Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 115342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 165,119 pages of information and 246,492 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

W. and T. Avery

From Graces Guide
1835.
c 1840's. Used in the fur trade. Exhibited at Fort Dauphin Museum, Manitoba.
c 1840's. Stamped detail on above scales.
1852.
1892. Semi-automatic Weighbridge.
1899.
1899. A New Automatic Grain Scale.
1899. Automatic Package Filling Machine.
c1900. Counter platform scales.
February 1901.
1902.
January 1902.
Exhibit at Newport Museum, Monmouthshire.
October 1906. Automatic Coal Weighing Machine W. and T. Avery with Chain-Belt Engineering Co.

‎‎

300-ton Universal Testing Machine. 1909.
May 1912. Chain testing machine.
September 1913.
Platform Scales.
1914. Liquid weighing machine.
1917.
c1918. Exhibit at Pearns Steam World.
Exhibit at Powerhouse Museum.
Im201403Bow-Avery.jpg
1921.
January 1920. Avery's Brinell Hardness Tester.
1921.
1922.
1922.
1923. .
1926. Universal testing machine.
1926.
1926.
1929. Gravitometer.
December 1929.
1930. 200-year commemoration brochure.
1930. 200-year commemoration brochure. The Directors.
1930. 200-year commemoration brochure. UK Premises.
1930. 200-year commemoration brochure. UK Premises.
1932.
1936.
1938.
1938.
1942. Pulsator, fatigue testing machine.
1950.
1950. Scale Manufacture at Sherburn.

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1951.
June 1969.
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Exhibit at the Chatham Dockyard.
Izod's patent. Exhibit at Kelham Island Museum.
Kitchen scales.
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Road weighbridge. Exhibit at Amberley Working Museum.
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Exhibit at the National Brewery Centre.
Exhibit at the Grassington Folk Museum.
Type 282. (Detail). Exhibit at National Waterways Museum, Gloucester.
Exhibit at Coldharbour Mill
Exhibit at Coldharbour Mill (Detail)
Im20120920Mau-Avery.jpg
Im201403PMM-Avery.jpg
Sole Agents: South African Scale Co.
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Model A721 293.
Model A721 293 (detail).
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Scale seen in Cradock, South Africa.
Scale detail.
Weighing scale at Dharmapur Railway Station.
Dharmapur Railway Station weighing scale detail.
Seen in Willowmore, Eastern Cape (2018)

of Soho Foundry, Birmingham. Telephone: Smethwick 1112. Telegraphic Address: "Avery, Birmingham". (1937)

Averys Ltd was the holding company for the 32 operating companies in the Avery Group. The Group's main activity was the design, manufacture, sale and servicing of a wide range of weighing machines, physical testing machines and fluid measuring equipment.

The company's history can be traced back to 1730, with the manufacturing by hand of steelyards and beam scales in a small workshop in Birmingham.

1731 The original owner of the company was James Ford

The company passed from Ford to William Barton, then Thomas Beach and Joseph Balden, husband of Mary Avery

In the early part of the nineteenth century the business passed to the Avery family.

1813 The business passed from Joseph Balden to his cousin, William Avery, who brought in his brother Thomas Avery. It was then developed from a purely Midlands concern into a nationwide, and finally, under the family's successors, into a worldwide organisation.

1822 William and Thomas Avery, Scale beam makers, of Digbeth[1]

1823 Thomas Avery died

1835 W. and T. Avery Late T. Beach (See advert)

1854 A new factory was built at the Atlas Works in West Bromwich, and from there the company expanded.

Mid-century: the original Digbeth premises were still used as the head office but manufacturing had spread to three other factories: platform scales and sack scales were made at Mill Lane works, Birmingham, while the nearby Moat Lane works produced brass and agate beam scales; iron castings were made at the Atlas foundry.

1865 Dissolution of the Partnership between William Henry Avery and Thomas Avery, as Manufacturers of Scale Beams and Weighing Machines, at Birmingham, under the previous firm of William and Thomas Avery; the business was continued by William Henry Avery under the same firm for his own sole benefit.[2].

1874 William Henry Avery died but it was not until 1881 that his sons, William Beilby Avery and Henry J. Avery, took control of the business.

