Warners Solicitors

Warners Solicitors
Type Limited Liability Partnership
Industry Legal
Founded Kent, UK (1785 (1785))
Headquarters Tonbridge, Kent, UK
Employees 110
Parent Warners Law LLP
Website www.warners-solicitors.co.uk

Warners Solicitors (trading name of Warners Law LLP,) is a specialist Law Firm based in Kent, with offices in Tonbridge[1] and Sevenoaks[2], it employs over 100 employees. The firm was ranked in the top 200 Law firms in the 2008 report issued the by The Lawyer Magazine.[3]

Contents

History

Warners Solicitors was established in 1785 by Thomas Bowdler. Thomas moved from Shrewsbury to settle in Tonbridge in 1783[4] (the exact reason for his relocation is not clear but it was probably to take advantage of the booming town after the river Medway was made navigable).[5]

In 1797 George Lingard took over the Firm, he bought a large house in Tonbridge from Frank Austen (Jane Austen’s uncle). This house was 180 High Street and it remained the main place of business for the Firm (that was to become Warners) until 2007.[6]

William Gorham was taken on as a clerk in 1831, and after qualifying he became a partner. During his working life William became clerk to the Medway Company, clerk to the Turnpike Trustees and secretary to the Tonbridge Water Works Company. He was a great benefactor and supporter of the poor in Tonbridge and like his predecessor John Carnell served as a trustee for the parish who were overseers of the poor house.[7]

The poor house was provided by a trust set up by Sir Andrew Judd (benefactor of Tonbridge School on land in Back Lane (now Bank Street). The poor house became disused in 1840 when the Poor Law Union built a new large workhouse at Pembury (Pembury Hospital). The building in Bank Street then became the National School.[8]

The first member of the Warner family to join the Firm was George D. Warner, he became a partner in 1857 and the Firm became Carnell Gorham & Warner. The Firm went through various name changes with the coming and going of different partners, however there was always a member of the Warner family in the Firm. In 1955 the Firm’s name changed to Warners and it has stayed the same since. The last member of the family to become a partner was Charles Warner in 1978.[9]

In 2007 the historical link with the old poor house was renewed as Warners took up residence in the old building. The building still retains the first two floors of the front elevation of the original poor house.

Present day

Main areas of practice

Alliance of Business Lawyers (ABL)

Warners is a founder member of the alliance of business lawyers (ABL)[10]. The alliance is an affiliation of international lawyers with over 35 independent law firms in more than 25 jurisdictions.

References

  1. ^ "Legal 500"
  2. ^ "Legal 500"
  3. ^ "The Lawyer Magazine Annual Report"
  4. ^ "Shropshire Archives"
  5. ^ Born 1751 Wolstaston, married Francis Ennis St. George The Martyr, Middlesex in 1774, died 8 January 1796 at Tonbridge. Schooled at Shrewsbury Grammer School. Son of Thomas Bowdler, Burgess of Shrewsbury and Martha Watkis. Acknowledgment - Denise Roberts (nee Bowdler)
  6. ^ Born in London circa 1754 to George Lingard Master Butcher who paid for his son to be apprenticed to Thomas Swayne attorney of Tonbridge. George married Sarah Mills in 1797 a widow, formerly married to Vanderlure Mills Vicar of Leigh (nee Saxby). Acknowledgement - Neil Robertson
  7. ^ "The Weald"
  8. ^ The Tonbridge of Yesterday by Arthur H. Neve published 1933
  9. ^ Warner family personal papers.
  10. ^ "Alliance of Business Lawyers"

External links