Felton, Grimwade & Co., was founded in 1867, when A. Felton and F. S. Grimwade took over the wholesale drug business of Youngman & Co. (1). Felton, Grimwade & Co., soon expanded into other areas including the manufacture of drugs and perfumes as well as establishing a Chemical Company and the Melbourne Glass Bottle Works. Given that liquids, powders and potions were all packaged in glass bottles and jars at the time, this was logical move.
The Felton of Felton Grimwade was Alfred Felton (1831-1904), who, before the partnership, had his own wholesale drug business. After his death his estate provided the funds for the Felton Bequest which purchased works of art for the National Gallery in Melbourne and supported charities. His partner was Frederick Sheppard Grimwade (1840-1910). Grimwade also had a background in the drug business as his father owned a wholesale drug company in England (2).
Felton never married, but in 1865, Grimwade married Jessie Sprunt (1842-1916) and they had nine children. Apparently, Felton and Grimwade, were not only business partners but were also to spend their afterlife together at the St Kilda Cemetery. A report notes that Alfred Felton's body was interred in the family vault belonging to the deceased and Mr. Grimwade (3) and after Mr Grimwade's death it was reported the remains will be interred in the grave of the late Mr. Felton (4).
This story exists because I come across this 1884 image of their factories.
The top images are the Chemical Works and Bi-Sulphide of Carbon works at Sandridge (Port Melbourne); the middle image are the Glass Works in Graham Street, South Melbourne. At the bottom are the Laboratory & Drug Mills, Jeffcott Street, West Melbourne and the Leech Aquarium, part of Drug works.
It was the Leech Aquarium that caught my eye, because that seemed a bit unusual.
Leeches have been used in medicine for centuries to remove blood from the body, thought necessary for a variety of conditions. Leech saliva has a substance which acts as an anti-coagulant on the blood and therefore increases blood flow which the leeches absorb (5). In fact, so common was it that one report in 1893 noted the palmy days of leeching, when "blood him" was the advice of every physician upon the slightest provocation (6).
Firstly, the aquarium was in West Melbourne, as the 1884 contemporary report (above) confirms. The West Melbourne location is also confirmed by the 1937 reminiscences of former employee -
In their chemical laboratory in West Melbourne men and women were kept working. I was one of sixty there. Leeches were required by the medical profession more then than they are now. So Felton and Grimwade must have a leech house built there (14).
However, Felton, Grimwade & Co.,were still in the leech business in 1916, as confirmed by this answer to a correspondent in the Bendigo Advertiser in 1916 -
We are informed that there is no market in Bendigo for leeches, the chemists obtaining requirements from Melbourne. Messrs. Felton, Grimwade and Co., of Melbourne, who have special means of keeping leeches alive, buy from recognised suppliers in large quantities during certain seasons. The prices given, we believe, range from 17/6 to 25/ per thousand (23).
This 1916 article is the last I can find which has a connection between Grimwade, Felton & Co. and the leech trade. However, as we saw before, leeches were still being used in hospitals at this time, as Dr Leach of the Education Department, was urging boys to collect leeches for the Hospital.
In the end, Dr Leach's campaign was successful as The Argus reported in April 1916. The article has many engaging leech facts, so it is reproduced in full -It may not be generally known that the leech is still largely used in medical practice. Each year about 8,000 are used in the Melbourne Hospital, mainly in cases of pneumonia, in which they have a beneficial effect in easing the characteristic pain in the back. They are used, too, in cases of bruising. The leeches are collected mainly by the school children of the State, in swamps and ponds. Some months ago it was feared that the supply for this winter would fall short, as it did last, and an appeal was made to the children, who are paid 5/ a hundred for the leeches. One small boy reassured the Hospital by writing:-"I will send as many leeches as possible as soon as possible,''
Soon the leeches began to arrive. Now there are about 8,000 of them-a year's supply-stored in stone filter-cases, with six inches of pebbles at the bottom of the water. Against these pebbles they scrape off the slime, which would otherwise kill them. Most of them come from the Murray and Goulburn districts. The children fish for them with baits of meat; some daring youngsters wade in the swamps, and the leeches fasten on their bare legs.
Some years ago, in the old dispensary of the Melbourne Hospital, the gauze was found to have been removed from the top of the vessels in which the leeches were kept, and the leeches vanished, not one being found in a search of the dispensary. It was finally found that the rats were the culprits, it being surmised that they put their tails into the water, and that the leeches, fastening upon these baits gratefully, were drawn up and eaten. The leeches are not fed. They are thus more ready to do their work of blood-sucking when the time comes. When once they have gorged themselves they are discarded. The reason for discarding them is obvious-one cannot sterilise a leech. If, however, one wishes to keep them as pets afterwards, it is interesting to know that about four months' rest is necessary before the leech is ready for business again (24).
Since the war began, the manufacture of carbolic acid has been carried on by Messrs Felton, Grimwade and Company at their works in Jeffcott street, West Melbourne. Today the works were destroyed by fire, the result of an explosion in a naphthalene retort. The extent of the damage, which was great, has not yet been estimated. Thick black clouds of smoke hung over the western end of the city, and caused thousands of people to run to see the fire. The factory was of iron, and four men were at work when the retort exploded. Nobody was injured. In an instant there was a huge flame which shot right through the factory, where carbolic acid, lysol substitutes, cresol, and naphthaline wore in process of manufacture. The plant was quickly gutted. Hundreds of gallons of carbolic acid, cresol, and caustic, and many barrels of raw naphthalene were destroyed (25).
As you can see from the image above, the West Melbourne Complex was a large one, with many different buildings and I have no information as to which building was destroyed. However, they were still producing drugs, or pharmaceuticals, on the West Melbourne site into the 1950s at least (26). What of the Leech Aquarium? I have no information as to when it closed.