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William Valentine Wright, born in 1826 in Aldeburgh, Suffolk, was a wholesale druggist and chemist who had a small business, W.V. Wright & Co. at 11 Old Fish Street Hill, Doctors' Commons, London. Now non-existent, Old Fish Street Hill southeast of St Paul's Cathedral was the 14th-century fish market before Billingsgate (it is not the present ...
The Larkin Company, also known as the Larkin Soap Company, was a company founded in 1875 in Buffalo, New York as a small soap factory. It grew tremendously throughout the late 1800s and into the first quarter of the 1900s with an approach called "The Larkin Idea" that transformed the company into a mail-order conglomerate that employed 2,000 people and had annual sales of $28.6 million ...
H. Bronnley & Co. (or Bronnley) is a British soap and toiletries producer established in 1884 in London. The company moved to Brackley , Northamptonshire before 1961 and was located in the old Chesham and Brackley Brewery premises, with their box making department located across the road in an old manor house.
James Gamble (1803–1891), Irish-American soapmaker, co-founder of Procter & Gamble; William Gossage (1799–1877), English soap manufacturer; Alfred John Hampson (1864–1924), Australian soap manufacturer; John Nelson Hinkle (1854–1905), American soapmaker; Jacob Holm, Danish soap-maker; Robert Spear Hudson (1812–1884), English soap ...
John Knight (25 December 1792 – 6 April 1864) was an English businessman and founder of John Knight Soap Works in London, which later became The Royal Primrose Soap Works. [ 1 ] In 1810, John Knight started making candles and soaps, in his spare time, using scraps of material from his job working for a grocer in London.
Yardley & Statham exhibited soap and perfume, including a soap called Old Brown Windsor, which was embossed with a picture of Windsor Castle and was one of their first production soaps. [ 10 ] In 1913, Yardley adopted Francis Wheatley 's Flowersellers painting, from his Cries of London series, as their new corporate logo.