The origins of the company date back to 1849, when Francis Berrington Crittall bought the Bank Street
ironmongery in
Braintree, Essex. However, it was not until 1884 that the company – by this time run by the founder's son
Francis Henry Crittall (1860–1935) – began to manufacture metal windows. Five years later (1889), the Crittall Manufacturing Company Ltd was incorporated. At this time the firm's output in a two-year period was 20 tonnes. In 1880 the company employed 11 men, by the 1890s this figure was 34, by 1918, 500. In 1907, Crittall bought the so-called Fenestra joint patent from the German company Fenestra in
Düsseldorf. In the same year, Crittall began to operate the
Detroit Steel Product Co, the first steel window factory in the United States. During the
First World War, Crittall's factories were used in munitions production, but postwar the company returned to steel window manufacture. It formed a manufacturing agreement with
Belgian firm Braat in 1918 and opened a works in Witham, Essex in 1919, partly to supply standard metal windows for the UK government's housing scheme. The 1920s saw operations established in South Africa, India, Australia, New Zealand, Germany and in Washington, DC, in the US, followed by a company in
Shanghai, China in 1931. The company also had a factory at
Foots Cray, Kent, on a junction still known as "Crittall's Corner". Amid this corporate expansion, the company started a
model village at
Silver End in Essex in 1926. The name most associated with the company at this time is that of W. F. Crittall, known as Mr Pink, who as both director and designer was responsible for the development of the steel windows and who was closely associated with the modern architectural movement that such windows are associated with. In 1939, Crittall built its first
galvanising plant at Witham, shortly before it once again became engaged in munitions production during the
Second World War. ==Post-war history==