The firm was founded by John James Hardy in 1856 at Bond St. Hartlepool. The company prospered and moved to Throston Bridge in the 1880s. W.H. Hardy (Billy) took over as M.D. on his fathers death and continued in that position until 1937 when he sold the company to T.H. Pailor.
Ald. T.H. Pailor bought the company, limited liability since 1929, and ran it until his death in 1963.
His widow, Marion Isobel Pailor, was M.D. until 1967 when his son, Tom Pailor, took over on her death.
Tom supervised the move to Brenda Road and the company’s transition from brassfounders and finishers to CNC machinists and railways parts suppliers. On his retirement in 2002, his son Andrew Pailor became M.D. – only the sixth person to hold this position in 150 years.
(courtesy of J.J. Hardy's website)
Appearing in this photograph is Adam Scott Hardy , second son of John James Hardy. Born in Newcastle in 1859 and died in 1907 in Hartlepool. He appears with his second wife Eliza Marth James, born in 1862 in Great Yarmouth and died in 1948 in Hartlepool.
More detail »Adam Scott Hardy was born in 1900 to John James and Frances Hardy. He moved to Billingham to work for ICI and died in 1976 This photograph of 1919 shows Adam on the left with other young men of Hartlepool including Tom Wilson(centre).
More detail »This is Adam Scott Hardy's passport photo, taken in 1950.
More detail »Angus Kenneth Hardy (son of Horace) married Catherine Ray in Gateshead in 1919. In the photograph he appears in his RFA Uniform.
Having survived the war he died of Spanish Flu in Hartlepool a few months later at the very young aged of 22.
More detail »This photograph is of Arthur Hardy son of John James Hardy. He was born in Durham in 1862 and was married to Elizabeth Jane Porter also born 1862?
Arthur died in 1921 while living in York Road, Hartlepool. His wife died in 1945.
More detail »This photograph is of John George Hardy's children; Connie born in 1900( who later married a Mills) and George born 1905 who emigrated to Melbourne.
More detail »This photograph is of Elizabeth Hardy (nee Johnson).
Elizabeth was born in 1833 and died in 1897 Adelaide Street Hartlepool. In 1854 she married John James Hardy in Hull. Eliizabeth's father had been a soldier guarding Napoleon on St. Helena.
More detail »This photograph is of Frances Hardy (nee Herron) born 1878 and died in 1954, wife of John James Hardy.
Their daughters also appear in the photo. Elizabeth /Lizzie born in 1903, married Jack Sutheran in 1928 and Minnie born 1905 who married Johnathan Walter Waller in 1924.
Minni's husband Walter died on a Japanese POW ship when it was torpedoed by an American sibmarine.
More detail »Adam Scott HARDY (1900-1976) showing Old Hartlepool to a young German visitor 1955.
More detail »Henry Frederick Hemy the composer was uncle by marriage to John James Hardy who established the brass-foundry in Hartlepool. When Hemy died in 1888 at 10 Regent Street, two of the mourners were A. and W. Hardy, sons of the brass founder.
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Horice Henry was the youngest son of John James Henry. He was born in Hartlepool in 1875 and died 1924 in Howbeck House Hartlepool.I
In 1902 Horace became a volunteer in Imperial Yeomanry , he went to South Africa for the Boer War but was too late for action. In this photograph he seen ipossibly wearing the badge of the Imperial Yeomanry(front row,seated, middle).
John George Hardy , his nephew is sitting on the right of Horace.
Standing behind are Horace's sons ;Angus Kenneth Hardy (1896-1919) and William Hardy(1905-1933).
The young boy on the left of Horace is his son Eric Hardy (1905-1933),
Angus served with the Royal Field Artillery in France, he was taken prisoner by the Germans in 1917.
William enlisted with the Durham Light Infantry in 1915 but was dischared later that year for being underage. He re-enlisted in the Royal Engineers but died in a military hospital in Colchester in 1917 of a skull infection.
More detail »The young man in the photograph as been identified as John George Hardy 1875-1955 son of William Henry Hardy and grandson of the original John James Hardy . Were the rather fierce looking dogs guard dogs ?
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More detail »J.J. Hardy, Brass Founders and Engineers, 9 Church Street, West Hartlepool.
More detail »Jim Wilson's first job upon leaving school at 14 and prior to commencing his apprenticeship as a marine engineer was as fitting shop boy for this local firm of brassfounders.
More detail »Pictures from J.J. Hardy's premises, taken on the 18th October 1966, when the premises were still at Throston Bridge.
More detail »On reverse of photo it says Laura Huntley (or Nuttley ?) is in the foreground
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More detail »John George Hardy, son of William Henry Hardy was born in Hartlepool in 1875 and died 1955 in Howbeck House, General Hospital. He is wearing the uniform of the Grenadier Guards in WW1.
More detail »John James and Frances Hardy at their home in Bruce Cresent in the early 1950s.
Thier daughter Lizzie Sutheran (1903-1961)and their Grand -Daughter Jessie Sutheran born in 1930, who married Norman Price 1953 also appear in the photograph.
More detail »This photograph is of John James Hardy and his sons Vincent and John James.J ohn James (1879) was born in Hart Street and died 1957 in Bruce Crescent West View brass founder/mouldre.
