History

 

Job EarnshawRecords show that the Earnshaw family has been connected with the timber trade since 1780. The business today, which was founded in 1860, carries the name of Job Earnshaw, who worked falls of timber in the local area near Wakefield. Soon his brothers joined him in the venture, and a small sawmill was built on the Midgley site, producing parts for horse drawn carts, gates, fence posts, rails and various items used in agriculture.

Initially all the sawing was done by hand, but this was soon brought to an end with the acquisition of a traction engine, which in turn was replaced with a steam engine in 1880. By 1900 a mill dealing in foreign timber was purchased at Wakefield. The company's first car was bought in 1914.

The Midgley site, c1900By the end of the First World War the company had around 40 employees and supplied a wide range of timber .. oak for railway wagons and fencing; ash for handles and cart shafts; elm for wheel hubs; beech for textile rollers. Until the 1940's most haulage and extraction was done by horse; at one time the company owned 26 horses - 16 at Midgley and 10 at Wakefield.

Since the Second World War, the company has evolved steadily. The premises at Wakefield were sold, replaced by a sawmill mill at Brigg in Lincolnshire. Large areas of woodland have been acquired which the company still works to this day.

With the decline of the regions traditional industries of steel, coal and textiles the company moved towards agricultural products with fencing and gates taking over much of the mills production. With the addition of a pressure treatment tank in the 1970's much of the production shifted to softwood species. In the mid 1980's the company launched its first 'Fencing Centre', a major initiative which took Earnshaws into retail operations for the first time. In many ways the company was a pioneer at offering fencing and landscaping products direct to the general public, and though initial demand was steady word soon spread and the company was ideally placed to cater for the upsurge of interest in home and garden fuelled by the makeover programmes of the 1990's.

Aerial view of the Midgley site, 2002In 1996, following the closure of the local coal mine, the company relocated its entire Midgley based operation to the newly vacated 13 acre site. The move allowed for the further modernisation of the sawmill operation, but in particular enabled the further development of the retail and distribution enterprise.

1998 saw the opening of a new retail department on the sawmill site at Brigg and at the present time the whole company focus is geared towards offering the most comprehensive range and largest stocks of fencing and garden products in the region.

The company is still based at Midgley where Job Earnshaw started work over 140 years ago and his descendants still run the business. David Earnshaw as Director and Chairman, John Earnshaw as Director and Company Secretary and Chris, Daniel and Peter Earnshaw as Directors.