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{{Short description|UK consumer staples company}}
[[File:LeverHouseNewYork.JPG|thumb|[[Lever House]], [[New York City]]]]
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
'''Lever Brothers''' was a British manufacturing company founded in 1885 by brothers [[William Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme|William Hesketh Lever]] (1851–1925) and James Darcy Lever (1854–1916). They invested in and successfully promoted a new soap-making process invented by chemist William Hough Watson. In 1930, Lever Brothers merged with [[Margarine Unie]] to form [[Unilever]].
{{Infobox company
| name = Lever Brothers
| logo =
| image =Outside Lever House, Port Sunlight (2).jpg
| image_caption =Lever House in [[Port Sunlight]], [[Wirral Peninsula|Wirral]], [[Merseyside]], the former headquarters of Lever Brothers
| type =
| industry = Consumer Goods
| fate = Merged with [[Margarine Unie]]
| predecessor = <!-- or: | predecessors = -->
| successor = [[Unilever]]
| founded = {{Start date and age|1884}} in [[Warrington]], England
| founders = [[William Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme|William Hesketh Lever]]<br>James Darcy Lever
| defunct = {{End date|1930}}
| hq_location_city =
| hq_location_country =
| area_served = <!-- or: | areas_served = -->
| key_people =
| products =
| brands = [[Sunlight (cleaning product)|Sunlight]]<br>[[Lifebuoy (soap)|Lifebuoy]]<br>[[Lux (soap)|Lux]]<br>[[Vim (cleaning product)|Vim]]
| subsid = Curtis Davis Company<br>Huileries du Congo Belge<br>[[Andrew Pears|A&F Pears]]<br>[[William Gossage|Gossage's]]<br>[[Joseph Watson, 1st Baron Manton|Watson's]]<br>[[Joseph Crosfield|Crosfield's]]<br>[[Hazlehurst & Sons]]<br>[[Robert Spear Hudson (soap)|Hudson's]]
| owner = <!-- or: | owners = -->
| num_employees = 250,000
| num_employees_year = 1930
| parent =
| website = <!-- {{URL|example.com}} -->
}}
'''Lever Brothers''' was a British manufacturing company founded in 1885 by two brothers: [[William Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme|William Hesketh Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme]] (1851–1925), and James Darcy Lever (1854–1916). They invested in and successfully promoted a new soap-making process invented by chemist William Hough Watson. Lever Brothers entered the United States market in 1895 and acquired [[Mac Fisheries]], owner of [[Wall's (meat)|T. Wall & Sons]], in 1925. Lever Brothers was one of several British companies that took an interest in the welfare of its British employees. Its brands included [[Lifebuoy (soap)|Lifebuoy]], [[Lux (soap)|Lux]] and [[Vim (cleaning product)|Vim]]. Lever Brothers merged with [[Margarine Unie]] to form [[Unilever]] in 1929.<ref name="Unilever global company website" />


