The History of Pickfords
Pickfords Removals was established in the 17th century and has been moving
homes for generations.
By popular belief within the company, the Pickfords family of Adlington, South
of Manchester, and later of nearby Poynton, first entered the wagon trade in
the 17th century.
There is a tantalising mention of a Will Pickford, a carrier, working in the
area in the 1630s, although there is no solid link to date that connects the
present firm and Mr Will Pickford.
Will Pickford, carrier, working in the area of Adlington, south of Manchester
(no verified connection with the company).
1630
The Civil War - Thomas Pickford, yeoman farmer, has his lands sequestered for
co-operating with the Cavaliers.
1646
Pickfords family engaged in the business of mending roads. The family owns a
quarry, moving stone by means of a train of packhorses. Instead of returning to
the quarry empty, the horses carry goods for others, making Pickfords a
carrier.
1695
Weights to be carried by carriers are limited by an Act of Parliament to
minimise damage to roads.
1720
James Pickford, the London to Manchester waggoner, has headquarters in London
at Blossoms Inn in Lawrence Lane and at the Bell Inn in Wood Street, Cheapside.
1756
James Pickford dies and his wife Martha and sons, Thomas and Matthew, take over
the running of the business.
1768
Martha Pickford moves the company headquarters to 'The Bear' Inn in Basinghall
Street, London. Matthew Pickford leads the company during this time.
1771
Pickfords invents the fly wagon, named for its speed, to carry goods and
passengers. The fly wagon makes the London to Manchester journey in four and
half days, travelling just over 42 miles a day.
1776
Matthew Pickford buys the company of carrier William Bass of Burton, who
carries ale for Benjamin Printon. Bass moves from carrying to brewing with the
proceeds and founds the Bass brewing empire, which existed until the late '90s.
Today Bass is owned by Coors Brewers Ltd.
1777
James Pickford's son Matthew runs daily services six days a week between
Manchester and London.
1778
Matthew joins the emergent boom in the canal trade by arranging to carry goods
by barge as well as wagon.
1779
Matthew and brother, Thomas Pickford, have by this time accumulated: 50 wagons;
400 horses; 28 barges.
1800
- Pickfords' Manchester to London service runs six days a week and carries
passengers (working on Sunday banned by law) to Swan with Two Necks Inn in Lad
Lane, London.
The Fare to London is three pounds, three shillings to travel inside and one
pound, eleven shillings and six pence for an outside seat.
Pickfords' Complement is now: 262 horses; 11 road depots; 8 canal depots.
1803
Matthew Pickford writes to the Duke of York to offer the services of Pickfords
to the army should Napoleon invade, which is rewarded by a letter of sincere
appreciation from the Duke.
1803
Pickfords' canal services reach Birmingham.
Warehouses and wharves are built at Paddington, Deptford, Brentford and City
Basin in London.
There are two classes of services from Pickfords: -Fly boats travelling day and
night with two steerers and two drivers (for the horses) at 3 to 3 ½ mph,
covering 40-miles a day in stages with fresh horses at each stage.
-By barge at 25 miles per day with two men resting at night.
1807
Thomas and Matthew and their sons, James and Matthew, run the company.
1809
There is a national slump due to the cost of Napoleonic wars and loss of trade.
1810 - 1815
The London to Manchester journey now takes thirty-six hours.
1814
Following successive years of decline, the company reaches the point of
bankruptcy. The Pickfords family saves the company but sacrifices their
connection with it by selling out to new owners - Joseph Baxendale, Charles
Inman and Zachary Langton. Baxendale becomes the next great leader of the
company with his family remaining active in the company for almost 120 years.
1816
Joseph Baxendale, Zachary Langton, Charles Inman and Hugh Hornby Burley take
ownership of company from the Pickfords family.
Joseph Baxendale takes charge of the canal and road networks and vigorously
cuts down on waste and negligent operations. The company starts to rise from
near bankruptcy.
1817
Baxendale takes a keen interest in the possible emergence of railways.
Subsequently he joins the board of several railway companies and holds shares
in docks, harbours and other ventures that would help further the fortunes of
Pickfords. The company's wagons run on most of the new railways lines as soon
as they open. This starts a long argument with most railway owners who feel
that all railway rolling stock should be theirs and not the carriers.
1825
Stephenson's Rocket wins the Rainhill trials and heralds the opening of the
Liverpool and Manchester line, the nation's first public railway.
1829
Pickfords is restored to its full former glory.
1830
Earliest use of steam traction engines for road haulage takes place.
1840
The Company finally withdraws from the declining canal business.
1850
Joseph Baxendale dies aged 84 leaving company in the hands of his sons.
