THE NAME BOLTON-LEVER Bolton has a very interesting past over the
centuries with many famous people originating from the area.William Lever
was born in 1851,
in Bolton,
Lancashire, and educated at the Bolton Church Institute. After
training with his father's wholesale grocery business, in 1886
he established a soap manufacturing company called Lever
Brothers (now part of Unilever)
with his brother James. It was one of the first companies to manufacture
soap from vegetable oils, and in conjunction with Lever's business
acumen and marketing practices, produced a great fortune. James Lever
never took a major part in running the business. A recent biography by
Adam Macqueen suggests that James suffered from diabetes throughout his
life, and that perhaps his symptoms (prior to the discovery of insulin
and effective treatment of the condition) were mistaken for mental
instability
With accommodation tied
to employment, a worker losing his or her job could be almost
simultaneously evicted. Nonetheless, conditions, pay, hours, and
benefits far exceeded those prevailing in similar industries.
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From 1888,
Lever began to put his philanthropic principles into practice through
the construction of Port
Sunlight, a model community designed to house and support the
workers of Lever Brothers, who already enjoyed generous wages and
innovative benefits. Lever's philanthropy had definite paternalistic
overtones, and life in Port Sunlight included intrusive rules and
implied mandatory participation in activities. |
In the early 1900s, Lever was using palm oil produced in the British
West African colonies. When he found difficulties in obtaining more palm
plantation concessions, he started looking elsewhere in other colonies.
In 1911, Lever visited the Belgian
Congo to take advantage of cheap labour and palm
oil concessions in that country. Lever's attitudes towards the
Congolese were paternalistic and racist, and his negotiations with the
Belgian coloniser to enforce the system known as travail
forcé (forced labor) are well documented. As such, he
participated in this system of formalised labour. The archives show a
record of Belgian administrators, missionaries and doctors protesting
against the practices at the Lever plantations. Formal parliamentary
investigations were called for by members of the Belgian
Socialist Party, but despite their work, the practise of forced
labor continued until independence in 1960.[2]
Lever lived in the Rivington
area of Bolton
for many years. In 1913,
his house there was destroyed by a suffragette
— ironically, as he was in favour women's suffrage. He had a large
mansion created to replace this original home, and turned a large
portion of the grounds over to the town of Bolton as a public park,
including a small zoo stocked with emu, yaks, zebra, wallabies and a
lion cub. His own Japanese-style garden, based on the design of the
willow-patterned plate, included a lake complete with its own flock of
flamingos. Each of his houses was equipped with an open-air bedroom, in
which, following his wife Elizabeth's death in 1913, he frequently slept
with only a small glass canopy to protect his bed from the elements.
Lever was a lifelong supporter of William
Gladstone and the Liberal
cause, and was often called upon to contest elections for the Liberal
Party. He served as Member
of Parliament (MP) for the Wirral
constituency Henry
Campbell-Bannerman's government to introduce a national old age
pension, as he already provided for his own workers. He was High Sheriff
of Lancaster in 1917
and Mayor of Bolton in 1918. between 1906 and 1909, using his maiden speech to the
House of Commons to urge Henry
Campbell-Bannerman's government to introduce a national old age
pension, as he already provided for his own workers. He was High Sheriff
of Lancaster in 1917
and Mayor of Bolton in 1918.
Lord Leverhulme is remembered as a philanthropist. Port Sunlight is
now the home of the Lady
Lever Art Gallery; he endowed a school of tropical medicine at Liverpool
University; he gifted Lancaster
House in London
to the British nation; and endowed the Leverhulme
Trust. The garden of his former London residence 'The Hill' in Hampstead,
is open to the public. He was a major benefactor in his home town of Bolton.
He bought Hall
i' th' Wood (Samuel
Crompton's birthplace) and donated it to the town. He made many
donations to Bolton
School and wanted to completely redesign Bolton
town centre but his offer was not accepted by the council.
In 1918,
Lever bought the Isle
of Lewis, Scotland,
with the intention of making Stornoway
an industrial town and building a fish cannery, his intentions were
received badly by the islanders. He gave Lewis to its people in 1923,
and concentrated his efforts on the southern portion of the island,
known as Harris.
He was created Baron Leverhulme on 21
June 1917,
and Viscount
Leverhulme on 27
November 1922
- the hulme section of the title being in honour of his wife,
Elizabeth Hulme. Upon his death, of pneumonia, in 1925, the Leverhulme
viscountcy passed to his son William Hulme Lever. It became extinct on
the death of the third viscount, Philip William Bryce Lever, in 2000.
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