== History ==
== History ==
Starting with a small grocery business begun by his father, William Lever and his brother James entered the soap business in 1885 by buying a small [[soap]] works in [[Warrington]]. The brothers teamed up with a [[Bolton]] chemist, William Hough Watson, who became an early business partner. Watson invented the process which resulted in a new soap, using [[glycerin]] and vegetable oils such as [[palm oil]], rather than [[tallow]].<ref name="watson">Jeannifer Filly Sumayku, [http://www.thepresidentpost.com/?p=2621 Unilever: Providing Enjoyable and Meaningful Life to Customers], ''The President Post, 22 March 2010</ref> The resulting soap was a good, free-lathering soap, at first named Honey Soap then later named "[[Sunlight (cleaning product)|Sunlight Soap]]". Production reached 450 tons per week by 1888. Larger premises were built on marshes at [[Bromborough|Bromborough Pool]] on the [[Wirral Peninsula]] at what became [[Port Sunlight]].<ref name="bbcbusiness">{{cite news | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/651938.stm | title=Unilever: A company history | publisher=BBC | date=22 February 2000 | accessdate=9 July 2011}}</ref> Though the company was named Lever Brothers, William Lever's brother and co-director James never took a major part in running the business. He fell ill in 1895, probably as a result of [[diabetes]], and resigned his directorship two years later.<ref>{{Cite book |last= Macqueen |first=Adam|title=The King of Sunlight: How William Lever Cleaned Up the World. Unilever first started out in new zealand wellington petone but then later on got moved to australia.|page=144 |publisher=Random House |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-552-15087-3}}</ref>
Starting with a small grocery business begun by his father, [[William Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme|William Lever]] and his brother James entered the soap business in 1885 by buying a small soap works in [[Warrington]]. The brothers teamed up with a [[Cumbria]]n chemist, William Hough Watson, who became an early business partner. Watson invented the process which resulted in a new soap, using [[glycerin]] and vegetable oils such as [[palm oil]], rather than [[tallow]].<ref name="watson">Jeannifer Filly Sumayku, {{usurped|1={{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20131215041539/http://www.thepresidentpost.com/?p=2621 Unilever: Providing Enjoyable and Meaningful Life to Customers]}}}}, ''The President Post, 22 March 2010</ref> The resulting soap was a good, free-lathering soap, at first named Honey Soap then later named [[Sunlight (cleaning product)|Sunlight Soap]]. Production reached 450 tons per week by 1888. Larger premises were built on marshes at [[Bromborough|Bromborough Pool]] on the [[Wirral Peninsula]] at what became [[Port Sunlight]].<ref name="bbcbusiness">{{cite news | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/651938.stm | title=Unilever: A company history | publisher=BBC | date=22 February 2000 | access-date=9 July 2011}}</ref> Though the company was named Lever Brothers, James never took a major part in running the business. He fell ill in 1895, likely as a result of [[diabetes]], and resigned his directorship two years later.<ref>{{Cite book |last= Macqueen |first=Adam|title=The King of Sunlight: How William Lever Cleaned Up the World. Unilever first started out in new zealand wellington petone but then later on got moved to australia.|page=144 |publisher=Random House |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-552-15087-3}}</ref>


Lever Brothers entered the United States market in 1895, with a small New York City sales office. In 1898, it bought a soap manufacturer in [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]], the Curtis Davis Company, moved its U.S. headquarters to Cambridge and started production at a factory located at what is now [[Technology Square (Cambridge, Massachusetts)|Technology Square]]. In 1925, Lever Brothers acquired [[Mac Fisheries]], owner of [[Wall's (meat)|T. Wall & Sons]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Publication%20Files/Acquisitions%20and%20Firm%20Growth.pdf|title=Acquisitions and firm growth: Creating Unilever's ice cream and tea business|access-date=21 March 2015}}</ref>
== Employee welfare and use of forced labor ==
Lever Brothers was one of several British companies that took an interest in the welfare of its British employees.<ref name=lewis>{{cite book| author=Brian Lewis |title="So Clean": Lord Leverhulme, Soap and Civilization |location=Manchester| publisher=Manchester University Press |year=2008}}</ref> The [[model village]] of [[Port Sunlight]] was developed between 1888 and 1914 adjoining the soap factory to accommodate the company's staff in good quality housing, with high architectural standards and many community facilities.


By 1929, Lever Brothers employed 1,000 workers in Cambridge, and 1,400 nationwide, making it the third-largest soap manufacturer in the U.S.<ref name="chs">{{cite web|publisher=Cambridge Historical Society|title=Industry in Cambridge: Lever Brothers|url=https://cambridgehistory.org/industry/leverbrothers.html|access-date=1 February 2020}}</ref>
=== Use of forced labor in the Congo===
{{One source|section|date=March 2018}}
{{Undue|section|date=March 2018}}
However, in the Congo, Lever Brothers, through their subsidiary Huileries du Congo Belge (HCB), utilized forced labour. Palm cutters failing to meet requirements regarding compulsory cultivation of crops were liable to prison sentences, where the chicotte, a type of whip, was used.<ref> {{cite book|last1=Marchal|first1=Jules|others=Translated by Martin Thom. Introduced by Adam Hochschild|title=Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo|date=2008|publisher=Verso|location=London|isbn=978-1-84467-239-4|page=217|chapter=Afterword}}
First published as Travail forcé pour l'huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme: L'histoire du Congo 1910-1945, tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001. </ref>


