A Brief History of the Stratton Of England Factory By Kind Permission of Juliette Edwards
Here is a " A Brief History of the Stratton Name " as written by
Juliette Edwards.
(Founder of The British Compact Collectors'
Society. ) and this is wholly attributed to her.
A Brief History
of the Stratton Name:
In 1920 two Birmingham companies merged;
Jarrett & Rainsford, makers of haberdashery goods and cheap
jewellery, and Stratton Ltd., makers of knitting needles, radio
receivers and men's jewellery. Stratton Ltd. was owned by G.A.
Laughton and the new company was called Jarrett, Rainsford &
Laughton Ltd., with the Stratton name retained for the company's
Fancy Metal department.
From 1923 part-finished powder boxes were
imported from the USA to be assembled and decorated in England
until the company set up its own compact and lipstick case
manufacturing equipment in the 1930s. This was so successful that
by 1939 half these items for the British cosmetic industry were
being made by Stratton Ltd., although they did not carry the
Stratton name. At the same time a range of "fancy vanity boxes"
(compacts) marked Stratton, or the earlier "Stratnoid" name, were
produced for the jewellery trade, competing successfully against
imports from the USA, Germany and Japan.
An employee of a German
competitor was forced to flee the Nazis in 1938. He joined the
company, adding his experience and expertise gained with Rowenta to
Stratton's Fancy Metal Department, which was located in the
Alexandra Works, one of the company's five factories in
Birmingham.
In November 1940 four of these factories were
destroyed by Luftwaffe bombing raids on Birmingham, with 500
foot-high flames engulfing the Alexandra works and the adjacent
Globe Works. The company found new premises at scattered locations
around Birmingham and turned production to the war Effort, adapting
salvaged machinery where possible: for example, machines designed
to make lipstick cases were modified to produce shell cases.
The
manufacture of powder compacts was resumed in 1946 at the rebuilt
Leominster Works, using new and adapted machinery, so that many
post-war Stratton compacts are unlike their pre-war counterparts.
A new factory was built at Warstock Road, Birmingham, for the
Twinco Moulding Division of the company and in the mid-1950s, in
response to an export drive, the Fancy Metal Department was able to
move to premises on the same Warstock Road site, where the company
operated until it changed hands in the late 1990s.
In 1997 the
company (then known as Laughton & Sons Ltd.) sold the Stratton name
to Cork International; in 2000 it became the property of Firmin &
Sons PLC, a company with a long involvement in the fancy metal
business. The Stratton name has recently (2006) changed hands again
and the new owners, Faze Two Manufacturing Ltd., plan to reinstate
the Stratton name with the prestige it formerly held.
Thank You:-
I would like to thank Juliette
Edwards for giving me this Brief History on "The Stratton Name".
I
would hope who ever reads this will get pleasure and insight into
one of our a great British factories.
Juliette, this " Brief
History on the Stratton Name" has added great content to my blog
"Thank you"
____________________________________________
Juliette Edwards is
also the author of the 'Miller's Powder Compacts A Collector's
Guide' of which I have a photo included in my website.
Trevor
Hall.(This website designer)
An Intresting Collection of Ashtrays Compacts & Cases.
Where do i start and where do keep my gorgeous collection of Stratton Memorabillia
Well the first large consideration when starting a collection, is where do you keep it, how large will it become, and will it just hang around collecting dust, which really is going to reduce its appeal to yourself and others, which in turn looses it`s value. Do you hide it from those none desirables in society that want to have all that we have, and at any cost, or do you put it on show for the world to see( was that not the reason why you wanted to own a collection? Yes of course it was) So It is going to go on show!!...........BUT WHERE....I will share that with you, when you have had chance to view more cases.
This Apsolutly Stunning Case, This Case Has A Deep Black Gloss Enameled Background & A Red Rose
A Wintery Autumn Scene ! Breathtaking.
British Compacts Collectors Society
Stratton Cigarette Case & Powder Compact
A Great eBay tale !! But a very true Story
Stratton Cases come with a fantastic amount of Enameled Fronts, consisting of themes, scenes,birds, flowers,and Characters, and some to match the Era in which they were made, and i have only been collecting these for the past year and now it is 2006, and i always have a rush of blood when i see a case that i have not yet seen or collected, this one was one of those blood rushes, in fact i was on the edge of my seat waiting to see if i could win the bid on eBay to rescue this case to my collection.I waited seven days and watched in anticipation,watching and waiting to see if i was the lucky bidder, for three days i held my bid of just fourteen UK pounds,and this only after i had taken the bid of someone El's in the race for this beautiful case.It did not take me long to feel bad about the whole situation, as i had lost the bid to another bidder coming from the United States.I tried to take on a bid almost immediately, and unfortunately for me the bid went higher and higher until i was the highest bidder once again, but it was Higher than i wanted to pay, and only for one reason as i really did not know how much to pay for something i had only paid a few small UK Pounds for before, i needed to know how much they were worth, i tried to find websites on collecting Strattons, and the only indication i could find was for the Ladies Make-up compacts, and these were being sold for some small amounts of Money, to very large amounts of money, in fact a lot more than i was paying for this cigarette case.Anyway the moral of the story was Hey i Wanted that case badly and i would pay for it, like this other person would pay for it, so it must have been worth at least that much to me, as it was to them. Guess what YES i WON the BID..........Yes it was 26 UK Pounds, but I do really really like it and it stands proud in my collection...........Was i right to pay that much for it...........well i think i was !! Don't you?
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