WHO WE ARE
History & Heritage
1746- TODAY

Francis Allen of Norwich starts a basket-making business in 1746 that would be the start of our history.
paper merchants

Samuel Deyns takes over the business in his own name and expands into brush making, paper, pattens and clogs.

Samuel Deyns Page, grandson of Samuel Deyns, is taken into partnership. The business is now known as Deyns and Page.
Three years after the death of his grandfather, Samuel Deyns Page names the business S D Page.

Samuel Deyns Page had brought his son, also called Samuel Deyns Page, into the firm in 1831, adding ‘& Son’ to the company name. In 1839, letterpress printing is added to the product range.

S D Page & Son becomes S D Page & Sons, as Samuel Deyns Page (Junior) welcomes his two sons Frederick John Page and Charles Fountain Page to the business.

Due to growth, the premises at the Haymarket and Theatre Street in Norwich are rebuilt and extended.

We’re renamed again to Page Brothers & Company – St Stephen’s Printing Works. We have our printing works built at St Stephen’s Back Street in Norwich and are officially letterpress and lithographic colour printers.

Frederick John Page and Charles Fountain Page dissolve the partnership.
Frederick will head up Page Brothers & Company and give his attention exclusively to the paper and printing trades.
begins his apprenticeship

Alfred Munnings, later to become Sir Alfred Munnings, begins his seven-year apprenticeship as a lithographic poster artist. He goes on to become one of the country’s best known and well respected artists.

Printing Firm registers as Page Bros (Norwich) Ltd.

Frederick John Page dies aged 89 and his son F S Deyns Page becomes Chairman and Managing Director.
Thanks for everything, Frederick.

The business leaves Page family ownership and is sold to a local timber products manufacturer, Boulton & Paul Ltd. F S Deyns Page remains as Chairman and Managing Director.
In the same year, the St Stephen’s printing works is destroyed during one of the blitz raids on Norwich. We move to makeshift premises just outside Norwich, before the move to our current site at Mile Cross Lane.

F S Deyns Page retires at the age of 81 and so becomes the last Page family member to be associated with the business.

1953 sees Page Bros sold to the Eden Fisher Group, making it part of one of the largest printing groups in the UK. This marks the beginning of 40 years of ownership outside Norfolk from Eden Fisher, to Harrison & Sons, to Lonrho plc.

We install our first litho perfector machine. Shortly after come the second and third. In due course, all letterpress and hot metal systems are phased out.

Page Bros becomes one of the first companies to install computer-assisted composition and typesetting systems, with our own ‘Pageprint’ branding.

The company is returned to private ownership as a team led by David Armstrong purchases the company from Lonrho plc. We go on to establish ourselves as a leading supplier of educational materials.

A new management team oversees our first venture into the world of colour print, with the installation of our first HP Indigo and Heidelberg colour presses.

2016 sees the company rebrand itself, with one eye very much on the future. We specialise in creation, fulfilment, and of course print and associated services.
We are Page Bros Group.

A fundamental element of what makes Page Bros is our openness to change. While we excel at what we do, we’ve never been content to stand still. It’s part of our DNA, part of what it means to be Page Bros.
As we embark on the next leg of our amazing 275-year journey, Page Bros enters a new era under new ownership and leadership. With our wealth of experience behind us and vision fixed firmly on the future, we continue to broaden our service offering giving us routes into new markets.