Everything about Beecham Pharmaceutical Company totally explained
Beechams was a British pharmaceutical company. Following mergers in the late 20th century it's now part of
GlaxoSmithKline
History
Beechams was the family business of Thomas Beecham (1820-1907), a chemist. He was the grandfather of the conductor also named
Thomas Beecham (1879–1961). As a boy, he worked as a
shepherd, selling herbal remedies as a sideline. He then started as a travelling salesman or
peddler, but subsequent success enabled him to open a shop in
Wigan.
Their first product was
Beecham's Pills, a
laxative in 1842.
Beecham opened its first factory in
St Helens,
Lancashire, for the rapid production of medicines in 1859.
Under
Sir Joseph Beecham, 1st Baronet (1848-1916), son of Thomas, the business expanded but remained a patent medicine company and engaged in little research.
Beecham bought companies for various products, adding the
Lucozade glucose drink and
Macleans toothpaste to its product chain in 1938. The following year it added hair products for men by buying another company.
In 1943, it decided to focus more on improving its research and built Beecham Research Laboratories. In 1944, the company was named
Beecham Group Ltd.
In 1945, Beecham Research Laboratories Ltd operated from Brockham Park,
Surrey.
By the mid 1950s the group comprised some 100 smaller companies, including a large wholesale grocery business which was sold off later.
In the 1950s to 1960s Beecham in consort with
Bristol-Myers developed
penicillin derivatives including
pheneticillin, then the more potent
methicillin (Celbenin). Later these were followed by
Ampiclox and others as the group focussed on pharmaceutical development
In 1953, it bought C. L. Bencard, which specialized in allergy
vaccines.
In 1957, company researchers isolated the penicillin nucleus 6-aminopenicillanic acid (6-APA). This discovery allowed the synthesis of a number of new semisynthetic penicillins. In 1959, Beecham marketed Broxil (
phenethicillin), followed shortly by Celbenin (methicillin) that's active against
Staphylococcus aureus. In 1961, Penbritin (
ampicillin) hit the market, and soon Beecham's facilities were inadequate for the worldwide demand. A 35-acre complex at
Worthing came on line in the early 1960s to produce 6-APA, the base for semisynthetic penicillins.
In 1972, Beecham launched
Amoxil, which went on to become one of the most widely prescribed antibiotics.
In 1981, Beecham introduced
Augmentin, an antibiotic used to treat an array of bacterial infections.
In 1989, The Beecham Group plc and
SmithKline Beckman merged to form
SmithKline Beecham plc. In 2001, SmithKline Beecham and Glaxo Wellcome merged to form
GlaxoSmithKline.
Products / Brands
Further Information
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