British Buttons

Área de identidad

Tipo de entidad

Entidad colectiva

Forma autorizada del nombre

British Buttons

Forma(s) paralela(s) de nombre

    Forma(s) normalizada del nombre, de acuerdo a otras reglas

    • British Buttons; 1929-2003

    Otra(s) forma(s) de nombre

    • Gansolite Ltd; Quality Buttons

    Identificadores para instituciones

    Área de descripción

    Fechas de existencia

    1929-2003

    Historia

    Gansolite Ltd established a factory on former Rowntree land in Haxby Road, York, in 1929, when Dutchman Jacob Gans moved his factory from Holland to the city. The factory produced buttons for a number of commercial clothing manufacturers. In 1983 the firm, then trading as British Buttons, was acquired by Ashley Goff and his son Stephen as part of a management buyout.

    By 1990 British Buttons employed 70 people and manufactured an average of five million buttons a week. At that point it was the biggest selling button maker in Britain. That same year, production moved to Sutton on the Forest so that the Haxby Road premises in York could be cleared for redevelopment.

    During the 1990s British button maufacturing began to go into decline. With the firm losing Marks & Spencer as a client in 1998 following a review of their materials purchasing, 30 to 40 per cent of business was lost in a year. This resulted in the firm filing for bankruptcy, before being rescued by Peter Bownes in 2000. With a continued decline in customers due to cheaper options being produced abroad, by 2003 the firm employed 18 staff and was manufacturing between 750,000 and 1.5 million buttons a week.

    On 27 January 2003 staff were told that due to the the decline in orders the company had been placed in voluntary liquidation.

    Lugares

    Haxby Road, York; Sutton on the Forest

    Estatuto jurídico

    Funciones, ocupaciones y actividades

    Manufacturer of buttons for commercial clothing companies, including Marks & Spencer and Berwyn & Berwyn.

    Mandatos/fuentes de autoridad

    Estructura/genealogía interna

    Contexto general

    Gansolite Ltd established a factory on former Rowntree land in Haxby Road, York, in 1929, when Dutchman Jacob Gans moved his factory from Holland to the city. The factory produced buttons for a number of commercial clothing manufacturers. In 1983 the firm, then trading as British Buttons, was acquired by Ashley Goff and his son Stephen as part of a management buyout. \n\nBy 1990 British Buttons employed 70 people and manufactured an average of five million buttons a week. At that point it was the biggest selling button maker in Britain. That same year, production moved to Sutton on the Forest so that the Haxby Road premises in York could be cleared for redevelopment. \n\nDuring the 1990s British button maufacturing began to go into decline. With the firm losing Marks & Spencer as a client in 1998 following a review of their materials purchasing, 30 to 40 per cent of business was lost in a year. This resulted in the firm filing for bankruptcy, before being rescued by Peter Bownes in 2000. With a continued decline in customers due to cheaper options being produced abroad, by 2003 the firm employed 18 staff and was manufacturing between 750,000 and 1.5 million buttons a week. \n\nOn 27 January 2003 staff were told that due to the the decline in orders the company had been placed in voluntary liquidation.

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    Área de puntos de acceso

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    Occupations

    Área de control

    Identificador de registro de autoridad

    GB0192-770

    Identificador de la institución

    GB0192

    Reglas y/o convenciones usadas

    International Standard Archival Authority Record for Corporate Bodies, Persons and Families - ISAAR(CPF) - Ottawa

    Estado de elaboración

    Nivel de detalle

    Fechas de creación, revisión o eliminación

    Idioma(s)

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        Notas de mantención