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Swaine London

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429: 437: 346:, umbrella-makers, round the corner at 23 St James's Street decided to join forces. From 1943 until 1990 the company traded as Swaine, Adeney, Brigg & Sons Ltd, with Edward Swaine Adeney Jr appointed chairman for life. Brigg's gave up its shop on St James's Street but kept its manufactory for sticks and umbrellas at Newbury Street in the City of London. Whips and other leather goods continued to be made at the Piccadilly shop and at Zair's factory in Birmingham. 29: 676:, the firm wrote: "We beg to announce that . . . we have purchased the old-established business of Messrs. J. Köhler & Son, Bromley, Kent, Hunting, Coaching and Signal-horn Manufacturers. The factory will be retained as before, and customers can therefore rely on obtaining the unique tone and excellent qualities that have made their specialties so famous for over a century." 419:
Although Robert had nursed the firm back into trading with a small profit, he and the Adeney and Brigg family shareholders decided in the summer of 1990 to sell their 80 per cent stake in the company for a reported £4 to £5 million. The new controlling shareholder was the Ensign Trust, the investment
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The attempted expansion overseas coincided with the opportunity to acquire the lease on the shop next door at 186 Piccadilly, affording the firm a wonderful double frontage on Piccadilly. Unfortunately the firm overreached itself, moving too far away from its core strengths, and nearly collapsed. The
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Not long after Slocock's retirement in 1825, James Swaine invited William Isaac to become a partner, which role he assumed from at least 1829 to 1848. After George IV's death in 1830, Swaine & Isaac were re-appointed as whip-makers to his brother William IV and in 1837 to the new queen, Victoria.
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The firm of Swaine & Adeney was said to have been founded in London in 1750, but the earliest documentary evidence goes back to around 1760 when a saddler named John Ross set up a whip manufactory in London. His first-known factory was in Marylebone Street (now incorporated in Glasshouse Street),
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as successor to Robert Adeney; he was followed by Rohan Courtney in 1993–4; and then John de Bruyne, the Cambridge entrepreneur, who had grand ideas of making the company into a British Hermès or Gucci. De Bruyne achieved big savings by moving the shop from Piccadilly to cheaper premises in Old Bond
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The sporting press in March 1863 reported the appointment of Swaine & Adeney as whip-manufacturers to Albert Edward, Prince of Wales. The patronage of the Prince of Wales helped determine the firm's future direction. As the growing railway network ate into the demand for coaching whips, the firm
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In 1845, some three years before William Isaac resigned, Edward Swaine took into partnership his nephew and son-in-law James Adeney, who had served a seven-year apprenticeship with him. For a short time the firm was known as Swaine, Isaac & Adeney, and then for almost a hundred years, from 1848
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When Swaine & Adeney were registered as a limited company, Edward Swaine Adeney Jr was named as the managing director. He was to remain at the helm of the firm until his retirement in 1949. It was thanks to his commitment and passion that the firm was able to survive in challenging times. He
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Ross sold his business in 1798 to a whip-maker named James Swaine, who had been apprenticed to Benjamin Griffith & Co., whip-makers of High Holborn, and the firm of Swaine & Co. (James Swaine in partnership with Benjamin Slocock) carried on business from the Piccadilly address. The first
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Gilbert's son Robert Edward John Adeney, who became chairman on Gilbert's retirement, was to be the last of the family to run the firm. With the expiry of Zair's factory lease in 1965, and the compulsory purchase of the factory in Newbury Street in London, Robert decided to consolidate all the
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The firm continued to prize good design but embraced the use of new technologies and of some new materials. Nylon fabric replaced the hand-woven silk for the canopies of some umbrellas and at Zair's factory nylon increasingly replaced rare whalebone for the core of many whips made under the
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The company was reincorporated as Pictology Ltd, but continued to trade as Swaine Adeney Brigg. The financial challenges were not over, however, for the firm was running at annual losses of more than £3 million even as it went through various chairmanships. First came Anthony Tryon, 3rd
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In the 1980s the firm decided to open an American branch in San Francisco to meet the growing demand from America and contain the risk of currency fluctuations between the pound and the US dollar. The experiment was not successful and the San Francisco shop was surrendered.
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The whips each have a braided shaft in black leather with white leather keeper, thong and lash. The firm had made the postilion whips for the wedding procession in 1863 of Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, and Princess Alexandra of Denmark. See
249:. Ross's Marylebone Street premises were lost in a fire in July 1769, but by the following year he was trading at 238 Piccadilly on the south side of the street just a few doors away from the largest coaching inn, the White Bear, at No. 235. 324:
That same year Edward Swaine Adeney brought out a booklet extolling the virtues of handcraftsmanship. "This, then, is the formula," he wrote: "honest material and the finest craftsmanship that can be put into the moulding of it."
