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T Foster & Sons Fazeley Street

Richard Greaves

Brummie babby
I am researching the history of T Foster & Sons of Fazeley Street, Birmingham. There were coal merchants and fuel suppliers. One of their customers was the Shell Chemical Company. In 1950's they became distributors of the first washing up liquid called TEEPOL. Eventually they set up a separate company called Cleenol to distribute cleaning products, for whom I now work. Any information about them would be much appreciated.
 
Previous to 1897 Kellys directory (remembering that date was publication date and may refer to year before)

1884 No foster coal merchant listed in directory
1888-1892 John, William & Thomas Foster, coal merchants, Bordesley St wharf
1895 John, William & Thomas Foster, coal & coke merchants, Bordesley St wharf
1896 Thomas Foster & Son, coal merchants, Bordesley St wharf
 
Well looking at the Cleenol site it looks like they trace their metamorphosis back to the 1700s !

“Cleenol, a private family-owned company tracing its roots to the 1700s, originated as a timber business in the West Midlands. Evolving with the times, it ventured into canal-related industries, from supplying timber to becoming boat builders and coal merchants during the canal's heyday.”

“Teepol led to the birth of Cleenol, as Mr. Neville Foster pioneered its production and expansion.”

 
The mention of teepol is interesting as the production of Teapol liquid detergent by Shell began at Stanlow in 1941.
Many thanks for your response.
The story I was told was that prior to WW2 washing up was done using soap flakes or a small piece of soap in a wire cage suspended under the taps. During the war the government needed the raw materials used to make soap for the war effort and asked Shell to come up with an alternative. They developed TEEPOL the first liquid detergent. Nobody knows why they chose that name. They knew they had a retail market but asked the brothers who ran the coal business to see if they could interest industrial customers in it. They did, and sales took off. Initially they bought in packed product but then took in in tankers and bottled it themselves, into glass bottles and metal tins. They then employed their own chemist to formulate a range of complimentary products and Cleenol was formed. Twin brothers Samuel and Neville Foster ran the business at that time, and eventually they split it, the first taking the coal and the other the chemicals.
 
Previous to 1897 Kellys directory (remembering that date was publication date and may refer to year before)

1884 No foster coal merchant listed in directory
1888-1892 John, William & Thomas Foster, coal merchants, Bordesley St wharf
1895 John, William & Thomas Foster, coal & coke merchants, Bordesley St wharf
1896 Thomas Foster & Son, coal merchants, Bordesley St wharf
Very useful. Many thanks
 
82 Fazeley Street

and Teepol in the 1950s



Source: British Newspaper Archive
 

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The divisional sales offices in the 1950s.

Source: British Newspaper Archive
 

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There is also a present Company called Teepol, and they say “Teepol was the name given to the first modern cleaning product developed in the UK in 1938. Since then, Teepol has become an international brand, operating across the globe.

It could be that Teepol was developed just before or at the start of the war at Stanlow where production started in 1941. They also produced something Teepodol and Teepex, which may give a clue to the naming.
 
Well the Cleenol site traces back their family history back to the 1700s and mentions timber, but failed to mention this from the Birmingham Journal of July 1860…

IMG_1884.jpeg
 
Who founded T Foster and Sons ?
From the obituary in the Birmingham Post (1966) for John Sproston Foster it states that he was joint MD with his twin brother Neville T Foster of T. Foster and Sons. Also it states that the Company was founded by their grandfather Thomas Foster in 1860.

On the 1911 census we see Samuel Foster (42), Coal Merchant, as the father of John and Neville who was born in Tipton.
On the 1871 census Samuel is 2 and his father is Thomas Foster (26) and down as a labourer in Iron Works, and also born in Tipton.

If we go back to 1861 Thomas is 16 and his father is Jabez (42) and a labourer. So something doesn’t add up.

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In May 1944 the Evening Despatch reports on cases of over supply of coal and anthracite above the Fuel Rationing Order.

The suppliers Horace Samuel Foster, Jack Sproson Foster, and Neville Foster, trading as Messrs AH Blackwell, Midland Wharf, Hampton-in-Arden.

IMG_1888.jpeg
 
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