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112:. 12 High Street was the office of John Edward Pink, John Brickwood's solicitor. Brickwood became the club's first chairman and oversaw the growth of the club until 1912 when the original Portsmouth Football Club was dissolved and reformed to clear large debts. Brickwood was succeeded as chairman in 1912 by
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started in 1907 after Sir John
Brickwood (1852-1932) donated a magnificent Trophy to the Royal Navy. The Brickwoods Trophy competition, as it became known, involved teams only from the Portsmouth area. The Brickwood Trophy competition differs to the more famous Command Field Gun competitions that
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The
Brickwood family had a long history in brewing, beginning in 1851 with an early brewery (the Cobden Arms Brewery on Arundel Street, Portsmouth) and then from 1891, formally under the name Brickwood & Co Ltd. Their principal brewery was constructed in 1902 in
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up until 1999, the
Brickwood Trophy competition course has no obstacles and is run on a shorter flat track. The Brickwood Trophy competition continues to be competed for on an annual basis at
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and was named the
Portsmouth Brewery (itself closing in 1983). During the late 19th and early 20th century, the family firm acquired numerous local brewers in and around
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on 5 July 1904. The title became extinct on the death of his son from his third marriage, the third
Baronet (who had succeeded his half-brother in 1974), in 2006.
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31:. It was created on 29 June 1927 for Sir John Brickwood, chairman and managing director of Brickwood & Co Ltd, brewers, and chairman of the
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80:. In 1974, the company changed its name to Brickwoods Ltd. By the 1970s, the company owned a large brewing operation and 675
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A mock tudor example of a
Brickwood & Co pub owned by the Brickwood baronets and their family
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John
Brickwood (1852-1932) and six local businessmen met at 12 High Street in
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Extinct baronetcies in the
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
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116:, a fellow founding director of Portsmouth Football Club.
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Extinct baronetcy in the
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
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Sir Rupert
Redvers Brickwood, 2nd Baronet (1900–1974)
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The Brewing Industry - A Guide to Historical Records
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Sir Basil Graeme Brickwood, 3rd Baronet (1923–2006)
35:chamber of commerce. Brickwood had previously been
273:(1990 edition). New York: St Martin's Press, 1990.
88:in 1971 by Sir Basil Graeme Brickwood and family.
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108:on 5 April 1898 to pool their resources to form
43:Brickwood baronets, of Portsmouth (1927–2006)
269:Kidd, Charles, Williamson, David (editors).
203:. Manchester: University Press. p. 80.
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48:Sir John Brickwood, 1st Baronet (1852–1932)
228:. London: James & James. p. 115.
226:An Uncommon Brewer, the Story of Whitbread
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137:as part of the HMS Collingwood Open day.
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277:Leigh Rayment's list of baronets
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271:Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage
120:Brickwoods Field Gun competition
29:Baronetage of the United Kingdom
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100:12 High Street, Old Portsmouth
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183:. 12 July 1904. p. 4448.
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163:. 8 July 1927. p. 4406.
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110:Portsmouth Football Club
92:Portsmouth Football Club
224:Ritchie, Berry (1992).
199:Turton, Alison (1990).
250:"Royal Navy Field Gun"
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129:were held during the
126:Field gun competition
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27:, was a title in the
114:George Lewin Oliver
84:which were sold to
21:Brickwood Baronetcy
180:The London Gazette
160:The London Gazette
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59:Brickwoods Brewery
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135:HMS Collingwood
124:The Brickwoods
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254:. Retrieved
252:. Royal Navy
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175:"No. 27695"
155:"No. 33292"
141:References
74:Portsmouth
33:Portsmouth
25:Portsmouth
86:Whitbread
78:Hampshire
286:Category
256:26 April
37:knighted
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23:, of
258:2022
230:ISBN
205:ISBN
82:pubs
19:The
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