Printing Neighbours – part 2

I was taking some picture the other day when a gentleman told me about Burgess …

Burgesses were in Stert Street when I started in 1949. I started work at £1 10s a week. £1 for my mum and 10s for me. All the presses were hand-fed back then…. Abbey Press was by the side of it in Stert Street. Then Burgesses moved to up near Waitrose… I was a printer all my life. Just before I retired the last press they bought cost 2.4 million, a Heidelberger machine. It did the lot, and all automatic – put the colours on the inside and the varnish outside, all in one pass. The last picture we printed was a big picture of the sighting of the Bismarck. I got a picture framed of that for my retirement.
Ye Olde
Burgess and Sons, the printer, were at 55 Stert Street in the 1930s. At that time they did a lot of work for HMSO, printing patents.

Next door, number 57 was vacant for some time. 57 had been the Abingdon Kinema. Burgess and Sons had plans to expand into number 57. But before they could get everything agreed The Abbey Press (John Hooke Ltd) bought 57, and so the two printers were neighbours for the first time.
Ye Olde
That was a blessing in disguise as a larger premises on Station Road, by the old coal yard, became available. Most of the building was owned by William Press and Son, a big engineering company. They took part in the big conversion from coal gas to North Sea natural gas in the 1970s, when 20 million appliances were altered.
Ye Olde
Burgesses took over some of the building. Then when William Press and Son moved out, Burgesses took over the lot. It was more than they needed but gave room for expansion. Some parts of the site were let, one part to The Abbey Press – and so the printers became neighbours for a second time.
Ye Olde
The twenty first century arrived and Burgesses had been taken over by a company outside Abingdon who had exciting plans. The shocking news came in June 2000 that the 195 staff of Burgess were to loose their jobs. Europe’s largest independent greetings card printer, was to close. Their parent company, Bezier, decided that the market for greeting cards was changing, and their plan to make Abingdon the center for making greeting cards was no longer viable.

The Abbey Press expanded and carried on both on the old Station Road site and in Nuffield Way. The old Station Road site became the Thames View housing development so they moved all their operations to Nuffield Way. The Abbey Press ceased trading in April 2013.

I find it amazing, in my own lifetime, to have seen factories and institutions, that I thought would last forever, demolished, just leaving individuals’ memories. I don’t know if anybody has written a history of John Hooke Ltd and The Abbey Press. Leslie E. Stopps compiled A Short History – Burgess & Son (Abingdon) Ltd in 1980, and I got a copy second hand after listening to the man who was a printer all his life. It has lots of pictures of people and printing presses.

1 thought on “Printing Neighbours – part 2

  1. John Styles

    Very interesting. These little printing companies everywhere are something that has quietly disappeared over the last 30 or so years
    I remember getting some stuff done at one in Oxford in the ‘Temperance Works’ on Thames Street, now flats

    Reply

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