In 1949, Unilever moved its US headquarters and laboratories to [[Park Avenue]], New York, and in 1959, it closed the Cambridge factory.<ref name=chs/>
A decree issued 16 March 1922 by the Belgian government in the Congo, which remained in force for the remainder of the colonial period, albeit with a few modifications, made provision for prison sentences of two to three months for "dishonesty" (reneging upon their legal obligations to work), and prison sentences of a fortnight for violations of work discipline. Francois Beissel was dissatisfied with a number of the measures laid down in the decree, and left record of this in a letter dated 22 November 1922, which he wrote to Doctor Albert Duren, Inspector of Industrial Hygiene. Regarding absenteeism, Beissel wrote, "As the man hired could not renege more seriously upon his obligations than by abstaining from work without a plausible excuse, I would venture to hope that the prison sentences recommended would be applied with all due rigor in the case of unjustified, repeated absences. I would be glad to receive some reassurance in this regard."<ref> {{cite book|last1=Marchal|first1=Jules|others=Translated by Martin Thom. Introduced by Adam Hochschild|title=Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo|date=2008|publisher=Verso|location=London|isbn=978-1-84467-239-4|pages=19-20|chapter=1: The Early Years (1911-1922)}}
First published as Travail forcé pour l'huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme: L'histoire du Congo 1910-1945, tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001. </ref>


=== Employee welfare and use of forced labour ===
Between 25 and 30 November 1923, Dr. Emile Lejeune, chief medical officer for the Congo-Kasai province, toured the HCB's Lusanga circle for six days. He drafted a report of his inspection, dated 8 December 1923. The HCB was employing approximately 6,500 workers in the areas he inspected. He found inadequate documentation of mortality rates, but notes another report citing a mortality rate of 9% in three months among certain groups of workers. He said that the most frequent cause of death recorded in 1923 were bronchial infections and pneumonia, though there were also some from septicemia and at least one from tuberculosis. Dr. Lejeune found the number of doctors, and available equipment and shelter for the sick to be inadequate.<ref> {{cite book|last1=Marchal|first1=Jules|others=Translated by Martin Thom. Introduced by Adam Hochschild|title=Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo|date=2008|publisher=Verso|location=London|isbn=978-1-84467-239-4|pages=27-35|chapter=2: The Lejeune Report (1923)}}
Lever Brothers was one of several British companies that took an interest in the welfare of its British employees.<ref name=lewis>{{cite book| author=Brian Lewis |title="So Clean": Lord Leverhulme, Soap and Civilization |location=Manchester| publisher=Manchester University Press |year=2008}}</ref> The [[model village]] of [[Port Sunlight]] was developed between 1888 and 1914 adjoining the soap factory to accommodate the company's staff in good quality housing, with high architectural standards and many community facilities. The paternalism found at Port Sunlight did not exist in the operations of its subsidiary in the [[Belgian Congo]], where Lever Brothers, through their subsidiary ''[[Huileries du Congo Belge]]'' (HCB), utilised [[forced labour]] between 1911 and 1945.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Marchal|first1=Jules|author-link=Jules Marchal|translator=Martin Thom|others=Introduced by Adam Hochschild|title=Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo|date=2008|publisher=Verso|location=London|isbn=978-1-84467-239-4}}
First published as Travail forcé pour l'huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme: L'histoire du Congo 1910-1945, tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001. </ref>
First published as ''Travail forcé pour l'huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme: L'histoire du Congo 1910-1945'', tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001.</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Rich|first1=Jeremy|title=Lord Leverhulme's Ghost: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo (review)|url=http://muse.jhu.edu/article/265076|journal=Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History|access-date=17 March 2018|date=Spring 2009|volume=10|doi=10.1353/cch.0.0053|s2cid=161485622}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Buell|first1=Raymond Leslie|title=The native problem in Africa, Volume II|date=1928|publisher=The Macmillan Company|location=New York|pages=540–544}}</ref>


