Catalogue description Messenger and Co. Ltd
This record is held by Museum of English Rural Life
Reference: | TR MES |
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Title: | Messenger and Co. Ltd |
Description: |
The Collection contains contract files for buildings erected in Great Britain and overseas. |
Date: | 1887-1953 |
Arrangement: |
The catalogue is arranged by the following counties: Bedfordshire Berkshire Buckinghamshire Cambridgeshire Cheshire Cornwall Cumbria Derbyshire Devon Dorset Essex Gloucestershire Hampshire Herefordshire Hertfordshire Isles of Wight and Man Kent Lancashire Leicestershire Lincolnshire London Merseyside Middlesex Norfolk Northamptonshire Northumberland and Co. Durham Nottinghamshire Oxfordshire Rutland Shropshire Somerset Staffordshire Suffolk Surrey Sussex Warwickshire West Midlands Wiltshire Worcestershire Yorkshire Scotland Ireland Wales Overseas NB: Where counties were not specifically mentioned in the records, current counties have been given. |
Related material: |
Many records were retained by the Records Office of Leicestershire, Leicester and Rutland, including financial records, purchase and estimate books, contract books, order books, contract files for Leicestershire, plans etc 1866-1973 [Reference DE 2121] |
Held by: | Museum of English Rural Life, not available at The National Archives |
Language: | English |
Creator: |
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Physical description: | 30 linear metres |
Immediate source of acquisition: |
Deposited in 1980 (Accession Number T80/8) via Leicestershire Museums, Art Galleries and Records Service. |
Subjects: |
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Administrative / biographical background: |
Thomas Goode Messenger is recorded as having a plumber's, glazier's and glassfitter's business in High Street, Loughborough as early as 1855. In 1858 he formed his own company of Messenger and Co. and by 1863 is listed as a plumber and hydraulic engineer. By 1877 the firm is described as "horticultural builders and hot water apparatus manufacturers". In 1874, Walter Chapman Burder purchased the company and in 1884 the business was moved from the High Street premises to Cumberland Road, off Ashby Road. A foundry was then built and further extensions in 1895 led to the complete closure of the High Street Branch. The firm was famous, particularly in the Victorian and Edwardian period, for making greenhouses, verandahs, summer houses, cucumber frames, melon pits, mushroom beds, orchid stages, vineries and peach houses. As the demand declined from the 1930s, the company began to concentrate more on the manufacture of heating equipment and became an engineering firm. It was also known by the name Midland Horticultural Company. |
Link to NRA Record: |
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