Ellaline Terriss, Baby, and her Humber Bicycle

Image ID: 17947

Ellaline Terriss, Baby, and her Humber Bicycle

Courtesy of Mr W Spencer

Beeston
England

Ellaline Terriss (as she was to be known) was born Ellaline Lewin on April 13, 1872, in the Ship Inn, Stanley, in the Falkland Islands where, at that time, her father, William Lewin (1949-97), was a sheep-farmer. In 1888, at the age of sixteen, Ellaline made her professional stage debut at the Haymarket Theatre. She married Seymour Hicks in 1893 and had a baby daughter, Mabel, in 1904 (info from: http://the-camerino-players.com/britishtheatre/EllalineTerriss.html). Her bicycle was a local product, made by the Humber and Company Limited. This was founded by Thomas Humber (1841-1910) at Beeston, Nottinghamshire, in 1869. Thomas Humber had earlier opened his pedal-cycle works in Sheffield, then expanded to Stretton Street, Nottingham, in 1868, to produce a diamond frame cycle that was described at the time as a curious looking contraption. In spite of this, Humber quickly earnt a name for producing a quality article and soon outgrew the capacity of his shop, and thus moved to Beeston, and turned his business into a limited liability company with Thomas Humber as general manager. (He further developed his business by building a works in Wolverhampton and, in 1889, Coventry.) Humber Motorcycles were constructed in 1895, the first Humber car in 1899. Although Beeston originally dabbled with the abortive Pennington car project, the first engine-driven, Humber-badged, machines from Beeston were motor tricycles and quadricycles, followed by tricars. The first cars had two- or four-cylinder engines, but they were succeeded by the tiny single-cylinder-engined Humberette (literally, 'small Humber') in 1903. By 1908 the company ceased production of cars in Beeston due to trading losses (probably because the Beeston cars were manufactured to a higher standard than its Coventry counterparts and were more costly). In 1932 Raleigh bought out the Humber Cycles Division. The Beeston factory was located on the huge block of land between Humber Road, Queens Road and Hassocks Lane. Only parts of the factory remain, such as a section on Humber Road, on the sides of which, above the windows are the medallions of the Humber Company.

Date: 1904

Organisation Reference: NCCS000998

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