===Brands===
Sidney Edkins, the managing director of HCB, wrote a letter to Governor Engels, dated 18 December 1923, claiming that the natives working for the HCB were better fed than they would be in their own villages. He claimed that, "The reason for the failure of our recruitment is purely and simply the repugnance felt by blacks for every kind of work and every kind of sustained effort. The villagers even refuse to carry the luggage of civil servants, as our agent Geno and myself have observed. Our agent Cotton has reported that tons of rubber, grass and palm-nuts rotted in the villages, simply because of a reluctance to transport them." Edkins also claimed that the labour shortage "cannot endure for long without compromising the very existence of our interests, which represent so large a part of economic activity in the Colony." Edkins asked the Governor, measures in favor of the HCB that they might obtain more workers.<ref> {{cite book|last1=Marchal|first1=Jules|others=Translated by Martin Thom. Introduced by Adam Hochschild|title=Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo|date=2008|publisher=Verso|location=London|isbn=978-1-84467-239-4|pages=37-38|chapter=2: The Lejeune Report (1923)}}
By 1911, the company had its own [[oil palm]] plantations in the [[Belgian Congo]] and the [[Solomon Islands]]. Lever Brothers Ltd also acquired other soap companies including [[Andrew Pears|A&F Pears]], John Knight of London,<ref>''[http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/John_Knight Grace's Guide: John Knight]'' Retrieved 1 May 2020</ref> [[William Gossage|Gossage's]] of [[Widnes]], [[Joseph Watson, 1st Baron Manton|Watson's]] of Leeds, [[Joseph Crosfield|Crosfield's]] of Warrington, [[Hazlehurst & Sons]] of [[Runcorn]] and [[Robert Spear Hudson (soap)|Hudson's]] of [[Liverpool]]. The town of Leverville (the present-day [[Lusanga, Kwilu|Lusanga]]) was founded in the then district of Kwango, later part of the [[Provinces of the Democratic Republic of Congo|Province]] of [[Léopoldville]], in the western part of the [[Belgian Congo]] and was named after William Lever (later [[Viscount Leverhulme]]).<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tSe8AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA207|title=Co-operative culture and the politics of consumption in England, 1870-1930|first=Peter |last=Gurney|publisher=Manchester University Press ND |year=1996 |isbn=0-7190-4950-4|page=207}}</ref>
First published as Travail forcé pour l'huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme: L'histoire du Congo 1910-1945, tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001.</ref>


=== Unilever ===
Engels replied on 26 December, agreeing that the labour shortage was liable to compromise "if not the existence, at any rate, the further development of your interests." However, he disagreed that this situation had nothing to do with how the HCB treated their workers. In particular, he was not persuaded by Edkin's argument that the natives were better fed by the HCB than in their own villages "since the native is not obliged, when in his own village, to do the work that you ask of him." <ref> {{cite book|last1=Marchal|first1=Jules|others=Translated by Martin Thom. Introduced by Adam Hochschild|title=Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo|date=2008|publisher=Verso|location=London|isbn=978-1-84467-239-4|pages=38-39|chapter=2: The Lejeune Report (1923)}}
In September 1929, [[Unilever]] was formed by a merger of the operations of Dutch [[Margarine Unie]] and British soapmaker Lever Brothers, named as a blend of the two firms' names.<ref name="Unilever global company website">About us, 1920-1929 {{Cite web |url=http://www.unilever.com/about/who-we-are/our-history/1920-1929.html |title=1920 - 1929 &#124; About &#124; Unilever global company website |access-date=12 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150725211548/http://www.unilever.com/about/who-we-are/our-history/1920-1929.html |archive-date=25 July 2015 |url-status=dead }}, Unilever</ref> By 1930, it employed 250,000 people and in terms of market value, was the largest company in Britain.<ref name=lewis/> Unilever was the first modern multinational company.<ref name=lewis/>
First published as Travail forcé pour l'huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme: L'histoire du Congo 1910-1945, tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001. </ref>


