Sugar Bag Seal, Henry Tate & Sons
Tate (Henry) & Sons Bag Seal, Image & Found by Coreservers.
Tate Bag seal 10mm.
Raised circle border containing HENRY (curving downward) / TATE / & SONS (curving upward) / LIVERPOOL (curving upward) // horizontal lozenge containing TATE
Company No: 46915; Henry Tate and Sons Ltd. Incorporated in 1896. Dissolved before 1916. Source - Board of Trade: Companies Registration Office: Files of Dissolved Companies. Held by The National Archives, Kew
Henry Tate(March 11, 1819 – December 5, 1899) was an English sugar merchant, noted for establishing the Tate_Gallery in London. Tate was born in Chorley, Lancashire, the son of a clergyman. When he was 13, he became a grocer's apprentice in Liverpool. After a seven-year apprenticeship, he was able to set up his own shop. His business was successful, and grew to a chain of six stores by the time he was 35. In 1859 Tate became a partner in John Wright & Co. Sugar refinery, and he sold his groceries in 1861. By 1869, he had gained complete control of the company, and renamed it to Henry Tate & Sons. In 1872, he purchased the Langen patent on a method of making sugar cubes, and in the same year built a new refinery in Liverpool. Tate rapidly became a millionaire, and donated generously to charity. In 1889 he donated his collection of 65 contemporary paintings to the government, on the condition that they be displayed in a suitable gallery, toward the construction of which he also donated £80,000. The National Gallery of British Art, better known as the Tate_Gallery, was opened on July 21, 1897, on the site of the old Millbank prison. Tate was made a baronet in 1898. In 1921, after Tate's death, Henry Tate & Sons merged with Abram Lyle & Sons to form Tate and Lyle.
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