Harts of Stur Kitchen Issue 5, Christmas 2017 | Page 46

Harts Kitchen Icon History of Arthur Price The Price is Right The story of Arthur Price and his company told by his great-grandson, Simon Price J ust as Sheffield was home to knife and blade manufacturing in the UK, turn-of-the-20th century Birmingham was the home of spoon and fork making. The two trades used different materials and processes, and it wasn’t until after WWII that the two elements came together. In the latter part of the 19th century, my great-grandfather Arthur Price spent 20 years working for cutlery companies in the Birmingham area before setting up his own business. During this time, he mastered every skill required for the cutlery trade and slowly accumulated second-hand machinery to start his own enterprise. A dedicated and ambitious man, he made his own tools and dies at home once he’d finished his 12-hour factory shifts. The Price family’s front room became Arthur’s workshop. His very first factory was at 16 ½ Gem Street in the Aston area of Birmingham. He employed 12 people including his eldest daughter, my great aunt Maud, who was the company’s secretary from 1905 until the outbreak of the Great War. T