Catalogue description IMPERIAL TOBACCO LTD (FORMERLY W A AND A C CHURCHMAN LTD), IPSWICH AND NORWICH
This record is held by Suffolk Archives - Ipswich
Reference: | HC446 |
---|---|
Title: | IMPERIAL TOBACCO LTD (FORMERLY W A AND A C CHURCHMAN LTD), IPSWICH AND NORWICH |
Description: |
Prime cost records, 1907-1939; comparative returns of sales, 1915-1939; trade mark registers, c. 1908-c. 1962; office staff and foremen's wages records, 1918-1942; rules of service, etc., 1970-1978; file concerning employees killed etc. in H M Forces, 1940-1949 |
Date: | 1907-1978 |
Related material: |
The Imperial Tobacco Company (of Great Britain and Ireland) Ltd, Ogden Branch archive at Liverpool Record Office (380OGD) contains the following material relating to Churchmans: Wholesale and retail price lists 1909-1945 (380OGD/5/4/1/7-11, 380OGD/5/4/1/19-20, 23-25, 26-28, 32, 35-36, 41-42, 57-58) and 'Trade Marks - Specimens removed from Guard Book' (380OGD/6/1/10/14). |
Held by: | Suffolk Archives - Ipswich, not available at The National Archives |
Language: | English |
Creator: |
|
Physical description: | 27 vols, 7 files (6.5 lin. ft.) |
Access conditions: |
File concerning employees killed etc. in H M Forces, 1940-1949: confidential until 2025 |
Custodial history: |
The records accumulated at the Ipswich factory of W.A. & A.C. Churchman Ltd in Portman Road from 1907. The few records of the small Norwich Branch were presumably transferred there on its closure. On the closure of the Ipswich site in May 1992, the records were placed on deposit at Suffolk Record Office, Ipswich on 24 June 1992, by the Operational Director, Cigar Division, Imperial Tobacco Ltd, PO Box 735, Bristol,BS99 1UP |
Subjects: |
|
Administrative / biographical background: |
The firm of W.A. and A.C. Churchman was founded in Ipswich by William Churchman in 1790, beginning as a small pipe tobacco manufacturer with a shop at Hyde Park Corner. In 1888 William Alfred (later Sir William) and Arthur Charles Churchman (later Lord Woodbridge and a director of the British American Tobacco Company from 1904 to 1923), grandsons of the founder, succeeded their father, Henry, in the business. It was from them that the Company derived its title. At that time output was mainly shag, snuff and tobacco. By 1890 the Company was also making 'white cigarettes', and six years later installed one of the first cigarette-making machines, producing 20,000 cigarettes an hour; the famous 'Churchman's No. 1' brand dates from this period. In 1891 Churchmans opened a new factory in Portman Road, Ipswich. In 1890 James Buchanan Duke of North Carolina merged his family tobacco business, W. Duke Sons & Co., with four of the largest American manufacturers to form the American Tobacco Company, which by 1901 had amassed capital to the equivalent of £150 million sterling. An aggressive assault was launched on the British cigarette market, Duke making no secret of his authority to spend up to £6 million of American Tobacco Company money on the acquisition of British and European tobacco companies. To counter this threat, W.D. & H.O. Wills, John Player & Sons, Lambert & Butler, Hignett Brothers (with their associated firms) and Stephen Mitchell & Son, with six other firms, joined forces to found the Imperial Tobacco Company (of Great Britain and Ireland) Ltd in 1901. The following year Churchmans joined the new company. Churchmans' Portman Road factory was extended several times during the inter-war years. From at least as early as 1918 to at least as late as 1944 they also had a small branch in Norwich, of which very little documentation appears to have survived (see HC446/2). In 1961 W.A. & A.C. Churchman amalgamated with Lambert & Butler and Edwards, Ringer & Bigg, to become first Churchman, Lambert & Ringer, then renamed Churchmans in 1965. By now production was concentrated on the manufacturing of cigars, and in August 1966 Churchmans acquired the firm of Herbert Merchant, the main UK agents for the Dutch cigar producers Henri Wintermans. With a work force of over 1,000, the Ipswich factory produced more than 1,000,000 cigars a day. But in 1972 the company ceased to be a separate brand of Imperial Tobacco; the cigar business was integrated with John Player & Sons, and the tobacco interests with Ogdens of Liverpool. Finally, in May 1992, in order to streamline operations, the parent company moved all production to Bristol, and Churchmans closed with the loss of over four hundred jobs. |
Have you found an error with this catalogue description? Let us know