The Lever Brothers name was kept until the 1990s as an imprint, as well as the name of the US subsidiary, Lever Brothers Company, and a Canadian subsidiary, Lever Brothers Limited. Lever Brothers was sold to a US capital firm, Pensler Capital Corporation, and renamed Korex in 2008. Korex Don Valley assumed operations of the Lever Brothers [[Toronto]] plant. It has since closed and gone bankrupt. The Toronto plant is now being redeveloped into an office and industrial district by First Gulf Corporation.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/toronto/old-soap-factory-getting-a-facelift/article542845/ |title=Old soap factory getting a facelift |newspaper=The Globe and Mail |location=Toronto |date=1 February 2012 |access-date=27 April 2015}}</ref>
Sidney Edkins submitted a defense against the Lejeune report, a memorandum 26 pages long with appendices dozens of pages long. Edkins' defense was forwarded from Engels to Bureau. In the report, the HCB made many excuses, for example, the memorandum claimed that providing a pagne and a blanket for men hired for only three months would effectively double their wage. <ref> {{cite book|last1=Marchal|first1=Jules|others=Translated by Martin Thom. Introduced by Adam Hochschild|title=Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo|date=2008|publisher=Verso|location=London|isbn=978-1-84467-239-4|pages=40-43|chapter=2: The Lejeune Report (1923)}}
First published as Travail forcé pour l'huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme: L'histoire du Congo 1910-1945, tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001. </ref>

Reports by Rene Mouchet and Victor Daco, shows that some limited improvements were made to the condition of the HCB's workers by 1928 and 1929. However, the HCB was still using forced labor. Daco recommended that local workers should be fed just as imported workers were. Accommodations at many camps had been improved, and there were houses made of baked brick or adobe. However some camps, such as the villages of the Yanzi, were still in a deplorable state. Overcrowding continued to be an issue, as houses were too few in number, in Daco's opinion. Daco believed the existing hospitals were in good state, but that there were two few of them, and that the number of beds should be quadrupled.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Marchal|first1=Jules|others=Translated by Martin Thom. Introduced by Adam Hochschild|title=Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo|date=2008|publisher=Verso|location=London|isbn=978-1-84467-239-4|pages=94–98|chapter=5: In the Basongo and Lusanga Circles (1923-1930)}}
First published as Travail forcé pour l'huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme: L'histoire du Congo 1910-1945, tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001.</ref>

An report signed on 29th January 1931 by Pierre Ryckmans and two others appointed by the minister discusses the quota system in use by the HCB at the time. Ryckmans' report quoted some directives issued by company headquarters at Leverville for Kwenge sector, dated 23rd March 1930. One of the directives stated that, "It is your responsibility to organise the cutters' deliveries so as to obtain on a regular bases an average production of 40 crates per month." Ryckmans recommended that the quotas should vary throughout the year to correlate to the rate at which clusters ripened. The Ryckmans report also stated, "We reckon that the employment of state messengers ought generally to be condemned. They understand just one thing, namely, that they are responsible for getting people to work, and they are ready to use any means possible to carry out this mission." In short, as Jules Marchal summarized the report, "the exploitation of palm groves in Lusanga circle was a system of forced labour pure and simple."<ref>{{cite book|last1=Marchal|first1=Jules|others=Translated by Martin Thom. Introduced by Adam Hochschild|title=Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo|date=2008|publisher=Verso|location=London|isbn=978-1-84467-239-4|pages=139-142|chapter=8: Pierre Ryckmans' Report on Lusanga (1931)}}</ref>

=== Brands ===
By 1900 "[[Lifebuoy (soap)|Lifebuoy]]", "[[Lux (soap)|Lux]]" and "[[Vim (cleaning product)|Vim]]" brands had been added and subsidiaries had been set up in the United States, Switzerland, Canada, Australia, Germany and elsewhere. By 1911 the company had its own [[oil palm]] plantations in [[Belgian Congo]] and the [[Solomon Islands]]. Lever Brothers Ltd also acquired other soap companies including [[Andrew Pears|A&F Pears]], [[William Gossage|Gossage's]] of [[Widnes]], [[Joseph Watson, 1st Baron Manton|Watson's]] of Leeds, [[Joseph Crosfield|Crosfield's]] of Warrington, [[Hazlehurst & Sons]] of [[Runcorn]] and [[Robert Spear Hudson (soap)|Hudson's]] of [[Liverpool]]. The town Leverville (the present-day [[Lusanga, Kwilu|Lusanga]]) was founded in the [[Bandundu Province|Bandundu]] district of the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]], named after William Lever.

