Phipps Bridge Road, Merton, SW19
and
131/3 Western Road
Varnish, paint
Source:
Borough of Mitcham List of Factories,
Town Clerk’s Department,
July 1963.
Available at Merton Heritage and Local Studies Centre at Morden Library.
Reference L2 (670) MIT

Demolition of paint factory in Western Road. Photo is looking south, part of the gas works can be seen in the background on the left.
George Hadfield’s varnish business was at Phipps Bridge, and moved into the premises of Charles Blume in Western Road, when his varnish business was wound up in 1916 by the government under the Trading with The Enemy Act.
From the minutes of the Mitcham Parish Council
Volume 11 April 1913 to March 1914
Report of the No. 1 Fire Brigade Committee
24th March, 1914
Page 193
The Committee beg to report the receipt of a letter from Mr. Hadfield, thanking the Brigade for their services at the fire on March 9th.
The Superintendent’s report included
March 9 Fire at Phipp’s Bridge … Expenses £2 2s. 0d.
Page 194
Phipps Bridge,
Merton,
Surrey,
10th of March, 1914.
The Chairman of the Fire Committee,
Mitcham Parish Council.Dear sir,
We write at the earliest possible moment to put on record our thanks to your Fire Brigade for the prompt manner in which they responded to our call, the fine way in which they worked and the splendid stop which they helped to effect. It was a great achievement to have confined damage to such small proportions, and we congratulate the Parish Council or having such a very efficient service.
Yours faithfully,
(Signed) GEO. HADFIELD.
From Surrey History Centre
Hadfields (Merton) Ltd, were formed in 1917 to act as manufacturers of or wholesale or retail dealers in varnish, japans, enamels, colours, oils, paints, pigments, cements, dye wares and other such, and particularly to acquire the businesses of varnish, paint and enamel manufacturers carried on under the name of George Hadfield, Phipps Bridge, Merton and George Hadfield (successor to C H Blume), Western Road, Mitcham. These businesses were conveyed to the company by George Hugh Hadfield and Samuel Rogers Hadfield, both of whom were directors. The Merton company claimed to have been trading since 1840 (letterhead seen at the depositor’s office), and it appears that George Hadfield, father of George Hugh and Samuel Rogers, had purchased Paul Addington’s varnish works at Phipps Bridge in 1892. Addington was certainly already working there in 1851.
In 1969 the UK paint manufacturing business and trade name ‘Hadfield’, with the fox trademark, were sold to Bestobell Paints and Chemicals Ltd, and the parent company’s name changed to G H Successors (Merton) Ltd. (A new company, called Hadfields (Merton) Ltd, was formed for the purposes of the transfer, to acquire the parent company’s UK interests.) The parent company was purchased in 1972 by the Land and House Property Corporation, which was itself acquired by the depositor in 1978.
Source: 2640 G H SUCCESSORS (MERTON) LTD, PREVIOUSLY HADFIELDS (MERTON) LTD, PAINT AND VARNISH MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS: COMPANY RECORDS
Job ads that appeared in local papers in 1972/3 showed the company name as Carson / Hadfields, as it was Bestobell’s paint subsidiary, Carson-Paripam, that had merged with Hadfields.
1947 Institution of Mechanical Engineers visit (from Grace’s Guide to British Industrial History)
These works are devoted essentially to the production of highclass paints for decorative and for specialized industrial use, including transport finishes.
Manufacture in the main paint shop is based on the following sequence: (1) edge-runner, (2) roller mill, of which a variety of types is employed, (3) mixer, and (4) refining mill. The shop is designed to facilitate a steady flow of medium-size batches in a wide variety of colours.
Ball mill production of both large and small batches is well illustrated in a second paint shop; and other departments produce water paints of various types, especially emulsion paints, cellulose lacquers, and the most modern synthetic enamels.
The laboratories, recently rebuilt after bomb damage in 1944, show very clearly the impact of science on the paint industry, and the lengths to which it is necessary to go to ensure suitability of the products for specific purposes. In addition to this factory, the laboratories are responsible for development and testing oi paint media and varnishes, including insulating varnishes, produced at the Merton factory.
A very clear system of identification, necessitated by the wide range of materials employed, is an important feature of the factory organization.
Minutes of meetings held by the Mitcham Parish Council are available on request from the Merton Heritage and Local Studies Centre at Morden Library.



I have kept in my possesion a fascinating mini-diary 2.5 inches x 4 inches which I used for the year 1966, I was then 17 years of age. It was used to promote the company therein described as “Hadfields (Merton) Limited, Western Road, Mitcham, Surrey. It contains many features which it was presumed to be convenient for the user, including postage rates, notable dates, measures and equivelant weights, time adjustments abroad, first aid tips, temperature conversions and not least, a full map of the UK. Quite a lot for such a small diary.
The cover image is described as “The Gate To The Old House” and it is described as follows “The Gate of Progress is reproduced from a very fine wrought-iron gate at our Varnish Factory and symbolises the progressive development over 125 years of paints, enamels and varnishes of the highest quality. Progress continues by the introduction of spray-applied plastter”.
I dont know how I came into possesion of the diary, however at that year i was working as a trainee-metallurgist in Walsall, West Midlands and it may have been posted to my workplace.
Sean Farrell
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This is interesting. Samuel Hadfield, mentioned in the article as a Director, was my mother in law’s Grandfather. I have a Hadfields Paints ash tray that I use as a soap dish.
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Sam was my great uncle. His brother George Hugh (d. 1935 aged 55) played for Surrey CCC, their youngest brother, Roy, was my grandad.
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