January 2023
The Visit
After seeing the epic thread from @Esoteric Eric I just had to pay this one a visit (if not for the staircase shot alone), visited this one with @stranton and @coolboyslim whilst out and about in the Liverpool area. We spent a good hour here covering the full building, after wondering around the structure it was very clear that it was once a very grand building in its day. The facility is split over two floors with multiple art-deco staircases dotted around.
@Esoteric Eric's thread: Report - - Former Pilkington HQ Canteen, St. Helens, Jan. 23 | Leisure Sites
The History
The company was founded by John William Bell and five other local men in 1826 under the name St. Helens Crown Glass Company. In the early seventeenth century the introduction of coal-fired furnaces in glass-making had caused most glass-production to be in the North East of England where most of the coal mines were located. The first glass-making furnace in St Helens was built by 1700, so by the time St Helens Crown Glass Company was established there was already competition up and running.
The company was established with the technical knowledge and ability of J. W. Bell plus capital from three of the most influential local families: the Bromilows, the Greenalls and the Pilkingtons. In 1827 production started at Grove Street, St. Helens. The former Pilkington UK Headquarters can still be seen at this location. In 1828 J. W. Bell sold his share of the company to Peter Greenall, James Bromilow, William Pilkington and a John Barnes. Since Bell had the technical knowledge of glass making and had kept the success of the works consistent, the loss of him looked damning for the company. But the partners felt too invested to give up, so kept on investing sums of money. William Pilkington took on Bells role and became very involved in the company’s day-to-day activities, using the knowledge he’d learned from J. W. Bell.
William’s elder brother Richard started to invest in the company, with William acting on his behalf in decisions. After some ‘differences’ arose between William Pilkington and James Bromilow in 1829, James Bromilow left, and John Barnes followed him with this move. This was due to William discovering that James had not been keeping the accounts properly and had been missing sums of money off the books. This left St Helens Crown Glass Company with William and Richard Pilkington and Peter Greenall as remaining shareholders, so they renamed the company “Greenall & Pilkington” in 1829. After the withdrawal of Peter Greenall in the early 1840s, William and Richard Pilkington acquired the company. In 1849, it was officially renamed Pilkington Brothers.
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Cheers for looking
Canon EOS 70D, 10-18mm EFS
Canon EOS 70D, 10-18mm EFS