1872
Railway goods traffic grows by 900 percent. The numbers of carmen, carters and
carriers in Britain grows from 67 651 (1861) to 272 960 (1901).
1850 - 1890
The Pickfords finally breaks with London and North-Western Railway over the use
of Pickfords' own wagons. The trucks become property of the railway company.
1901
The first steam tractors are used to tow pantechnicons on road.
1903
Eleven steam wagons are purchased from S. Hindley & Son of Bourton in
Dorset.
1905
Pickfords compete neck-and-neck in the use of motor cars with their biggest
rival Carter Paterson.
1906
Two Commer cars are purchased.
1907
Engineering and heavy haulage departments open new premises at Hackford Road,
Brixton.
1910
Pickfords, Carter Paterson, Beans Express and London Parcels Delivery Company
merge.
1912
The wage of a one-horse car-man is 21 shillings per week.
1914
The Home Removals Service benefits from the war. Many people are relocated and
their goods stored for the duration. The Ministry of Munitions uses Pickfords
heavy vehicles to move airframes and other war material.
1914 -1918
Goods vehicles travelling by road increase from 41 000 to 128 000.
1918 -1921
Pickfords Complement now: 1580 horses; 1900 horse vehicles; 46 motor vehicles.
1919
Removals activity comes to the fore. TheCompany is sold to the Hayes Wharf
Cartage Company Limited.
1920
The Company starts carrying petrol in tankers.
1921
Pickfords establishes a travel company using Crimson Rambler petrol coaches to
provide 'Seeing Britain' tours of the UK. Trips to Switzerland start. Pickfords
discovers that the Saurer motor company in is Switzerland making high quality,
heavy petrol wagons and decides to test-drive them. The decline in the
company's use of steam traction for heavy loads begins.
1922
The First pneumatic tyred vehicles appear in the household removals fleet.
1923
The company introduces temperature controlled between Aberdeen and London.
1932
L.H. Baxendale resigns from Pickfords' board, the last of a long line of
Baxendales to serve the company. W.J. Elliott is promoted to General Manager -
the fourth great mover in the company's history. Complement now: 509 horses;
866 horse vehicles; 628 motor vehicles.
1933
The four main UK railway companies buy out the company as a significant part of
the Hayes Wharf Cartage Company.
1934
The contribution to the war effort exhausts the company's reserve - yet it
remains profitable. It joins with others to run the national meat pool.
WWII 1939 - 1945
Pickfords sent its lighters, the flat bottomed barges built for transporting
goods between the Solent ports and the Isle of Wight to join the 'Little Ships'
that made their way across the Channel to evacuate the beaches at Dunkirk.
By the end of the war the Hayes Wharf Cartage Group has its own vehicle
servicing and tyre manufacturing companies and absorbs Thos. Cook & Sons
Limited, and some forwarding agents for air, sea and land transport. The range
and scale of the company is unrivalled - services include parcels delivery,
removals, heavy haulage, tank haulage, contract hire and special contracts like
servicing grocery multiples.
Pickfords evacuates BBC to Bristol.
Pickfords breaks down 750 military vehicles at the company vehicle rebuilding
facility in Isleworth for export to the front.
1940
- May - Scientific research laboratories are removed from Christchurch and
Swanage to Malvern. Malvern College is moved to Harrow. Heavy Haulage moves
Mulberry's temporary harbour sections to sea launchings prior to D-day
landings.
1942
Carter Paterson and Pickfords joins forces to form Joint Parcels Service.
Complement now: 1150 motor vehicles; 300 horse vans; 4500 staff.
1946
Express Motor and Body Works company at Enfield begins making vehicles for the
group. Formerly under the sole control of Carter Paterson, it now comes under
the control of Pickfords. Both companies form part of the Hayes Wharf Cartage
Group. The wage of a one-horse car-man is four pounds, 11 shillings per week.
Pickfords is nationalised to form part of the British Road Services.
1947
The public operating company BRS (Pickfords) Limited is established.
1953
British Transport Commission is dismantled. Pickfords is now in control of the
Transport Holding Company.
1963
Pickfords becomes part of the National Freight Corporation (NFC), owned by the
Treasury.
1969
There is an employee buyout.
1982
NFC is introduced to the stock exchange.
1989
The company moves to a new, purpose-built headquarters in Enfield.
1995
Pickfords becomes part of SIRVA inc., the largest moving, storage and
relocation company in the world.
2002
Kevin Pickford, who can trace his antecedents back to 1750, in the same parish
as the Pickford family, becomes MD of Pickfords UK.
2004
SIRVA signs definitive agreement with Team Group to sell Pickfords moving
operations in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland.
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2008