EAW000264 ENGLAND (1946). The Fred Hawkes Ltd shoe machinery works on Portland Road, Rushden, 1946

© Copyright OpenStreetMap contributors and licensed by the OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Cartography is licensed as CC BY-SA.

Nearby Images (8)

EAW000264
  0° 0m
EAW000266
  105° 34m
EAW000267
  215° 43m
EAW000269
  105° 60m
EAW000270
  156° 60m
EAW000268
  270° 68m
EAW000271
  266° 79m
EAW000265
  96° 133m

Details

Title [EAW000264] The Fred Hawkes Ltd shoe machinery works on Portland Road, Rushden, 1946
Reference EAW000264
Date 15-April-1946
Link
Place name RUSHDEN
Parish RUSHDEN
District
Country ENGLAND
Easting / Northing 495978, 266942
Longitude / Latitude -0.59259407483031, 52.29182507904
National Grid Reference SP960669

Pins

CIVIL AIR RAID SHELTER: e70951

Matt Aldred edob.mattaldred.com
Sunday 10th of March 2024 10:44:06 AM
CIVIL AIR RAID SHELTER: e70952 (Extant)

Matt Aldred edob.mattaldred.com
Sunday 10th of March 2024 10:43:43 AM
WW2 made tips and heels for army boots

Sparky
Wednesday 27th of September 2017 09:41:00 PM
This roof looks freshly painted, covering camouflage scheme?

Sparky
Friday 1st of September 2017 09:04:57 AM
WW2 Communal Surface Blast Shelter

Sparky
Friday 1st of September 2017 09:04:07 AM
WW2 Camouflage Scheme

Sparky
Thursday 27th of July 2017 05:40:06 PM

totoro
Thursday 24th of April 2014 08:32:12 PM

totoro
Thursday 24th of April 2014 08:31:54 PM
Fred Hawkes Ltd

totoro
Thursday 24th of April 2014 07:51:35 PM

User Comment Contributions

In 1909 Fred Hawkes joined Ernest Pack, an engineer from Higham Ferrers. Trading as Central Machinery Co. they were agents for Hornsby engines and provided a maintenance service for their customers.

In 1914 Fred resigned from the company and established the Fred Hawkes company supplying shoe machinery. The following year, with Walter Tarry, Samuel Horace Wright and Sidney Fox, he founded the Tecnic Shoe Co. and was their first chairman. Mr Wright resigned in 1916 and Mr Fox was killed in action in 1917. Fred resigned from Tecnic in 1919, leaving Walter Tarry in sole charge.



The business, now called F & W V Hawkes, had patented the boot tips that Fred had invented and also dealt in grindery, but now started making machinery for the shoe trade. New premises were built in Portland Road, next to their old works, and alongside the new machines, they traded in refurbished machines branded as “Nu Value”.



A new method was devised to make the framework and add the principal engineered parts as “units” that could be bolted on to the frame. This enabled the whole section to be removed and replaced and so an exchange part could be supplied. The returned part was again refurbished and ready for re-supply. This meant nothing was wasted, only the broken element was replaced in the main unit, and the machines were more easily repaired. Wherever possible a unit was used for several different types of machine, so keeping the variety to a minimum. This standardisation gradually enabled the customer to keep spare parts in hand to keep their own productions running almost without loss of production time. Some of the refurbished machines were adapted to use the new units, thus minimising the range of spares.



In 1965 Fred Hawkes (NV Engineering) Ltd and Fred Hawkes Refrigeration amalgamated with Cox & Wright of Wellingborough Road. Just two years later the new company was taken over by Evode, and Sidney Hawkes retired.





Image: 1954 advert



Image and text above from

http://www.rushdenheritage.co.uk/

Copyright where appropriate is reserved and commercial use requires further consent. "The Society encourages the use of the text and images for personal and educational work and is prepared to waive its copyright in these circumstances. The Society reserves all its rights with regard to commercial reproduction. However, requests for the use of Society images in commercial publications will be given sympathetic consideration."

totoro
Thursday 24th of April 2014 07:46:43 PM