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Joseph Cyril Bamford, CBE (21 June 1916 – 1 March 2001) [1] was a British businessman. He was the founder of J.C. Bamford Excavators Limited (JCB), a manufacturer of heavy equipment. Biography
Between 2007 and 2017, JCB and related Bamford entities donated £8.1m in cash or kind to the party. [39] Between 2019 and 2021 JCB donated a further £2.5m. [40] In 2016, Anthony Bamford donated £100,000 to Vote Leave, the official pro-Brexit group, [41] and wrote to JCB's 6,500 staff explaining why he supported the UK leaving the EU. [42]
J. C. Bamford may refer to: Joseph Cyril Bamford CBE (1916–2001), UK businessman, founder of JCB Excavators LTD Joseph Cyril Edward Bamford (born 1977), a UK businessman and investor, grandson of Joseph Cyril Bamford (1916–2001)
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William Habington, poet, works include Castara (1634), The Queen of Arragon (1640) and Observations upon History (1641). [16] Henry Gage. Fr Francis Hawkins, Jesuit, child prodigy and translator; translated (at age 10) An Alarum for Ladyes and (at age 13) from de La Serre's Youths Behaviour, or, Decency in Conversation amongst Men (1641). [17]
Joseph Cyril Bamford (1916–2001), British businessman, founder of JCB heavy equipment company Seamus Moore (singer) (born 1947), Irish singer; known as "The JCB Man" Places
Anthony Paul Bamford, Baron Bamford (born 23 October 1945), is a British billionaire businessman who is the chairman of J.C. Bamford Excavators Limited (JCB). He succeeded his father, Joseph Cyril Bamford, as chairman and managing director of the company in 1975, at the age of 30. He was knighted in 1990. [3]
The firm's first vehicle was a tipping trailer made from war-surplus materials, which J. C. Bamford built in a rented lock-up garage in Uttoxeter. The Bamford family had previously started Bamfords, later Bamford International Farm Machinery which was a large employer in the town from the end of the 19th century through to the early 1980s, when ...