Title
Papers of H & J Quick Ltd Ford Dealership
Reference
YA2008.10
Production date
01-01-1914 - 31-12-1999
Creator
- H & J Quick LtdBiographyBiography
Brothers Harry and Jim Quick started the H & J Quick company in 1912. Harry Quick served a 5-year apprenticeship with Sale Motor Company from 1906-1911, and with the Fiat Landaulette he received for his 21st birthday, set up a taxi business. Jim Quick began work in the building trade, but was dissatisfied with the work. In March 1912, the brothers formed the H & J Quick partnership and built a garage in Old Trafford. The partnership's association with the Ford Motor Company began in March 1914, when H & J Quick became a Ford sub-dealership. Henry Ford had set up his first UK factory in Trafford Park in October 1911, not far from the Quick's garage. The company became a private limited company, H & J Quick Ltd, in 1919, after becoming a main Ford dealership.
In 1921, the company moved to premises on Chester Road. The company expanded to take over other Ford dealerships across Manchester and Salford and during the 1920s and 1930s built a number of depots across the local area, including Altrincham, Ashton-under-Lyne and Bury. H & J Quick Ltd became a public company in 1946. Continued expansion led to the formation of the H & J Quick Group of companies in 1965. The Quick family association with the Dealership continued unbroken until the company was purchased by C D Brammall in c.2000. Brammall later changed their name to Evans Halshaw and was eventually taken over by Pendragon Holdings plc in 2004.
Scope and Content
Collection of documents including original limited dealers' agreement with Ford Motor Co., memoranda and articles of association, minutes, share records, financial ledgers, accounts, balance sheets, annual returns, leases and agreements, a staff register, inventories, correspondence, records of the '21 Club' for staff, photographs, newspaper cuttings and publications relating to the H & J Quick Group, records for subsidiary companies (such as Quickhire, Quickpower, New England Motor Co.), and some personal papers of Tom Quick (father of H & J Quick).
Extent
21 boxes
Archival history
The collection was in the care of the company's Personal Assistant at the Evans Halshaw premises at Centre House, Old Trafford prior to its donation to the museum.
Level of description
TOP
Repository name
Science and Industry Museum
Subject
Conditions governing access
Open access.
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions.
External document
Related object