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A Potted History of Stannah: 150 years

150 years and over 600,000 stairlifts installed worldwide, there are more satisfied Stannah customers than any other brand.

A Potted History of Stannah: 150 years

By now, you might have heard that the Stannah family business was founded in London by Joseph Stannah in 1867. However, few people know the interesting story of just how Stannah has grown and changed in the 150 years since its inception. Join us as we take a look back!

The Beginning

Stannah is a family-owned company established almost 150 years ago

Joseph Stannah was the son of Samuel Stannah, a linen merchant in Worcester (the original one, located in Western England). An accomplished engineer, Joseph started the Stannah business in Southwark, London, providing cranes and hoists to unload cargo from the docks. He turned his hand to numerous projects and accumulated a raft of patents throughout his career. Among his designs for cranes and hoists are drawings for stuffing boxes for locomotives, pendulum pumps and there is even a tantalizing reference to him having designed a car (although we can find no firm confirmation of that). We also have a few references to the business actually starting as early as 1828, but again, unfortunately there is currently no concrete evidence to support that. However, we do know for certain that Joseph knew a thing or two about creating a public profile and was a regular contributor to the publication, ‘The Engineer’, writing letters and publishing information about his patent devices.

The Second Generation

Joseph’s son Albert took over the business around the turn of the 20th century, by which time the business had started to diversify into passenger and goods lifts. Even working on some early car lifts. Joseph and Albert continued marketing their products and they placed numerous adverts in building catalogues in the pre-war period.

Rebuilding a Business

Next in line was Leslie Stannah, also known as Pop, father to Brian and Alan, and grandfather to Jon, Patrick, Nick, Alastair and Helen. Born in 1901 to Albert Stannah and his wife Edith, Pop was a genuine character. Known for his discipline on the one hand, he was, nevertheless, a man of real concern and kindness when it came to his staff. It was Pop who essentially rebuilt the Stannah business from scratch after the devastation of the Second World War.

As a young man, Pop was an avid motorcycle enthusiast. Retained as a competitive rider by the iconic British motorcycle firm Ariel, he won many events while riding for them. Pop didn’t join the family business immediately after finishing his education, but went to work for other lift companies to gain experience. In fact, he still hadn’t entered the family firm by the time the war broke out in 1939. Instead, he joined the Royal Navy.

After commendable service in the Royal Navy, Pop returned to London and to the ruins of the Stannah factory, which had been hit by a bomb. By this time, his father AJ was 77 and the business had ceased trading. With his demob suit, £300 and a bombsite where once a factory had stood, Leslie Stannah set out to rebuild the business. With incredible determination, Pop started small and grew the business, manufacturing as many components as possible of his lifts. By the 1950s the business was on firm foundations and Pop’s sons, Brian and Alan, were taking up apprenticeships in the industry ready for their ultimate entry into the business. Pop retired from the business in the 1960s and died at the age of 77 in 1979.

A Second Regeneration

Those firm business foundations were starting to show cracks when Brian Stannah joined the business in 1958 and, by 1961, the bailiffs were making visits to the factory. With some real determination, Brian set about restructuring the business by forming a base around steadier income from service contracts, providing a cushion for the more volatile supply and fit business.

While Brian managed business affairs, Alan Stannah oversaw all things engineering. Alan recognized that, in order to thrive, the business had to streamline production and look at standardizing products. This would cut costs, allow for the outsourcing of certain components and offer shorter lead times while still allowing for custom production where required. Alan’s work resulted in the launch of the Maxilift in the 1960s, introducing a product line that has been central to the success of the Lifts business.

The early 70s were a tough time for everyone, with a biting recession and fuel crisis leading to three-day work weeks. Brian and Alan were always open to new opportunities to develop the business, but one very successful diversification, our Microlifts business, almost didn’t happen. At the time, the brothers considered service lifts rather troublesome and when they received a letter promoting a product that could be installed in just a day they rather dismissively tossed it in the trash. Later that day, Alan having had second thoughts, retrieved the Daldoss letter from the bin and took the first step in a long and fruitful relationship. To this day Stannah is the sole distributor of Daldoss Microlifts in the UK and our Microlifts division continues to enjoy solid success.

