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  2. Morphy Richards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morphy_Richards

    A 1950s Morphy-Richards iron with original box. Donal Morphy of Chislehurst, and Charles Richards of Farnborough, Kent, met whilst working at Sydney S Bird and Sons [3] and formed Morphy-Richards Ltd on 8 July 1936 at an oast house in St Mary Cray in Kent. Morphy and Richards were joint managing directors, and had raised £1,000 starting capital.

  3. Kenwood Limited - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenwood_Limited

    Kenwood designs, produces and sells kitchen appliances including stand mixers, blenders, food processors, fridge freezers, kettles and toasters. The company was founded by Kenneth Maynard Wood in 1947 in the town of Woking at 79 Goldsworth Road. [3] In 1962 the company moved to Havant where they currently maintain operations.

  4. Russell Hobbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russell_Hobbs

    In 1960, the K2 kettle was introduced, which was manufactured for the next thirty years, and was possibly the company's best-known product. [5] In 1972, Russell & Hobbs produced the world's first all-plastic kettle, called "The Futura", which was spout-filled and equipped with an external liquid level indicator. The model was designed by Julius ...

  5. Currys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currys

    Currys (branded as Currys PC World between 2010 and 2021) is a British electrical retailer and aftercare service provider operating in the United Kingdom and Ireland, ...

  6. Currys plc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currys_plc

    Currys plc is a British multinational electrical and telecommunications retailer and services company headquartered in London, [4] which was formed in 2014 by the ...

  7. Hell Kettles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hell_Kettles

    The Kettles are two pools that are the result of catastrophic subsidence in 1179: [1] the Permian rocks underlying the area include substantial thicknesses of evaporites—gypsum and gypsiferous mudstone—and subsidence resulting from subterranean dissolution of these beds is a frequent occurrence, though the scale of the Hell Kettles subsidence is exceptional. [2]