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- Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
- Fri, April 01, 2011
The book by Cockburn is available from the SPAB/Mills Archive bookshop for £4+P&P:
http://shop.millsarchivetrust.org/search.php?mode=search&page=1
Home » Mill writing » Whatever happened to Whitmore and Binyon?
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Whatever happened to Whitmore and Binyon?
April 01 2011 by Chris Wheeler (827 views)
Archive & Peter Dolman
| 2 comments
This is a question I have been asking all week. Having worked for 2 weeks on the partly indexed material on Lincolnshire and Suffolk windmills in Peter Dolman’s collection, this week I have turned my attention to Peter’s material on Whitmore and Binyon. None of this material has yet been catalogued or scanned, so it has been really fascinating to make discoveries along the way.

Throughout the week, I have consulted Phyllis Cockburn’s excellent book on Whitmore and Binyon, which reveals more information on the company itself. Having morphed form Whitmore & Sons n 1860 to Whitmore and Binyon in 1868, the company really became successful after the introduction of iron roller mills in the 1880s and 1890s. The numbers of advertisements from this period that I have come across in Peter’s collection advertising milling machinery are a testament to this. Having helped to create 45 new roller plants by the mid-1890s, the company seemed to have reached its zenith. However, within five or six years the company had gone. So what went wrong?
Phyllis Cockburn suggests that the company spent a lot of money on workshops and machinery that they could not afford, but there must also be other reasons. After I have dealt with the photographs In Peter’s collection on the firm, I shall be moving on to look at his notes and documents on the company. Hopefully these will help to reveal some insights into why it declined so rapidly. Until then though, if anyone has any thoughts or information that would shed light on this please feel free to share.
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Messages & comments
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- Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
- Sun, April 03, 2011
Adam Marriot wrote on Facebook:
"Ron, i have a Whitmore hurst frame, i bought it being told it was a Ransomes but has Binyon stamped on the mace. Theres a steam engine of theirs in Stowmarket museum, i was told though i don't know if correct that either mr Whitmore or mr Binyon had an estate locally to the works but the workers were repeatedly cought poaching so they shut the factory and put everyone out of work."
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