The business was also selling a number of domestic homelifts at the time but unfortunately the product wasn’t suitable for many homes. Brian, however, was still receiving enquiries from home owners looking for a solution to getting upstairs. He was determined to find a way to give his customers what they wanted and to survive the recession, so off he went to Holland to visit a stairlift company called Jan Harmer, with the intention of learning more about their product. Brian ended up coming away with more than he had planned, when he purchased the company’s designs.

On his return, Brian and brother Alan together produced prototypes of their first Stannah stairlift. From their London base, the two brothers and a few colleagues began to manufacture stairlifts at the start of 1975 and, by December, had sold 66 units. Production was difficult and in the early days it seemed that they were having to take stairlifts out for repair as quickly as they put them in. However, Brian and Alan persevered, improving product design and fabrication techniques to deliver a more reliable product. Stairlift production quickly moved to Andover, where Brian and Alan were already building a new factory to house their expanding lift business and where it has flourished over the last 40 years. Today Stannah have manufactured well over 600,000 stairlifts.

A stairlift was quite a new concept in the 1970s. As a result, Stannah was not just trying to sell a new product, but also offering an innovative alternative to single story living in retirement. In printed advertising, the product was endorsed by Professor Heinz Wolff and Dr. Christian Barnard, well-respected pioneers of life-changing work in science and medicine.

Growth was steady throughout the 70s. As sales grew, the ability to provide after sales service to all their customers prompted the beginning of today’s service branch network. Beginning in Manchester, Birmingham and London, as production grew, so did the ability to provide quality post sale service. While the principal factory was in Andover, a second rail manufacturing center was set up in Dunston, Newcastle in the 1980s. This is where Stannah bought R J Shaw and Company and found that the skill sets in the north east were invaluable to their growth plan.

In 1979, the first exports were made to Germany, to Lifta, who are still the sole Stannah distributor in the country. Today, our stairlifts are sold in over 40 countries, through more than 30 distributors and 9 wholly-owned subsidiaries.

Five Generations On

Today five members of the fifth generation – Jon, Patrick, Nick, Alastair and Helen – are active in running the business

These days, the worldwide business sells passenger, platform and microlifts, escalators, moving walkways and stairlifts, alongside providing maintenance and repair services for all makes and models of lifts and stairlifts. Brian and Alan are still very much involved in the business as co-chairmen, but in the late 1980s handed over the reins of the day-to-day activities. Today five members of the fifth generation – Jon, Patrick, Nick, Alastair and Helen – are active in running the business, maintaining the family traditions and ethos. Through many ups and downs, and despite the challenges of the last century, Stannah continues to function as a proud family business, focused on quality manufacturing and personal service.

Canada: a New Frontier

Stannah Canada celebrates the opening of its GTA office in Markham, ON 2017

After 150 years in business, the British-based Stannah Group has opened for business in the GTA. The international lifting company, which emerged from London’s dockyards in the mid-19th century, chose a fitting time to expand to Canada, as the nation also marks its 150th anniversary this year.

Stannah Canada officially opened its doors on April 4 at its new location at 25 Valleywood Drive #11 in Markham, Ontario. Mr. Jim Closs and his team welcomed Mr. Nick Stannah, who addressed the crowd of invited guests, including Mr. Frank Scapitti, the Mayor of Markham.

“Following Stannah’s accreditation with the Canadian Association of Occupational Therapists
last year, it was only natural that our next step would be to open our first office in Canada. So we are really proud to be opening our office in Markham in 2017, and so excited about the opportunity to directly serve our customers in the GTA.”

Nick Stannah

 

 

Written by fernando at 30-06-2017