Lever Brothers rode the cresting late-Victorian consumer revolution to build a vast worldwide industrial empire. Four years after William Lever's death in 1925, his enterprises were amalgamated as [[Unilever]]. By 1930, it employed 250,000 people and in terms of market value, was the largest company in Britain.<ref name=lewis/>

== Unilever ==
The company grew and operated until 1930, when it merged with a [[Netherlands|Dutch]] margarine company, [[Margarine Unie]], to form [[Unilever]], the first modern multinational company.<ref name=lewis/> As part of the agreement, Lever Brothers changed its name to Unilever plc, and forms the British half of the [[dual-listed company]]. Although the two companies have separate shareholders and stock exchange listings, they have a common board of directors and essentially operate as one company.

The Lever Brothers name was kept for a time as an imprint, as well as the name of the US subsidiary, Lever Brothers Company, and a Canadian subsidiary, Lever Brothers Limited. Lever Brothers was sold to a US capital firm Pensler Capital Corporation and renamed Korex in 2008. Korex Don Valley assumed operations of the Lever Brothers Toronto plant. It has since closed and gone bankrupt. The Toronto plant is now being redeveloped into an office and industrial district by First Gulf Corporation.<ref>{{cite web| url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/toronto/old-soap-factory-getting-a-facelift/article542845/ |title=Old soap factory getting a facelift |newspaper=The Globe and Mail |location=Toronto |date=1 February 2012 |accessdate=27 April 2015}}</ref>


== Presidents ==
== Presidents ==
Among its presidents was [[Charles Luckman]] who in the 1950s championed the construction of the [[Lever House]] in New York City. Luckman left the company before the building's completion, moving on to a notable architectural career, including the design of [[Madison Square Garden]], the [[Theme Building]] and master plan for [[Los Angeles International Airport]], the [[Aon Center (Los Angeles)|Aon Center]], and major buildings at the [[Kennedy Space Center]] and [[Johnson Space Center]].<ref>{{cite web|first=Herbert |last=Muschamp |date=1999-01-28 |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B07E3DD1139F93BA15752C0A96F958260&scp=1&sq=Charles%20Luckman&st=cse |title=Charles Luckman, Architect Who Designed Penn Station's Replacement, Dies at 89 |publisher=New York Times |accessdate=2013-02-10}}</ref>
Among its presidents was [[Charles Luckman]], who, in the 1950s, championed the construction of the [[Lever House]] in New York City. Luckman left the company before the building's completion, moving on to a notable architectural career, including the design of [[Madison Square Garden]], the [[Theme Building]], the master plan for [[Los Angeles International Airport]], the [[Aon Center (Los Angeles)|Aon Center]], and major buildings at the [[Kennedy Space Center]] and [[Johnson Space Center]].<ref>{{cite web|first=Herbert |last=Muschamp |date=1999-01-28 |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B07E3DD1139F93BA15752C0A96F958260&scp=1&sq=Charles%20Luckman&st=cse |title=Charles Luckman, Architect Who Designed Penn Station's Replacement, Dies at 89 |work=New York Times |access-date=2013-02-10}}</ref>


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Breeze detergent]]
* [[Breeze detergent]]
* [[Lever & Kitchen]]
* [[Lever & Kitchen (disambiguation)]]
* [[Lever Brothers Factory]] originally located in [[Balmain, New South Wales]], Australia
* [[Lever Brothers Factory]] originally located in [[Balmain, New South Wales]], Australia
* [[Riverdale, Toronto#Lever Brothers Toronto Factory|Lever Brothers Factory, Toronto]] - re-development of Lever's Toronto factory and now being re-developed by First Gulf Corporation into a residential community.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.toronto.com/news-story/71368-former-lever-brothers-site-sold-to-commercial-developer/|title=Former Lever Brothers site sold to commercial developer|first=Joanna|last=Lavoie|date=January 27, 2012|website=Toronto.com}}</ref>
* [[Port Sunlight]]
* [[Port Sunlight]]
* [[Levers Pacific Plantations]]


