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The Acrow Group was founded in 1935 by a Swiss emigrant William Aphonse de Vigier as Acrow (Engineers) ltd. The company latter opened offices at 33 Catherine Place, London, SW1. Telephone: Victoria 0693. Cables: "Acrowlit, Sowest, London".[1]. After WWII the Group grew by buying various engineering companies, but by the early 1980s was in trouble and collapsed into administration in 1985 and was broken up. The Acrow name survived.

History[]

Timeline
  • 1912 William Aphonse de Vigier was born into an historical local family in Solothurn, Switzerland. His father, an eminent local lawyer, wanted his son to follow in his footsteps, but he had other ideas and signed up for an apprenticeship at Von Roll in Klus, moving on to a job at the Scintilla magneto works in Zuchwil.
  • The pull of the wider world, and continual disagreements with his father, eventually led him to pack his bags and head for England. His father was furious and warned him that he would not get a centime from him for any new venture.
  • 1935 Aged 24, he arrived in London with only 1,000 francs (roughly £50) in his pocket, and an idea for an adjustable scaffold prop. He soon realised that he would have to manufacture it himself, so he rented a small premises under the railway at Bow arches in east London, and approached a well known local solicitor Arthur Crow to establish the company; but the cost for doing so was £32, far more than he could pay, given that the deposit in the arches was £15, and on the offices around the corner in Charterhouse square £4.
  • He persuaded Arthur Crow to give him six months credit on his fee and, partly out of gratitude and partly on the basis that it would always come near the top in any directory or listing, he used the solicitor's name for his new company which became Acrow (Engineers) Ltd. The name was also used for his product the Acrow Prop, which soon became a generic name in the UK construction industry for such props.
  • He struggled for the first few months with very few sales, but thanks to Sir Robert McAlpine and Sons and Peter Lind, a Danish company, things eventually started to improve.
  • 1936 Became private company.
  • 1938 Acrow moved into their first “proper” factory in Slough and de Vigier and his company were on their way.
  • By 1939 he had sold over 40,000 props. He was grateful to the two forward-looking companies and always gave them credit for their part in his success.
  • WWII. During the war Acrow's production was largely diverted to the war effort, making tank and aircraft parts, as well as formwork for the Mulberry harbors that were used in the D-Day landings.
  • Post-WWII. After the war, the company went public and started on a wave of expansion though acquisitions, that turned Acrow into a truly global business. New businesses included steel Bailey bridges, scaffolding and formwork.
  • 1947 Listed Exhibitor - British Industries Fair. Manufacturers of "Acrow" Mobile Unit Storage system for Accessible Storage of Records, Stationery, and all classes of goods. (Olympia, Ground Floor, Stand No. B.1457).[1]
  • 1949 Became public company.
  • 1960 Pit props[2]
  • 1961 Manufacturers of equipment and plant for building, agricultural and forestry trades.[3]
  • 1964 bought Daniel Adamson and Co. the Manchester based manufacturer engineers, and a former locomotive builder who were makers of heavy fabrications and vessels; steam raising plant and boilers of all types; steam turbines and alternators.[4][5]
  • They moved on to become a world leading player in the crane business with the acquisition of the Steels Group now renamed (Coles Cranes Ltd) in 1972. This gave Acrow ownership of Coles Cranes which incorporated Neal and Co. and F. Taylor and Sons and Priestman Brothers of Hull, these firms were by then formed the majority of the UK crane industry.
  • 1985 After several years of difficulties the Acrow group went into administration and the Crane division, by now slimmed down to one production plant in Sunderland, was picked up by Grove of American as its European division.
  • De Vigier rescued parts of the business and in the late 80's gradually sold them off, largely to employee led MBOs.[clarification needed]
  • 2003 William Alphonse "Bill" de Vigier, died in December, aged 91.[6]

Group companies[]

List the groups companies here

Brands[]

Some of the brand names owned by the firm included:

  • Acrow prop - the much copied 'builders prop' & now a generic name like Hover or JCB commonly used to describe all similar products
  • Coles Cranes
  • Neal Cranes
  • Priestman Cranes
  • Priestman grabs
  • Taylor Speedcrane

See also[]

References / sources[]

based on Graces Guide article

  1. 1.0 1.1 1947 British Industries Fair p6 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "BIF-1947" defined multiple times with different content
  2. Mining Year Book 1960, Published by Walter E. Skinner. Advert p84 & p141
  3. Dun and Bradstreet KBE - 1961
  4. Graces Guide
  5. wikipedia:Daniel_Adamson
  6. Vertikal.net - News Archive

External links[]

  • add other relevant web site links here
  • WWW.acrowusa.com a US modular bridge builder. (probably spun off from the UK firm)
  • Acrow New Zealand - A formwork, propping & scaffolding supply firm



Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses some content from Graces Guide. The original article was at Group Acrow Group. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki, the text of Graces Guide is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.


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