Company History

190 years and counting

1800
1830

William Waddingtons, wool comb maker

Starting off on Albion Street – Silsbridge Lane (now Grattan Road) before soon moving to a small factory on Richmond Road that came to be West End Mills,

William Waddington’s was a manufacturer of wool combs in Bradford the then boom-town of the industrial revolution and wool-capital of the world during the mid-1800’s.

West End Mills circa 1880
1830
1879

Fortune & Bentham

Frank Holdsworth Bentham & Wilson Fortune, two young engineers who had already won their laurels as experts working for W.Waddingtons entered into association to buy the business. With a steady expansion of business, now renamed to Fortune & Bentham, the inventive ingenuity of the partners manifested itself by the construction of special machinery to facilitate speedy production and the out-turn of superior goods, manufacturing combing machines, circles and fallers for the textile industry.

1879
1883

Purchase of W.Bramham & Co

A water lane textile comb making works.

1883
1887

Purchase of John Feather

Comb maker in Keighley.

1887
1888

Move to West End Works

Across the road on the corner of Richmond Road and Longside Lane was a larger site where the company could over the years develop West End Works into what would be their base of operations for the next 70 years.

1888
1900
1903

F.H.Bentham Ltd

The partnership dissolved with Mr Fortune moving into cycle manufacturing business and F.H. Bentham carrying on with the textile comb making, specialising in the manufacture of the now forgotten Noble Comb and later the French Comb.

1903
1906

Purchase of John Sheard

A wool comb maker of Listerhills Road.

1906
1917

Keighley expansion

By 1917 the company had grown substantially as F.H.Bentham, expanding to a secondary factory at Hanover Street, Keighley including manufacture of textile brushes.

1917
1932

Purchase of Harry Thompson

A textile brush maker of Rawson Road.

1932
1941

Tyre remoulding

Then in its infancy as an industry, Benthams branched into the manufacture of buffing rasps, later extended to include complete design and manufacture of other machinery and equipment used in the re-moulding industry.

1941
1958

Bentham Tyre Machinery Co. Ltd (BTYM)

Still under the direction of the Bentham family, Philip & Frank Bentham, by 1958 the section of the company manufacturing equipment for the tyre re-moulding industry had developed to such an extent that a subsidiary company was formed at the company’s newest quarters in Lane Close Mills until 1960 when BTYM Co finally moved to Dotcliffe Mill in Kelbrook, near Barnoldswick under the title of Benthams Press Division.

1958
1961

Move to Prospect Works

Following the realisation of the city’s new ring road scheme through the Richmond Road Site the company made the decision to move to Prospect Works Allerton, a spinning mill originally built in 1850, the second oldest mill in Allerton overlooking Ladyhill Park where the company still resides to this day. Thanks to several developments on the site the new premises would provide three time more work space than at the previously limited West End Works.

1961
1963-1967

Bentham & Holroyd Ltd

Under the new directorship of Kenneth Christie, Ken Hudson, Lyndon Nash & Don Barker, all former employees under the Bentham family, the company bought Moses Holroyd Ltd another local wool comb maker in 1963, before rebranding as Bentham & Holroyd in 1967, further diversifying into the manufacture of critical components in the oil and gas industry.

1963-1967
1971-1976

Widdop de Courcy

Expanding the companies interests in specialised industrial brush manufacture, Benthams purchased Charles Widdops, a leading producer of hand-drawn brushes, and F. DeCourcy a specialist strip brush manufacturer to form the subsidiary Widdop de Courcy, now known as Widdops Brush. Also based in Prospect Works Bradford, with both companies working hand in hand to provide a wide range of specialist products for various industries.

1971-1976
2000
2025

Post-COVID & Brexit

After celebrating 190 years of UK manufacturing in Bradford, we now see ourselves having operated throughout out the global Covid19 Pandemic, supplying to essential industries whilst embracing our situation post Brexit, further diversifying our CNC capabilities and with redevelopments to the Prospect Works premises taking us into 2025 and forwards.

2025
 

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