1876 Exhibitor at the Royal Agricultural Show at Birmingham of a large collection of weighing machines. [3]

1881 William Beilby Avery and his brother, Henry J. Avery, took control of the business. At this time the firm employed between 600 and 700 hands, and had works at Mill-lane and West Bromwich.

1890 Makers of Snelgrove's patent counter [4]

1891 The firm of W. and T. Avery was incorporated as a private company. This was the predecessor of W. and T. Avery Ltd, the main operating company in Avery's weighing and testing machine division. The company was registered on 25 August, to acquire a business of weighing machine manufacturers. [5]

1894 It became a public company, the present company being registered on 10 December. June - Royal Agricultural Society's Show. Portable Cattle and farm Weighbridge. (of Digbeth, Birmingham). [6] The company remained a family business until it became public company.

1895 The Soho Foundry at Smethwick was purchased and rebuilt as the company's main factory. Averys continued to repair of some of the old James Watt and Co engines for several decades. All the other factories were closed, and the whole of the manufacturing was concentrated at Soho. Only the Digbeth premises were retained, as a Birmingham office, the head office being moved to Soho.

When legislation was introduced at the turn of the century requiring the stamping of all weighing machines used for trade Avery branches were set up in some 100 towns in the United Kingdom. This was the beginning of the sales and service organisation that expanded to cover not only every important town in the United Kingdom but was also established in many overseas countries.

1896/7 Directory: Advertiser. More detail. [7]

1899 All descriptions of weighing appliances from the heaviest railway weighbridge to the lightest counter scale were represented at the stands of Messrs W. and T. Avery at the 1899 Royal Agricultural Show. The "Avery" automatic filling machine (Richardson's patent) was amongst the firm's exhibits.[8]

1900 Illustrated article on a 110 ton weighbridge made for a large marine engineering company in the North of England and of a hot iron plate weighing machine for the Dowlais Ironworks. [9] July. The Paris Exhibition. Descriptions of their weighing equipment. [10]

From 1900 onwards Averys gradually established overseas companies.

1911 Smithfield Club Show. exhibited weighbridges, weighing machines, scales etc. [11]

1913 Acquired Henry Pooley and Son.[12] and Parnall and Sons of Bristol.

1914 Manufacturers of weighing and testing machines. Specialities: weighbridges, testing machines, weighing apparatus of every description, as required in works, collieries, railways, shops and for other purposes. Employees 3,000. [13]

1917 Advert. No-Loose-Weight Wool Weigher. [14]

1918 Last of the family to be involved in the business died, the business then employing nearly three thousand staff.

Post-WWI: W and T Avery Ltd were awarded £6500 by the Royal Commission on Awards to Inventors for the Parnall "Panther" ship aeroplane[15]

1922 Acquired De Grave, Short and Co

1925 L. Oertling became part of the Avery Group of companies.

1927 See Aberconway for information on the company and its history

1932 Production of metering petrol pumps had become an important part of the business; formed a JV company Avery-Hardoll, in which Averys owned a substantial interest, for distribution of petrol pumps[16]

1937 British Industries Fair Advert for Weighing, Counting and Testing Machines for all purposes; Petrol Meter Pumps; Scientific Seating; Shop-fittings; Architectural Wood and Metal Work; Dairy Machinery. Recorder Weighing Machines (heavy capacity). Large Automatic Grain Weigher. New Continuous Liquid Weigher. Many new features. All Machines available for demonstrations. (Engineering/Metals/Quarry, Roads and Mining/Transport Section - Stand Nos. D.613 and D.512) [17]

1937 Weighing, testing and counting machines. [18]

Although Averys' business was, for many years, based primarily on high quality mechanical engineering, it also adopted developments in other fields of technology where they could contribute to its activities. It was the first in the United Kingdom to produce electrically operated weighing recorders in the 1930s. After the Second World War it employed such technologies as optical projection, digital encoding and, from 1963, electronic weighing.

