Gas Light and Coke Company

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Lorries of the Gas Light and Coke Company at Beckton, probably in the 1920s
Lorries of the Gas Light and Coke Company at Beckton, probably in the 1920s

The Gas Light and Coke Company (also known as the Westminster Gas Light and Coke Company), was a company involved in the business of gas lighting and coking. It was located on the Horseferry Road in London's Westminster district.

The company was founded by Frederick Albert Winsor (originally from Germany)[1] and incorporated by Royal Charter on 30 April 1812, under the seal of King George III.[2] It was the first company set up to supply London with (coal) gas, and operated the first gas works in the United Kingdom.[1] It was governed by a "Court of Directors", which met for the first time on 24 June 1812. The original capitalisation was a million pounds (approximately £9bn at 2005 prices), in 80,000 shares.[3]

Offices were established at in Pall Mall, with a wharf at Cannon Row. In 1818 the company established a tar works in Poplar and expanded their works at Brick Lane and Westminster. Under the guidance of the company's chief engineer, Samuel Clegg (formerly of Boulton and Watt), a gas works was installed at the Royal Mint in 1817 and by 1819 nearly 290 miles of pipes had been laid in London, supplying 51,000 burners. Clegg also developed a practical gas meter. The vast Beckton works were built on East Ham Levels to the east of London in 1868, named after company chairman Simon Adams Beck.

The company had an especially large and diverse transport fleet including shipping, barges and railway engines for the import and export of coal and by-products, and road transport for local delivery and maintenance.

In 1872, five men were jailed for twelve months following a strike at the Beckton works in support of two workers sacked for requesting a pay rise. The sentence was subsequently reduced to four months. In 1889 men were laid off from Beckton, prompting the founding of the National Union of Gasworkers and General Labourers,[4] which subsequently became part of the General, Municipal, Boilermakers and Allied Trades Union (GMB Union).

With the advent of electricity the company expanded into domestic services, with lady Demonstrators employed to promote gas cooking. This Home Service eventually developed into a full advisory service on domestic gas use. The company was so large that after nationalisation of the gas industry in 1949 the area it covered, which stretched from Pinner in North West London to Southend-on-Sea in Essex, became North Thames Gas, one of the twelve regional Gas Boards.

It is identified as the original company from which British Gas is descended.[5]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b History of gas distribution
  2. ^ Archives listing
  3. ^ Prce index, HM Treasury
  4. ^ Gas Union history
  5. ^ British Gas Academy

[edit] Further reading

  • The History of the Gas Light and Coke Company 1812-1949, Stirling Everard, The Economic Journal, Vol. 60, No. 238 (Jun., 1950), pp. 393-395 (JSTOR)