== References ==
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
*{{Commonscat-inline}}


{{Unilever}}
{{Unilever}}
{{Authority control}}


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[[Category:Defunct manufacturing companies of the United Kingdom]]
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[[Category:1930 disestablishments in England]]
[[Category:British Royal Warrant holders]]
[[Category:British royal warrant holders]]
[[Category:Palm oil production in the Democratic Republic of the Congo]]
[[Category:Palm oil production in the Democratic Republic of the Congo]]
[[Category:British companies disestablished in 1930]]
[[Category:Lever family]]
[[Category:1930 mergers and acquisitions]]

Latest revision as of 22:27, 29 April 2024

Lever Brothers
IndustryConsumer Goods
Founded1884; 140 years ago (1884) in Warrington, England
FoundersWilliam Hesketh Lever
James Darcy Lever
Defunct1930 (1930)
FateMerged with Margarine Unie
SuccessorUnilever
BrandsSunlight
Lifebuoy
Lux
Vim
Number of employees
250,000 (1930)
ParentUnilever Edit this on Wikidata
SubsidiariesCurtis Davis Company
Huileries du Congo Belge
A&F Pears
Gossage's
Watson's
Crosfield's
Hazlehurst & Sons
Hudson's

Lever Brothers was a British manufacturing company founded in 1885 by two brothers: William Hesketh Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme (1851–1925), and James Darcy Lever (1854–1916). They invested in and successfully promoted a new soap-making process invented by chemist William Hough Watson. Lever Brothers entered the United States market in 1895 and acquired Mac Fisheries, owner of T. Wall & Sons, in 1925. Lever Brothers was one of several British companies that took an interest in the welfare of its British employees. Its brands included Lifebuoy, Lux and Vim. Lever Brothers merged with Margarine Unie to form Unilever in 1929.[1]

History[edit]

Starting with a small grocery business begun by his father, William Lever and his brother James entered the soap business in 1885 by buying a small soap works in Warrington. The brothers teamed up with a Cumbrian chemist, William Hough Watson, who became an early business partner. Watson invented the process which resulted in a new soap, using glycerin and vegetable oils such as palm oil, rather than tallow.[2] The resulting soap was a good, free-lathering soap, at first named Honey Soap then later named Sunlight Soap. Production reached 450 tons per week by 1888. Larger premises were built on marshes at Bromborough Pool on the Wirral Peninsula at what became Port Sunlight.[3] Though the company was named Lever Brothers, James never took a major part in running the business. He fell ill in 1895, likely as a result of diabetes, and resigned his directorship two years later.[4]

Lever Brothers entered the United States market in 1895, with a small New York City sales office. In 1898, it bought a soap manufacturer in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the Curtis Davis Company, moved its U.S. headquarters to Cambridge and started production at a factory located at what is now Technology Square. In 1925, Lever Brothers acquired Mac Fisheries, owner of T. Wall & Sons.[5]

By 1929, Lever Brothers employed 1,000 workers in Cambridge, and 1,400 nationwide, making it the third-largest soap manufacturer in the U.S.[6]

In 1949, Unilever moved its US headquarters and laboratories to Park Avenue, New York, and in 1959, it closed the Cambridge factory.[6]

Employee welfare and use of forced labour[edit]

Lever Brothers was one of several British companies that took an interest in the welfare of its British employees.[7] The model village of Port Sunlight was developed between 1888 and 1914 adjoining the soap factory to accommodate the company's staff in good quality housing, with high architectural standards and many community facilities. The paternalism found at Port Sunlight did not exist in the operations of its subsidiary in the Belgian Congo, where Lever Brothers, through their subsidiary Huileries du Congo Belge (HCB), utilised forced labour between 1911 and 1945.[8][9][10]

Brands[edit]