305:, the London makers of coaching and post horns in 1907, the new focus of the subsidiary was hunting horns and part of Swaine & Adeney's strategy was clearly to consolidate its position as suppliers of hunting equipment. 461:, the venerable firm of hatters of 38 New Bond Street in 1996. By that year the firm was making 2,500 briefcases a year; this was to be augmented with the acquisition of the luggage-making division of 301:
With the advent of the motor car, or "horseless carriage" as it was called, Swaine & Adeney turned to the manufacture of luggage sets as luxury motoring accessories. When the firm took over
339:. A range of animal heads carved in wood was made available for both umbrellas and walking sticks. Many of the heads were made by members of the Czilinsky family over several generations. 933: 314:
first registered the maker's mark of ESA with the London Assay Office in 1902 and thenceforth the silver and gold collars of the firm's whips and sticks were stamped with this mark.
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In 2003 the firm again changed hands, being sold to the Birmingham company Harris Watson Holdings PLC. Then in 2009, Roger Gawn, a Norfolk businessman bought the company.
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was granted by King George III for carriage riding whips. Ledgers show that the Prince Regent and his friends – the "Prinny's Set" – figured among the firm's customers.
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During the First World War, the firm produced a range of "War Equipment", including kit items made to War Office specifications. In 1927 Swaine & Adeney bought out
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Village Settlement near Cambridge in 1997. De Bruyne closed down the Great Chesterford factory and set up a new factory at Bar Hill to the north of Cambridge.
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James Swaine left his business to his son Edward. By 1845, the firm of Swaine & Isaac had branched out into the sale of walking sticks of fine quality.
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When Edward Swaine Adeney retired in 1949 he was succeeded briefly by Bertie Walter Brigg, and then from 1950 by Edward's only son Gilbert Latimer Adeney.
529:. The move was done to help modernise the brand and with it the brand was rebranded to Swaine London. Along with these changes a new factory opened in 428: 544:. The flagship location is 7,000 square feet (650 m) and with the brands workshops located in the same building above the store along with the 903: 295:
welcomed the opportunity to build custom among the hunting and racing community for whom the Prince of Wales stood out as the royal figurehead.
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firm found some financial relief when the Japanese conglomerate Fukuske Corporation paid £750,000 for a 20 per cent stake in the company.
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In a return to the line of business of the firm's founding fathers, Swaine Adeney Brigg made six postilion whips for the wedding of the
625: 488: 379:'s original 1957 novel: "Q Branch had put together this smart-looking bag, ripping out the careful handiwork of Swaine and Adeney". 737: 416:
That same year, Robert sold the firm's freehold factory at Great Chesterford and built a new 10,000 square foot factory nearby.
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New opportunities were found in meeting the new and growing market for polo equipment, including mallets and polo whips.
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to 1943, the firm bore the name Swaine & Adeney, becoming Swaine & Adeney Ltd on incorporation in 1910.
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In the 1920s and 1930s the firm greatly expanded its range of handcrafted umbrellas. These used frames made by
621:: The firm G. & J. Zair (bought by Swaine & Adeney Ltd in 1927) wins first special prize for its whips 265:
Trade directories show that by 1822 the firm had moved a few doors west to 224, and an advertisement in the
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announced a further change of address in 1835 to "more eligible" premises at No. 185, next door to
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pandemic, the Swaine group (including Swaine Adeney Brigg) was sold to French Chargeurs Group.
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shop that has traded in London's St James's since 1798. The shop sells leather goods, Brigg
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The period of de Bruyne's chairmanship was not without success. Swaine Adeney Brigg bought
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Also in 1927, Edward patented a new polo stick head, followed by a stronger stick in 1928.
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company's manufacturing at one site in School Street at Great Chesterford, Essex.
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A Swaine & Adeney shop was opened in 1989 in the fashionable Jingumae in the
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In an open letter dated 2 February 1907 and published in the fifth edition of
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With the lease expiry on 54 St James's Street, Swaine Adeney Brigg moved to 7
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and production was now housed under one roof for the first time in decades.
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A window display at Swaine Adeney Brigg's St. James's Street shop in 2010
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was closed in May 2022 and the brand relocated opening a store at the
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of Birmingham, the firm's biggest rivals in the field of whip-making.
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Street. A further move took place in 1998 when the shop opened at 54
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Luxury leather goods, Brigg umbrellas and hats from Herbert Johnson
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In Good Hands: 250 Years of Craftsmanship at Swaine Adeney Brigg
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In Good Hands: 250 Years of Craftsmanship at Swaine Adeney Brigg
802:"Swaine opens key New Bond Street flagship in radical rebrand" 572:, London (merged with Swaine Adeney Brigg in February 1943) 536:
In March 2023 the brand opened a new flagship store at 127
628:: The firm G. & J. Zair wins first prize for its whips 454:, not far from where Brigg's old shop at No. 23 had been. 241:
just to the north of Piccadilly. Among his customers were
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In February 1943, Swaine & Adeney on Piccadilly and
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International, Retail & Leisure (27 October 2022).
