malthouses
operated only briefly, since four were vacant in
1741 and three in 1750. (fn. 33) Some families managed
several malthouses: the Lowe family had three
c. 1690-1705; (fn. 34) the Banks family had one in 1743
and two, probably south of High Street, between
1772 and 1812, besides four at Old Brentford
between 1790 and 1817; (fn. 35) and the Jones family's
coal, corn, and malting business, based on
Catherine Wheel Yard until 1821, included at
least two malthouses from 1779, one at Plough
Yard and another at the Black Boy and Still inn. (fn. 36)
In 1791 Thomas Jullion, jeweller, and Thomas
Whitbread ran distilling and rectifying
businesses. (fn. 37)
A brewhouse by the Thames at Old Brentford
in 1685 was acquired in 1696 by John Clarke,
distiller, of London (fn. 38) and later of Old Brentford. (fn. 39)
A distillery and malthouse on the site were
surrendered by William Lonsdale in 1735, (fn. 40)
occupied by four partners, including Percival
Hart and Daniel Roberts, from 1763, (fn. 41) by Hart's
son-in-law David Roberts from 1773, (fn. 42) and by
him in partnership with Thomas Smith and
Thomas Harrington from 1792. (fn. 43) Another
Thames-side brewhouse at Old Brentford
acquired by maltsters in 1740 was occupied by
Hart in 1760. (fn. 44) After his death a malthouse stood
on the site, (fn. 45) which was occupied from 1773 by
David Roberts, (fn. 46) whose premises in 1777 covered
a large area between High Street and the
Thames. (fn. 47) In 1790, besides the premises south of
High Street, Roberts, Smith, and Harrington
also had land to the north, where their principal
distillery stood. Considerable by 1791, (fn. 48) the
distillery was the fourth largest in England in
1802. (fn. 49) In 1817 it was sold to Messrs. Booth of
Clerkenwell, who by 1819 had also acquired
Moses Banks's four malthouses and other
property from Smith and Harrington. (fn. 50) Despite
a major fire in 1837 (fn. 51) the distillery in 1845 was
described as one of the most complete in the
world, producing nearly a million gallons of
spirit every year. (fn. 52) Sold in 1851 to Messrs. Haig,
it was still operating on a large scale in 1855
but apparently had ceased production by
1859. (fn. 53) From 1864 parts of the site were used for
housing. (fn. 54)
A distillery and malthouse south of Old Brentford High Street in 1735 were settled in trust on
Abraham Harvest and his wife Anne Trimmer in
1748 (fn. 55) and owned by Abraham Trimmer, brewer,
in 1790. (fn. 56) There were two malthouses on the site
in 1796, which were worked from c. 1814 by John
Newton, (fn. 57) the purchaser in 1801 of a brewery by
the Thames at Old Brentford; that brewery had
been Francis Harvest's in 1735 and Thomas
Stump's since 1774. (fn. 58) Newton's brewery was
sold in 1817 to Messrs. Thompson of Chiswick
and passed in 1825 to John Hazard, (fn. 59) probably
already a partner of Booth & Co. The name was
apparently changed from the British to the Red
Lion brewery and in 1832, after a visit by William
IV, to the Royal brewery. (fn. 60) The business was
sold to Messrs. Carrington and Whitehurst in
1851 (fn. 61) and run by Montagu Ballard from 1880
until 1923, when brewing ceased. (fn. 62) About 1926
the building was replaced by extensions to the
gasworks. (fn. 63)
The Grand Junction brewery, Catherine
Wheel Yard, New Brentford, was worked from
1826 by James Crooks, (fn. 64) in 1845-8 by William
Gearey, (fn. 65) in 1853 by Sophia and Charles Gearey,
and in 1862 and 1866 by George Gearey. (fn. 66) The
buildings apparently were taken over by William
Gomm, mentioned in 1843, (fn. 67) whose Beehive
brewery was in High Street in 1853 (fn. 68) but later
in Catherine Wheel Yard. W. Gomm & Son
advertised ten brews in 1893 (fn. 69) and operated until
1900 or later. (fn. 70) Their business had been acquired
by Fuller, Smith & Turner by 1908, when the
Catherine Wheel Yard premises were for sale. (fn. 71)
Breweries in Boston Manor Road included
Thomas Tearle's Star brewery in 1848 (fn. 72) and the
Metropolitan and Provincial Joint Stock Brewery
Co. in 1853. (fn. 73) Thomas Lawrence's Boston
brewery, almost opposite Boston House, (fn. 74)
functioned from 1862 or earlier until 1896 (fn. 75) but
evidently had been taken over by Fuller, Smith &
Turner by 1900. (fn. 76) High Street contained David
Allen's Albion brewery between 1851 and 1866,
and Richard Hunt's Harefield brewery in 1853. (fn. 77)
The leading 19th-century maltsters were
Messrs. Jupp. In 1802 William Jupp occupied a
single malthouse at Old Brentford, first mentioned in 1780, (fn. 78) and in 1855 the premises, east of
Ferry Lane and north of Goat Wharf, were very
extensive. (fn. 79) The firm had other malthouses near
Kew bridge in 1877, when it planned to rebuild
them, (fn. 80) and from at least 1826 until 1896 Jupp &
Sons were also coal and corn merchants. (fn. 81)
Starch making was recorded in 1603. (fn. 82) Dr.
