Hello. I'm writer Antoinette Beard... WOO-HOO!!!... Here are quirky fascinations of the Victorian to the Edwardian age, and some things that happened later that were just too bizarre to resist... Such a yummy time of quaintness & blossoming industry. Scroll down for a multitude of coolness... Ha-ha-ha, always there are those who flaunt conventions, Darlings... ;)
Friday, February 20, 2026
The History Of Yardley's English Lavender...
>>> The business was established by the Cleaver family in 1770, which is the official date displayed on its product labels. According to the company's website, an earlier incarnation existed prior to this, but most records of the earlier business were lost in the Great Fire of London in 1666.
>>> William Yardley
The company is named after William Yardley, who purchased the business in 1823 from the sons of the founder, Samuel Cleaver, who had gone into bankruptcy. The business became known as Yardley & Statham in 1841 when Charles Yardley, son of William, took on William Statham as a partner in the business. At the time, the firm sold perfumes, soaps, powders, hair pomades and other toiletries.
In 1851, the firm, which was still known as Yardley & Statham, exhibited at the Great Exhibition in The Crystal Palace. That same year, the firm changed its name to Yardley & Co. The firm exhibited soap and perfume, including a soap called Old Brown Windsor, which was embossed with a picture of Windsor Castle and was one of their first production soaps.
In 1913, the firm adopted Francis Wheatley's Flowersellers painting, from his Cries of London series, as its new logo. The primula vulgaris being sold in baskets in the painting were replaced, in the logo, with sheaths of lavender.
???Yardley English Lavender Talcum Powder
Yardley's signature scent is English Lavender, which was launched in 1873. English Lavender was popular during the Victorian era in England, and it was exported to the USA during the 1880s, where it became popular in American households.
The variety of lavender that Yardley uses in its products is lavandula angustifolia, which is specially grown for Yardley in the south of England. Lavandula angustifolia was selected by the company in the 1930s, after a several year search for the finest variety.
Due to the growing popularity of Yardley soaps and cosmetics at the turn of the 20th century, the firm opened a shop in 1910 on Bond Street in London. The original Yardley shop on Bond Street was at 8 New Bond Street, but it later moved to 33 Old Bond Street. --- Wikpedia.
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