Fred Knight, son of Edwin Knight, built this splendid factory in Park Road in 1889,
perhaps on the site of an earlier, smaller factory. It was demolished in 2005. |
At the age of 21, in 1870, Mr Fred Knight founded his own boot and shoe manufacturing business in Rushden. He built this factory in 1889 and also bought the Old Rectory, in Little Street, which adjoined the land. He was also a Justice of the Peaceand Captain of the Fire Brigade.
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The blocks of flats built in 2006 on the site of the old factory.
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Wellingborough News, 27th January 1883
TO CLOSERSWANTED, a thoroughly competent person (female) to take the management of Machine-room, fitter preferred.Apply personally to Mr. F. KNIGHT, Shoe Manufacturer, Rushden.
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The Wellingborough News, 17th June 1887, transcribed by Jim Hollis
An Honourable Man
In the month of May, 1874, through an exceptionally heavy loss, Mr. F. Knight, shoe manufacturer, Rushden, found himself unable to meet all the claims upon his estate, and at a private meeting of creditors called on the 26th of that month, an offer of 10s in the £ was made and accepted. The claims were paid in two instalments, and there the matter was thought to have ended. It must have been a matter of surprise, and gratification, to the creditors to receive a communication from Mr. Knight last week informing them that by applying at the office of Mr. Thomas Dyer, Ladies’-lane, Northampton, they would receive the balance of the original account. The gentlemen who assembled in Mr. Dyer’s office on Saturday afternoon were warm in their congratulations. Mr. Knight drew attention to the exceptional circumstance connected with the failure, and said the thought that he had only paid 10s in the £ had been a skeleton in his cupboard for the last 13 years. He assured those present that it would give him even more pleasure to pay it away than for those present to receive it. He thought it would not be a bad way to celebrate the jubilee. The representative of a large leather merchant mentioned that in all his experience he had not met with a similar instance. The sum of money paid amounted to between £400 and £500, and the estate of a deceased leather merchant, Mr. T. P. Stroulger, Northampton has unexpectedly come in for the handsome sum of £215. Amongst other creditors reimbursed were Messrs. Samuel Barrow Bros., London; Messrs. J. C. Robinson, Wellingborough; Messrs. Phipps and Son, Northampton; the Executors of the Late Mr. T. P. Stroulger, Northampton; Mr. T. Dyer, Northampton; and the Northamptonshire Union Bank.
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The Wellingborough News, 9th September, 1887, transcribed by Gill Hollis
RushdenA pleasing acknowledgment
A few weeks since we announced that Mr. Fred Knight, of Rushden, had paid 20s. in the £ to his creditors on the composition paid in 1874. We are pleased now to state that this somewhat unusual act of business integrity has been acknowledged in tangible shape by the presentation to Mr. Knight of a beautifully engraved silver salver, bearing the following inscription “Presented to Mr. Fred Knight, of Rushden, by his creditors of 1874, as a token of their appreciation of the inherent honesty which prompted him to discharge his liabilities in full, when under no legal obligation to do so, in June, 1887.” An engrossed address had been drawn up by Messrs. Waterlow and Sons, of London, for presentation with the salver, and is worded as follows:- “August, 1887. To Mr. Fred Knight, Rushden. Dear Sir, - We, your creditors of 1874, cannot permit the recent interesting occasion when you called us together to pay the balance of 20s. in the £ on the composition of 1874, to pass without some recognition of our high appreciation of your conduct, and we respectfully beg your acceptance of a piece of plate suitably inscribed, which we trust will remain a memento in your family for generations to come. Yours faithfully, for the Northamptonshire Union Bank (Limited), Alfred Page (manager), Samuel Barrow and Bros., Phipps and Son, Thomas Dyer, T. P. Stroulger, J. and C. Robinson, and W. Coulson and Co.”
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