Robert Gillow

Robert Gillow

Robert Gillow (1704-1772) was born in Singleton, Lancashire.

He was the originator of the Lancaster-based firm of Gillows that made high status furniture from the West Indies mahogany imported through that port. He was succeeded in the business by sons Richard and Robert.

Robert Gillow came to Lancaster to start a career as a cabinet maker. His father was allegedly imprisoned in Lancaster Castle for his part in the Jacobite rebellion, and Robert Gillow may have remained in Lancaster in order to be close to him during his detention.

Robert Gillow’s fascination for carpentry began during a stint as a ship’s carpenter. He travelled to the West Indies and brought back one of the first recorded shipments of mahogany into the UK. Supplies of mahogany (supplemented with copious amounts of rum) soon began to flow between Gillow and his West Indian suppliers and in return, Gillow exported some of the finest furniture ever crafted. He was later joined by this three sons and the business expanded rapidly. In 1881, the Gillow's moved to North Road and developed a factory in the St Leonardgate area. They were previously based at Castle Hill.

In addition to furniture, the Gillow's were praised in opera and fiction and they are also accorded with the invention of the billiards table. They produced a substantial amount of furniture for museums, presidents and luxury ocean liners. Queen Victoria also commissioned a number of pieces from the company. During the First World War, they fashioned Navy munitions boxes from teak and DH9 aeroplane wings and propellers. Mosquito wooded aeroplanes followed in the Second World War. Unfortunately in 1961, the firm was taken over and closed down, although Gillow's lives on today as part of Maples Stores plc. The factory at St Leonardgate was later bought by John Peter Ltd of Leeds and then purchased by Lancaster University in 1964 as temporary means of accommodation until 1966. Two hundred thousand pounds was spent converting, equipping and furnishing the building although the plans were nearly ruined when an explosion ripped through the ground floor of the old factory in 1964.

The building is now called St Leonard’s House and is a centre for adult education and business advice. The Gillow's old showroom is now Liquid nightclub.

External links

* [http://34.1911encyclopedia.org/G/GI/GILLOW_ROBERT.htm Encyclopaedia entry]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Robert Phillip —     Robert Phillip     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Robert Phillip     Priest, d. at Paris, 4 Jan., 1647. He was descended from the Scottish family of Phillip of Sanquhar, but nothing is known of his early life. Ordained in Rome, he returned in 1612 …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Robert Blackburne —     Robert Blackburne     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Robert Blackburne     An English Catholic who suffered imprisonment in the closing years of the seventeenth, and during the earlier half of the eighteenth, centuries; he died in 1748.     He was …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Robert Stephen Hawker —     Robert Stephen Hawker     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Robert Stephen Hawker     Poet and antiquary; b. at Plymouth 3 December, 1803, d. there 15 August, 1875, son of Jacob Stephen Hawker, M. D., who took orders soon after the birth of his son… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Robert Aske —     Robert Aske     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Robert Aske     An English gentleman, and nominal leader of the 30,000 Northern Catholics who rose in defence of the monasteries at the time of their dissolution by Henry VIII (1536). Among their… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Robert Aston Coffin —     Robert Aston Coffin     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Robert Aston Coffin     An ecclesiastical writer and bishop, b. at Brighton, England, 19 July, 1819; d. at Teignmouth, Devonshire, 6 April, 1885. He received his secondary education at Harrow… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Robert Isaac Wilberforce —     Robert Isaac Wilberforce     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Robert Isaac Wilberforce     Born at Clapham, 19 December, 1802; died at Albano, near Rome, 3 Feb. 1857. He was the second son of William Wilberforce, and a younger brother of Samuel… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Robert Phillip — (d. at Paris, 4 January1647) was a Scottish Roman Catholic priest, the confessor to Henrietta Maria of France.LifeHe was descended from the Scottish family of Phillip of Sanquhar, but nothing is known of his early life. Ordained in Rome, he… …   Wikipedia

  • Ven. Robert Nutter —     Ven. Robert Nutter     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Ven. Robert Nutter     English martyr; b. at Burnley, Lancashire, c. 1550; executed at Lancaster, 26 July, 1600. He entered Brasenose College, Oxford in 1564 or 1565, and, with his brother John …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Philips Park, Whitefield — Philips Park is an area of parkland situated within the Metropolitan Borough of Bury on the boundary of Whitefield and Prestwich, in Greater Manchester. The park consists of rich woodland and grassland habitat and is home to an assortment of… …   Wikipedia

  • Hepplewhite, George — died 1786, London, Eng. British cabinetmaker. He was apprenticed to a furniture maker in Lancaster and later opened a shop in London. His reputation is based on his Cabinet Maker and Upholsterer s Guide (1788), containing some 300 designs. Pieces …   Universalium

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”