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William Carr Stevens
The first Board Meeting held on the following day mentioned those present as W.C. Cluff (Chairman), W.C. Stevens, H.J. Moors and W.H. Foreshaw (Secretary). W.C. Cluff was William Carr's father-in-law and Harry John Moore was married to one of William Carr's elder sisters, Emma. Only was H.J. Moore Company Director of Bone Crushing, but he was to become Company Secretary of Stevens Chemical Manure Co. Ltd. The next day at the second Board Meeting, William Carr Stevens was elected Chairman, aged 45, and three years later, in 1884 John William Stevens, aged 20 (William Carr's eldest son) replaced W.C. Cluff as a Director. While he was by far the largest shareholder, no mention of John Stevens (William Carr's father) is made in any of the minutes of The Bone Crushing Co. Ltd. At 76 he may well have retired from active business life. Sadly his wife died many years earlier in 1864 and is buried at St. Mary's, Walthamstow.
Stevens Chemical Manure Co. Ltd. and the Articles of Association tell us that it was "to carry on the business of manufacturers of, and dealers in, chemical manures and manufacturing chemicals and of manufactures of a like nature". It also states "to acquire the business now carried on under the style of Stevens Son & Co. at Weston Street, Bromley in the County of Middx, 34 Mark Lane, London, Queenborough in the County of Kent and Leith in Scotland", thus establishing that a Works at Sheppey had already been started a number of years before Sheppy Glue and Chemical Works Ltd. was formed. All this activity only goes to prove the tremendous business drive and energy that William Carr Stevens possessed.
Not content with al this activity, William Carr Stevens was at the same time, until his death in 1890, buying land and building houses in Horley. One can be by no means certain when this started, but a likely date seem to be in 1878, or maybe two or three years earlier, as his youngest daughter Mildred, was born at home in this year at The Oaks, Bonehurst Road, Horley. While this house no longer stands, it was later called 'Bonners Place'. Ralph Stevens was born in 1875 at Hooley Cottage, Redhill and christened there, proving, I think, that they lived in Redhill and nor Horley at that time. The older children were born in Forest Gate, Bromley and Walthamstow. Many of the houses that William Carr Stevens built are still standing today and can be seen in Bonehurst Road, our old offices are one, and the older and larger houses in Oakwood Road, Horley (a road build by him with its avenue of Limes and Chestnut trees). William Carr Stevens tragic death at the early age of 54 in 1890, as a result of a perforated appendix, must have been a terrible blow to his wife, Flora Hasting Stevens.
Address: Rushenden Road, Queenborough, Kent, ME11 5HH. |
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