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Bryant and May was a United Kingdom (UK) company created in the mid-nineteenth century specifically to make matches. Their original Bryant and May Factory was located in Bow, London. They later opened other match factories in the United Kingdom and Australia, such as the Bryant and May Factory, Melbourne, and owned match factories in other parts of the world. Bryant and May survived as an independent company for over seventy years, but went through a series of mergers with other match companies and later with consumer products companies; and were taken over. The registered trade name Bryant and May still exists and it is owned by Swedish Match, as are many of the other registered trade names of the other, formerly independent, companies within the Bryant and May group. ==Formation== A partnership was formed in 1843 between two Quakers, Francis May and William Bryant, to establish a Provisions Merchants business in Tooley Street, London. In 1850 they started importing Swedish matches, produced by Carl and Johan Lundström.〔Beaver (1985): Part One: "Building a Business".〕 Their first order was for 10 or 15 cases of 720,000 matches (each case held 50 gross boxes, with a box holding 100 matches). The next order was for 50 cases; and later orders for 500 cases. This partnership was successful, so Francis May and William Bryant decided to merge the partnership with Bryant's company, Bryant and James, which was based in Plymouth.〔 By 1853 Bryant and May were selling over 8 million boxes of matches per year; which was approximately 50% of the output of the Lundström brothers.〔 The company, Bryant and May, was founded with the specific aim of making only Safety Matches.〔Threfall (1951).〕 They were influential in fighting against the dreadful disease known as phossy jaw which was caused by white phosphorus used in the manufacture of the early matches.〔 They started in 1861, on a dilapidated site in Bow which had once been used for the manufacture of candles, crinoline and rope. This site was gradually expanded as a ''model factory''. However the public were initially unwilling to buy the more expensive safety matches so they also made the traditional Lucifer Matches. Bryant and May were the target of the London matchgirls strike of 1888, which won important improvements in working conditions and pay for the mostly female workforce working with the dangerous white phosphorus. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bryant and May」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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