A pharmaceutical business (John Bell & Co.): rooms for manufacture, dispensing, and shop. Etching by R.W. Macbeth.
- Macbeth, Robert W. (Robert Walker), 1848-1910.
- Date:
- [between 1890 and 1899?]
- Reference:
- 585841i
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- Online
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Description
The pharmacy business of John Bell at 338 (later renumbered 225) Oxford Street, London. The firm was founded in 1798 by John Bell (1774-1849). In 1819 "he established a manufacturing laboratory at the rear of his shop, where he manufactured galenicals & chemicals used in his dispensing business" (British Pharmaceutical Industry Records Database, CD-ROM at the Wellcome Library)
An enfilade of rooms. Foreground, a factory with vessels and machinery for chemical and/or pharmaceutical manufacture, with five men at work, all wearing protective clothing. Middle, a room with smaller vessels, possibly a pharmacy for making up medicines for retail. Background, a shop, with a lady customer or a shop assistant. Beyond, the street, with a horse passing along
A photograph of the same view of the room, dated 1871, is published by Tallis and Arnold-Forster, loc. cit.: "the 'elaboratory' was totally rebuilt in the late 1850s by John A. Godfrey, when it was fitted as a pharmaceutical manufacturing plant capable of making everything except chemicals on a a large scale"
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Location Status Access Closed stores