578:, hatters of New Bond Street, London (acquired in 1996) 197: 888:, 2012. The company no longer holds a Royal Warrant. 192: 169: 159: 151: 133: 123: 108: 86: 53: 45: 35: 350:Swaine, Adeney, Brigg & Sons Ltd (1943–1990) 75:Swaine, Adeney, Brigg & Sons Ltd (1943–1990) 674:The Coach Horn: What to Blow and How to Blow It 934:Organisations based in the City of Westminster 8: 635:, Paris: Swaine & Adeney wins Grand Prix 21: 882:Royal Warrant holders: the seal of approval 829:Prior, Katherine, with many photographs by 27: 20: 440:The shop at 54 St. James's Street in 2010 929:Manufacturing companies based in London 652: 420:arm of the Merchant Navy Pension Fund. 382:For the 1961 British television series 751:"Burlington Arcade Hits Full Capacity" 919:British companies established in 1750 914:Clothing brands of the United Kingdom 7: 659:See timeline in the company history 614:, London: Köhler awarded prize medal 560:, London (acquired in February 1907) 247:George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont 738:First-half 2021 results – Chargeurs 309:Swaine & Adeney Ltd (1910–1943) 72:Swaine & Adeney Ltd (1910–1943) 755:Retail & Leisure International 626:Melbourne International Exhibition 386:Swaine Adeney Brigg made a custom 14: 371:(1963), Swaine Adeney Brigg made 277:Swaine & Isaac (c. 1825–1848) 63:Swaine & Isaac (c. 1825–1848) 243:Prince Henry, Duke of Cumberland 699:"Whangee | Swaine Adeney Brigg" 619:Sydney International Exhibition 566:, Birmingham (acquired in 1927) 424:Swaine Adeney Brigg (1990–2022) 286:Swaine & Adeney (1848–1910) 69:Swaine & Adeney (1848–1910) 904:1750 establishments in England 1: 909:British royal warrant holders 612:1862 International Exhibition 505:With the onset of the global 552:Other firms within the group 253:Swaine & Co. (1798–1825) 92:; 226 years ago 60:Swaine & Co. (1798–1825) 465:, the manufacturing arm of 49:Manufacturing and retailing 960: 375:'s briefcase, faithful to 66:Swaine, Isaac & Adeney 860:Swaine & Adeney Ltd. 640:Franco-British Exhibition 26: 800:WW, FashionNetwork com. 139:Carine de Koenigswarte ( 570:Thomas Brigg & Sons 531:Sawston, Cambridgeshire 344:Thomas Brigg & Sons 939:Umbrella manufacturers 714:magazine, August 1996. 686:"Good Hands" 1750–1927 633:Exposition universelle 484: 441: 433: 211:, known previously as 862:Good Hands: 1750–1927 588: 513:Swaine London (2022–) 478: 439: 431: 394:hidden in the shaft. 390:umbrella featuring a 368:From Russia with Love 358:trade-mark "Sabson". 271:Fortnum & Mason's 564:G. & J. Zair Ltd 319:G. & J. Zair Ltd 77:Swaine Adeney Brigg 16:British luxury brand 780:The Mayfair Musings 582:Papworth Industries 558:J. Köhler & Son 517:The store at No. 7 493:Catherine Middleton 463:Papworth Industries 213:Swaine Adeney Brigg 125:Number of locations 23: 864:. London, c. 1927 806:FashionNetwork.com 485: 483:by Katherine Prior 442: 434: 103:Piccadilly, London 849:978-1-898565-09-3 523:Burlington Arcade 519:Piccadilly Arcade 500:Piccadilly Arcade 489:Duke of Cambridge 452:St James's Street 206: 205: 79:(1990–2022 ) 951: 817: 816: 814: 812: 797: 791: 790: 788: 786: 772: 766: 765: 763: 761: 746: 740: 735: 729: 721: 715: 709: 703: 702: 695: 689: 683: 677: 670: 664: 657: 647:References/Notes 606:Great Exhibition 599:Great Exhibition 303:Köhler & Son 202: 199: 100: 98: 93: 31: 24: 959: 958: 954: 953: 952: 950: 949: 948: 944:Shops in London 894: 893: 886:Daily Telegraph 878: 826: 824:Further reading 821: 820: 810: 808: 799: 798: 794: 784: 782: 774: 773: 769: 759: 757: 748: 747: 743: 736: 732: 722: 718: 710: 706: 697: 696: 692: 684: 680: 671: 667: 658: 654: 649: 594: 576:Herbert Johnson 554: 546:Herbert Johnson 538:New Bond Street 515: 482: 459:Herbert Johnson 426: 352: 311: 288: 279: 255: 238: 233: 225:Herbert Johnson 196: 188: 184:Herbert Johnson 136: 126: 119: 117: 96: 94: 91: 82: 78: 76: 17: 12: 11: 5: 957: 955: 947: 946: 941: 936: 931: 926: 921: 916: 911: 906: 896: 895: 890: 889: 877: 876:External links 874: 873: 872: 858: 839:. 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Index


Private
Piccadilly, London
W1J 0PN
CEO
Chairman
Chargeurs
Subsidiaries
Brigg
Herbert Johnson
swaine.london
luxury goods
umbrellas
Herbert Johnson
Prince Henry, Duke of Cumberland
George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont
Royal Warrant
Fortnum & Mason's
Köhler & Son
G. & J. Zair Ltd
Samuel Fox
Stocksbridge
Thomas Brigg & Sons
Terence Young
From Russia with Love
James Bond
Ian Fleming
The Avengers
Whangee
sword

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