Levy Brothers Company Limited

Identity area

Type of entity

Corporate body

Authorized form of name

Levy Brothers Company Limited

Parallel form(s) of name

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

Other form(s) of name

Identifiers for corporate bodies

Description area

Dates of existence

1857-1957

History

The Levy Brothers Company Limited was started by one of the first members of the Prussian Jewish community to come to Canada in the mid-1800s. Herman Levy, (1833-1902), emigrated from Germany in the 1850s and established a jewellery business in Hamilton in 1857. Within a few years, he had become successful and sent for his future wife Camilla Scheuer, and his brother Abraham (1835-1907), to join him. In 1862, his brother Abraham entered the business, and the company name was changed to H.&A. Levy, eventually becoming the Levy Brothers Company Limited in 1871. The company had a brief partnership with Herman’s brother-in-law, Edmund Scheuer, and at that time was located at 27 King Street East. By 1877, the company had a new location and a prominent presence in downtown Hamilton at 58-60 King Street East, remaining there for many decades. It was a four-story building with showrooms on the first floor and manufacturing on the upper floors. The showrooms featured jewellery pieces such as pins, brooches, rings, earrings, lockets, chains, and bracelets, available in silver, platinum, gold and white gold, as well as diamond rings and various other items such as pipes, ring cases, cutlery, and gold and silver bars.

Although there were many jewellery stores and manufacturers during this time, the Levy Brothers Company was the leading jewellery wholesaler and manufacturer of its kind in British North America, specializing in various jewellery pieces, watches, clocks, optical items, jewellery making materials and watchmaking materials. The company employed around 50 craftsmen who handmade the pieces. Some of these individuals started out as apprentices at the age of 14 and then spent decades with the company honing their skills and becoming experts in their trade before retiring. The quality of craftmanship made the Levy Brothers Company the standard of excellence throughout the country. By 1893, it became a joint stock company whereby investors could buy and sell shares in the business. Abraham took over as President and Herman as Vice President. When Herman passed away in 1901, Abraham ran the operations until he too passed away in 1907. Herman’s son Adolph took over the company at that time and then it was subsequently passed down to his son Herman Herzog Levy (1902-1990), who joined the company in 1923. During the Second World War, Herman H. Levy was appointed the Jewellery Administrator of the War Times Prices and Trade Board, and due to the excellent service he and his company provided during his term as Administrator, he was awarded an Order of the British Empire. In 1945, after 4 years of service as the Jewellery Administrator, he resigned his post and moved the company to its final location at 25 Main Street West. The company was still in business in 1957 to celebrate its centennial, but it is unclear as to when the doors closed permanently, ending over a century of excellent quality and craftsmanship in the jewellery trade.

Places

Hamilton, Ontario

Legal status

Functions, occupations and activities

Jewellery Manufacturers and Wholesalers

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Internal structures/genealogy

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Script(s)

Sources

Bailey, Thomas Melville et al. Dictionary of Hamilton Biography, Vol.2, p.92, 179. Hamilton: W.L. Griffin Limited, 1981. – Library Call Number R971.352 DIC

CF – Hamilton – Biography – Levy, Herman Herzog

CF – Hamilton – Jewellery Trade – Levy Brothers Company Limited

Hamilton, The Birmingham of Canada, 1893. The Times Printing Company, Hamilton, Ontario, 1893, p.93. – Library Call Number: 917.1352 HAM

Magazine of Industry & Dailey Times. Hamilton, Ontario, 1910, p.58. – Library Call Number: 971.351M27

“Merchant’s Death, Abraham Levy, President of Levy Bros., Died This Morning.” The Herald. June 25, 1907. Reference Number: MF – Herald Scrapbook, Vol. 01, pt.1.

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