William Johnson's premises in Catherine Wheel
Yard in 1791 included steam mill, coke house,
starch house, and laboratory piggeries. (fn. 83) The
business may have existed in the 1770s (fn. 84) and was
much admired (fn. 85) but proved unsuccessful, often
changing hands. (fn. 86) Described as Messrs. Burrell's
starch manufactory in 1811, (fn. 87) it was not recorded
after 1812. (fn. 88) Richard Thoroughgood and John
Wallace had another starch factory at Old Brentford in 1791. (fn. 89)
Mrs. Sumner had a printing office at Brentford
in 1774. (fn. 90) Philip Norbury of High Street, New
Brentford, was rated from 1769 (fn. 91) and printed
sermons in 1775. (fn. 92) The family firm continued to
print until at least 1859 (fn. 93) as part of a business
which, in 1848, included the selling of stationery,
medicines, and perfumery, besides a circulating
library and the post office. (fn. 94) Other printers were
W. H. Jackson, in High Street in 1872, (fn. 95) the
Brentford Publishing Co., Albany Road, between
1901 and 1956, (fn. 96) and Walter Pearce & Co. in
1939. (fn. 97)
Alexander Corson, surgeon, leased a turpentine
works, laboratory, and warehouse in Catherine
Wheel Yard in 1792. (fn. 98) He had occupied the
laboratory before 1791, when he was granted
more land on the west of the Ham, (fn. 99) and a
counting house, mill house, and distillery stood
on the site in 1792. (fn. 1) On the failure of his soap
making concern, (fn. 2) the Ham premises were sold in
1797 (fn. 3) and thereafter often changed hands. (fn. 4)
Turpentine was still made in 1813. (fn. 5)
T. W. Beach moved from Isleworth to Brentford in 1867, leased a jam factory at Walnut Tree
Road, Old Brentford, in 1886, and formed a
limited company with three factories in Middlesex and Worcestershire in 1887. His sale of jam
made from whole fruit in glass bottles earned the
description 'father of the jam trade' in 1902.
Beach's sons assigned the lease on the Brentford
factory in 1930. (fn. 6)
The firm of Trico-Folberth was formed in
1928 and established in a new factory in the Great
West Road in 1930, making windscreen wipers
and other motor accessories. It had 700 employees in 1948 (fn. 7) and survived in 1963 (fn. 8) but not in
1975. (fn. 9)
The Sperry Gyroscope Co. was formed in
1915 and moved from Shepherd's Bush
(Hammersmith) to the Great West Road in 1931,
with 250 employees. (fn. 10) There were c. 2,500 employees when it moved to Feltham c. 1950. (fn. 11)
R. B. Pullin & Co. was founded in 1932 and
moved in 1935 to Phoenix works in the Great
West Road. The company made electrical equipment and precision instruments in 1948 (fn. 12) and
extended the buildings in 1958. (fn. 13) Taken over as
part of the industrial division of Rank Precision
Industries by 1968, (fn. 14) it had 800 employees in
1972. (fn. 15) It was called Rank Pullin Controls in
1978, when there were 500 employees (fn. 16) and the
works also housed a film library and laboratories.
The Permutit Co. originated in the amalgamation of two firms in 1914 and moved in the 1930s
to Permutit House, Gunnersbury Avenue, where
it made water softeners and purifiers. The
engineering workshops were moved c. 1955 and
the offices to Isleworth in 1966, leaving only the
laboratories at Permutit House in 1978. (fn. 17)
The British Oxygen Co. occupied buildings on
the north side of the Great West Road in 1938
and 1940, where in 1978 Great West House was
the headquarters of the company's gases division,
employing 150 in making medical gases. (fn. 18)
Beechams Ltd., the international pharmaceutical, cosmetic, and food group, established
laboratories in the Great West Road in 1944. Its
Lucozade factory moved there by 1951 (fn. 19) and
Beechams' main offices followed in 1955,
occupying premises used since 1947 as the headquarters of B.O.A.C. (fn. 20) In 1978 the building
housed only research and administrative staff. (fn. 21)
The Strand Glass Co., renamed Strand Glassfibre in 1966, operated from no. 79 High Street
before moving to the Brentway trading estate c.
1968. It employed 140 people in distributing
materials in 1978. (fn. 22)
Polco Products was founded in 1956 at Covent
Garden (Westm.) to make or import motor car
accessories, notably vacuum cleaners. The firm
moved to the Brent works, Catherine Wheel
Yard, in 1972 and had 37 staff in 1978. (fn. 23)