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  1. Jeremiah Colman (1777–1851) was an English miller who founded Colman's Mustard, a business which merged into the conglomerate Reckitt & Colman, and is now owned by Unilever. Life. He was born in Norfolk in 1777 to Robert Colman (1749-1807) and Mary (née Harmer).

  2. Jeremiah James Colman (14 June 1830 – 18 September 1898) was an English mustard manufacturer and the third member of the family in charge of the eponymous company Colman's. He was a popular philanthropist in his home town of Norwich and a Liberal politician who represented the city in parliament.

  3. Sir Jeremiah Colman, 1st Baronet, DL (24 April 1859 - 16 January 1942) was an industrialist who developed Colman's Mustard into an international concern. Career. Colman was the son of Jeremiah Colman (1807 - 1885) and Isabella Button. Educated at King's College School and St. John's College, Cambridge, Colman joined the J & J Colman mustard ...

  4. Dec 13, 2013 · Jeremiah James Colman 1867-1868. In 1856, Colman’s employed just 200 people, by 1862 this had risen to 600 and by the time of his death in 1898 it was closer to 2,000. He expanded the range of products under production to include laundry blue, flour and starch.

  5. Sir Jeremiah Colman. The name of the library in the Department of Biochemistry, the Colman Library, commemorates the role of Sir Jeremiah Colman as Chairman of the Dunn Trustees responsible for administering the inheritance of Sir William Dunn.

  6. Jeremiah James Colman was born in 1830, at Stoke Cottage in the village of Stoke Holy Cross, four miles south of the City of Norwich. In 1854, on the death of his father, he assumed control of the manufacturing firm J. & J. Colman, a position he held until.

  7. Jeremiah Colman (1777-1851) of J. and J. Colman, an English miller who founded Colman's Mustard, a business which merged into the conglomerate Reckitt and Colman, now represented by Reckitt Benckiser.

  8. May 15, 2014 · On 30 April 1814, a flour miller called Jeremiah Colman placed an advertisement in the Norfolk Chronicle.

  9. The Noble game of cricket : illustrated and described from pictures, drawings and prints in the collection of Sir Jeremiah Colman, at Gatton Park, Surrey / [Sir Jeremiah Colman]; with an introduction by Clifford Bax.

  10. Jeremiah James Colman was an English mustard manufacturer and the third member of the family in charge of the eponymous company Colman"son. Background. Colman was the son of James Colman and his wife Mary Burlingham, daughter of John Burlingham of Old Buckenham. Career.