Averys owned companies in some European countries but these were unprofitable and were wound up before 1939, except for a manufacturing company in West Germany which was sold to a German manufacturer in 1968 because its business also proved unprofitable. In Averys' view it had never achieved a large enough share of the German market for its own products. It was not reckoned worth preserving as a distributor of Averys' products from the United Kingdom.

1957 Private company.

1958 The holding company, Averys Ltd, was formed.

1958 Name changed.

1961 Manufacturers of weighing, counting, measuring and testing machines, also iron founders and engineers. [19]

1962 George Parnall and Co was part of the Group as well as Parnall and Sons, both involved in shopfitting.

1963 Southall and Smith and George Driver and Son made small automatic weighing machines. Sold Hussmann refrigeration.

1968 Stanton Instruments acquired by the W. and T. Avery Group.

c.1970 Integration of Stanton's production and products into L. Oertling Ltd

1971 To provide for greater specialisation and management efficiency and co-ordination, a divisional structure was created in which the operating companies were grouped in three Divisions: Weighing and Testing, General Products, and International.

By the early 1970s, the company was established in electronic weighing equipment. It produced a microprocessor-based unit in 1973.

1978 Sales between Averys and GEC were small in relation to the turnovers of the 2 companies. Most of Averys' weighing and measuring machines were standard, but machines were also designed and constructed to customers' special needs and specifications.

Averys supplied machines to any user or systems supplier wishing to incorporate weighing and/or liquid dispensing equipment in industrial or retail systems. Averys supplied baggage weighers for London Heathrow Terminal 2, Edinburgh Airport and Glasgow.

Avery-Hardoll manufactured meter pumps, bulkmeters and couplings for petrol and fuelling equipment including aircraft refuelling.

Approximately 50,000 weighing machines were repaired for users each year. The company normally expects to answer a call on the day it is received and provides a Saturday emergency service for retailers, and special services to manufacturers having continuous processes. There are 250 sales and servicing branches for weighing and testing products, strategically located throughout the United Kingdom and the Irish Republic.

Averys operated manufacturing plants in Australia, New Zealand, India and South Africa. Averys was closely concerned with Government departments for more than 50 years in connection with the policy and framing of weights and measures legislation.

1974 Developed automatic weighing machines to cope with high volumes of both free and non-free flowing products.[20]

1978 The net assets of the Avery group amounted to £65-8 million for the year ended 31 December.

1979 Acquired by GEC.

The company soon after became GEC-Avery.

The company became Avery Berkel in 1993 when GEC acquired the Dutch company Berkel.

2000 The company was sold to American company Weigh-Tronix Inc. of America. After the take over by Weigh-Tronix in 2000 the company was again renamed to be called Avery Weigh-Tronix. [21]



From the formation of the firm of W. and T. Avery there was a continual expansion by the acquisition of other companies to form the Group. Some of the principal acquisitions in the United Kingdom were:

The number of employees in the Avery Group at September 1978 was as follows:

  • United Kingdom 8,589
  • Overseas 3,962
    • Total 12,551


See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. 1822 Baines's History and Directory, West Riding
  2. London Gazette 25 August, 1865
  3. The Engineer of 21st July 1876 p58
  4. Engineering 1890/11/21
  5. The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908
  6. The Engineer of 29th June 1894 p562
  7. Peck's Trades Directory of Birmingham, 1896-97: Advertisers
  8. The Engineering Times 1899-1900 Jul-Jan
  9. The Engineer of 4th May 1900 p456
  10. The Engineer of 6th July 1900 p2
  11. The Engineer of 8th December 1911 p595
  12. The Times, Feb 04, 1914
  13. 1914 Whitakers Red Book
  14. 1917 Worrall's Yorkshire Textile Directory Advert p196
  15. The Times, Jan 13, 1925
  16. The Times July 26, 1933
  17. 1937 British Industries Fair Advert p599; and p330
  18. 1937 The Aeroplane Directory of the Aviation and Allied Industries
  19. 1961 Dun and Bradstreet KBE
  20. The Engineer 1974/06/13
  21. Wikipedia
  • [1] Competition Commission
  • Trademarked. A History of Well-Known Brands - from Aertex to Wright's Coal Tar by David Newton. Pub: Sutton Publishing 2008 ISBN 978-0-7509-4590-5