Catalogue description F. KENDALL AND SON, BREWERS' CHEMISTS OF STRATFORD-UPON-AVON

This record is held by Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

Details of DR 197
Reference: DR 197
Title: F. KENDALL AND SON, BREWERS' CHEMISTS OF STRATFORD-UPON-AVON
Description:

Records of the firm of F. Kendall and Son, their subsidiaries and agencies, with some personal papers.

Date: 1845-1966
Arrangement:

The main divisions of the collection are:

 

DR 197/1-82: Accounts

 

DR 197/83-103: Staff

 

DR 197/104-137: Property

 

DR 197/138-145: Correspondence

 

DR 197/146: Minute book

 

DR 197/147-154: Shares

 

DR 197/155-167: Production

 

DR 197/168-208: Technical

 

DR 197/209-231: Company documents

 

DR 197/232-238: Printed matter

 

DR 197/239-242: Photographs

 

DR 197/243-285: Subsidiaries and agencies

 

DR 197/286-315: Personal papers

Related material:

DR 315/1: Records from the offices of F. Kendall and Son, 1775-1974, rescued on closure of the firm by Frederick Morris, Company Secretary.

Held by: Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

F Kendall and Son, c1836-1873, of Stratford-Upon-Avon, brewers' chemists

Physical description: 315 items
Subjects:
  • Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire
  • Pharmacology
  • Alcoholic beverages
Administrative / biographical background:

Frederic Kendall (1809-1883) moved to Stratford, taking over, in 1836 the chemist's shop at 36 High Street, formerly run by S.C. Price. The business prospered and in 1838 he moved to more spacious premises at no. 33 High Street where he could more easily manufacture his preparations. In 1841 he was one of the founding members of the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain. Always interested in the preservation of foodstuffs, by 1866 Kendall was manufacturing bisulphite of lime, used largely in the brewing industry. After complaints about the 'noxious effluvia', this part of the business was moved to the old lime-works near the canal. The chemist's shop in High Street was handed over to his assistant Richard Hawkes in 1873 and Kendall carried on his pioneering work in the application of science to brewing, with increased manufacture of sulphites, bisulphites of lime and other alkalines. After his death in 1883 the brewing chemicals business, allied to the analysis of water for brewers, was carried on by his son George Frederic as F. Kendall & Son and continued to trade until the 1970s, being registered as a limited liability company in 1902. Not all the firm's customers were brewers, but they formed the bulk of the trade, the principal local customer being Flower and Sons, whose old brewery site Kendalls took over in 1910. The business also had offices in France and agents in Australia.

Link to NRA Record:

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