Title
Individual photographs
Reference
WKC/A/2
Production date
1908 - 1979
Creator
- Williamson Manufacturing Company LimitedBiographyBiography
1910-current (2016), film developer, camera manufacturer, pump manufacturer, London, Sussex
Successor to Williamson Kinematograph Company Limited of Hove. The company was founded by cinematography pioneer James Williamson (1855-1933) in Hove.
The Williamson Company concentrated on the production of cameras and printers, moving to Williamson House, 28 Denmark Street, Charing Cross Road in 1910.
They continued to trade as Williamson Kinematograph Company until the second world war with the factory at Wilsden Green, manufacturing cameras and printing equipment and film developing (especially x-ray film); noted for aerial and reconnaissance cameras (used by RAF during both first and second world wars). They diversified into pump manufacture in the 1950s in association with Gorman Rupp Industries of Ohio; currently, as of 2016, manufactures pumps at The Street, Poynings, West Sussex.
Extent
10 files
Language
English
Level of description
SUB-SERIES
Repository name
Science Museum, London
Associated people and organisations
- Williamson, JamesBiographyBiography
(1855-1933), film-maker and camera manufacturer
James Williamson was born on the 8th November 1855 at Pathhead, Dysart, near Kirkcaldy, Fife. He began his career as a chemist in 1877 in Eastry, Kent, before moving to Hove Sussex in 1886. He took a keen interest in photography and optical entertainments as a Kodak agent.
Williamson began making films in 1896. He created films that were simple but radical for their time; representing the shift within film acting from pictorialism to naturalism. By 1902 the Williamson Kinematographic Company opened its first purpose-built film production studio and film processing works at Cambridge Grove, off Wilbury Road, Hove. Williamson was now a professional ‘animated photographer’ and no longer a high street chemist. Williamson's dramas and comedies were sold and exhibited across Europe and America. In 1910, the company refocused and moved to London, where it concentrated on the development of aircraft cameras and scientific instruments, the best known of which are probably their ‘Eagle’ aircraft cameras. Williamson Manufacturing was a major supplier to the RAF during both world wars, before later moving into film processing, particularly x-ray film processing. Williamson apparatus acquired an excellent reputation, and was used throughout the world.
His last years were spent in his neo-Tudor mansion at Mortlake, Surrey, where he would conduct experiments with colour photography. Williamson died on 18 August 1933 at his home.
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