In 1900 John James married Frances Herron who was born in 1878 in Croft Terrace, reesiding at Pratts Passage Croft.She died in 1954
Appearing also in the photograph are two of his sons ;Vincent born in 1908 who later married Louise Arkley in 1937 and John James born 1910 marrying Lilly Taylor in1938.
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This photograph taken in 1982 is of Josephine Navy Hardy and Eva Fraser(nee Carling) both sister were widowed when this photograph was taken in 1982.
For most of her married life Eva lived in Raby Gardens and died in 2001 in Seaton Carew.
More detail »This is Josephine Navy Hardy's (born Carling 1907-1991) passport photograph , taken in 1952.
More detail »Josephine HARDY nee CARLING (1907-1991) with daughter Joyce HARDY (1931-73) with husband and son Malcolm Scott HARDY born 1940. Photo taken in Croft Gardens August 1953.
More detail »This photograph is of the marriage of Mary Elizabeth Hardy to Bowater Baines in 1908. Elizabeth was born in 1877 and daughter of William Henry and Elizabeth Usher. Appearing on the right in the photograph is William Henry Hardy.
More detail »Minnie Hardy born Durham in 1864 was the daughter of John James Hardy. She married Arthur Stein in 1887. Arthur (1861-1910) born in London was the son of Carl Heinrich Stein (1835-1890) born in Denmark and naturalized in 1865 after his arrival in Hartlepool. Carl owned the Stein Hotel and Gaiety Theatre in Mainsforth Terrace. Arthur later managed them both. Arthur and Minnie had a son Carl who emigrated to the United States and died in Galveston in 1973. Minnie died in 1951 when visiting a daughter Doris Elizabeth in Glasgow and while living with another daughter Queenie in Darlington, but she was buried in Hartlepool North cemetery with Arthur.
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Queenie Corona Stein was born in Hartlepool in 1902 daughter of Arthur STEIN and Minnie HARDY. In 1927 she married Frank GRIFFITHS and moved to Darlington where she died in 2009 aged 106. This photo was taken on her birthday in 2009.
She was given these names because she was born on the coronation day of Edward VII.
More detail »This photograph is of Adam Scott HARDY (1900-1976) with son Malcolm Scott HARDY (born 1940 ) on the promenade Old Hartlepool in August 1949.
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This photograph is of Vincent Hardy taken in 1928. He was born in Hartlepool in 1908 and served in the Second World War in North Africa and India with the Yorks& lancs. Regiment.
More detail »This photograph is of Vincent Hardy son of John James hardy appearing with either an unknown friend or relative. Born 1870 in Hartlepool, he joined the Royal Navy in 1886 but was bought out of the service before the end of his twelve year enlistment.
Vincent separated from his first wife and started a new family with Annie Foster.
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This photograph is of Vincent Hardy with his second wife Annie Foster . Their sons Vincent Jnr and Tommy appear alongside their sister Minnie.
More detail »This photograph is taken in the USA and is of Vincent Hardy Jnr and Tommy Hardy.Vincent was born in 1899 and Tommy was born 1902.They had a sister Minnie born around 1906 before they emigrated to Cleveland Ohio where another daughter was born in 1908. Vincent Jnr died in San Diego California in 1973.
More detail »This photograph is of William Henry Hardy as a candidate for Throston.He was a councillor for Throston in 1910.
William was the eldest son of John James and Elizabeth Hardy.He was born in Hull in 1855 and died in 1947 in Eaglescliffe.
He inherited the brass-founding company and sold it in 1937. He lived in the house in Clifton Street (now Old Cemetery Road) where the foundry was located from the 1880s.
More detail »The photograph is of William Henry outside the company shop in Church Street.
More detail »This photograph is of William Henry Hardy with his wife Elizabeth ( nee Usher born Middleton, Hartlepool 1855 and died in 1935) and their daughter Amy Lily born in 1890(later married a Allenby).
Photo taken on a visit to London in 1908.
More detail »This photograph is of William Henry and his family including his daughter Mary Elizabeth and Bowater Baines in the yard of the house and foundry in Clifton Street.Probably taken after their marriage( Mary and Bowater) in 1908.
More detail »This photograph is of the Hardy Family Women in Middleton with Old Hartlepool in the background and a paddlel-steamer possibly "Confidence".
More detail »Old Hartlepool is the original fishing village which existed before West Hartlepool. The origins of ancient town of Hartlepool (Old Hartlepool) can be traced back to ca 647 AD. In the 8th century AD, Bede mentions it (“heopru” – the place where harts (deer) drink). The record goes blank then, and does not reappear until the 12th century. In 1201 King John confirmed a charter owned by Robert Bruce V. The name “Brus” or “Bruce” is still associated with parts of the town.
The fine abbey church of St. Hilda is mainly Early English, dating from 1185, on the site of an abbey which flourished as early as 658 AD. St. Hilda’s still flourishes and stands in a prominent place on the Hartlepool headland, and nearby the ancient town walls (completed ca 1322 as a defence against the twin enemies of the Scots and the sea) can still be seen.
On 8th February 1201, the town was granted its first royal charter by King John. A second royal charter was granted in 1593 by Queen Elizabeth (the First).
Hartlepool was visited several times by John Wesley on his preaching tours … he was certainly in the town in 1757 and 1786.
Old Hartlepool continued its independent existence until 1967, when local government reorganisation created the merger with its young neighbour, West Hartlepool.
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