By 1911, the company had its own oil palm plantations in the Belgian Congo and the Solomon Islands. Lever Brothers Ltd also acquired other soap companies including A&F Pears, John Knight of London,[11] Gossage's of Widnes, Watson's of Leeds, Crosfield's of Warrington, Hazlehurst & Sons of Runcorn and Hudson's of Liverpool. The town of Leverville (the present-day Lusanga) was founded in the then district of Kwango, later part of the Province of Léopoldville, in the western part of the Belgian Congo and was named after William Lever (later Viscount Leverhulme).[12]

Unilever[edit]

In September 1929, Unilever was formed by a merger of the operations of Dutch Margarine Unie and British soapmaker Lever Brothers, named as a blend of the two firms' names.[1] By 1930, it employed 250,000 people and in terms of market value, was the largest company in Britain.[7] Unilever was the first modern multinational company.[7]

The Lever Brothers name was kept until the 1990s as an imprint, as well as the name of the US subsidiary, Lever Brothers Company, and a Canadian subsidiary, Lever Brothers Limited. Lever Brothers was sold to a US capital firm, Pensler Capital Corporation, and renamed Korex in 2008. Korex Don Valley assumed operations of the Lever Brothers Toronto plant. It has since closed and gone bankrupt. The Toronto plant is now being redeveloped into an office and industrial district by First Gulf Corporation.[13]

Presidents[edit]

Among its presidents was Charles Luckman, who, in the 1950s, championed the construction of the Lever House in New York City. Luckman left the company before the building's completion, moving on to a notable architectural career, including the design of Madison Square Garden, the Theme Building, the master plan for Los Angeles International Airport, the Aon Center, and major buildings at the Kennedy Space Center and Johnson Space Center.[14]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b About us, 1920-1929 "1920 - 1929 | About | Unilever global company website". Archived from the original on 25 July 2015. Retrieved 12 October 2019., Unilever
  2. ^ Jeannifer Filly Sumayku, Unilever: Providing Enjoyable and Meaningful Life to Customers[usurped][usurped], The President Post, 22 March 2010
  3. ^ "Unilever: A company history". BBC. 22 February 2000. Retrieved 9 July 2011.
  4. ^ Macqueen, Adam (2005). The King of Sunlight: How William Lever Cleaned Up the World. Unilever first started out in new zealand wellington petone but then later on got moved to australia. Random House. p. 144. ISBN 978-0-552-15087-3.
  5. ^ "Acquisitions and firm growth: Creating Unilever's ice cream and tea business" (PDF). Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  6. ^ a b "Industry in Cambridge: Lever Brothers". Cambridge Historical Society. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  7. ^ a b c Brian Lewis (2008). "So Clean": Lord Leverhulme, Soap and Civilization. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
  8. ^ Marchal, Jules (2008). Lord Leverhulme's Ghosts: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo. Translated by Martin Thom. Introduced by Adam Hochschild. London: Verso. ISBN 978-1-84467-239-4. First published as Travail forcé pour l'huile de palme de Lord Leverhulme: L'histoire du Congo 1910-1945, tome 3 by Editions Paula Bellings in 2001.
  9. ^ Rich, Jeremy (Spring 2009). "Lord Leverhulme's Ghost: Colonial Exploitation in the Congo (review)". Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History. 10. doi:10.1353/cch.0.0053. S2CID 161485622. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  10. ^ Buell, Raymond Leslie (1928). The native problem in Africa, Volume II. New York: The Macmillan Company. pp. 540–544.
  11. ^ Grace's Guide: John Knight Retrieved 1 May 2020
  12. ^ Gurney, Peter (1996). Co-operative culture and the politics of consumption in England, 1870-1930. Manchester University Press ND. p. 207. ISBN 0-7190-4950-4.
  13. ^ "Old soap factory getting a facelift". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. 1 February 2012. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
  14. ^ Muschamp, Herbert (28 January 1999). "Charles Luckman, Architect Who Designed Penn Station's Replacement, Dies at 89". New York Times. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  15. ^ Lavoie, Joanna (27 January 2012). "Former Lever Brothers site sold to commercial developer". Toronto.com.

External links[edit]