Post by Mike in thread 'Ironmongers of the late 19th century'
J.P.Clabrough & Brothers had two sites. as shown on the invoice. Joseph Clabrough started out as a gunmaker in the 1867 PO directory at 5, New buildings, Price St, but by 1872 it was Claborough Bros.irm lost the St Mary's square address and became J.P.Clabrough Bros & Johnstone. By 1900 J.P.Clabrough & Johnstone had moved to 7½ St Mary's Row, and by 1903 to 3 Price St. and then by 1921 to 16-17 Loveday St, and by 1932 to 91,92 Lower Loveday St, where it remained till the late 1940s
Around 1868 Joseph Clabrough was situated in England and relocated to Birmingham to establish himself as a gunmaker.
In April 1868..J.P. traveled to England, returning stateside in late July. It appears his visit was to arrange to have guns made in Birmingham to his specifications and marked “J.P. Clabrough & Bro. San Francisco.” Joseph, who also had been trained as a gunsmith by his father, joined the business to oversee the logistics and to ship the guns to San Francisco…..In 1871 J.P. returned to Birmingham, where he rented a large shop at 8 Whittall Street (gunmaker Ebenezer Hollis’s premises until his death, in 1869) and set up a factory…”