Generations of brewers in Brentford
 During the 19th and early 20th century  there were several branches of the Gomm family living in Brentford.
During the 19th and early 20th century  there were several branches of the Gomm family living in Brentford.
        
        William Gomm (1817-1884) was a beer shop keeper at the time  of the 1851 census employing a potman, a maid and a nurse to look after his  children and having four lodgers. This would seem to have been the site of the  Beehive PH which at the time was not the corner building. Mr Gomm was brewing  at the back of the pub and by 1861 was employing 5 men in the business.
        
        At the time of the census in 1871 the family had moved to  18, Catherine Wheel Yard (now Catherine Wheel Road) and William was described  as a brewer employing 12 men and 1 boy. 
        
        By 1877 he had bought the Grand Junction Brewery in  Catherine Wheel Yard which he expanded and named The Beehive Brewery. 
        
        They used water from an artesian well 462 feet deep, had a 3  storey malt house, their own cooperage where they made and repaired their own  barrels and had their own stables on the site. The buildings were by the canal  which provided facilities for loading goods and materials for transporting on  the canal or the Thames.
        
        As a prosperous businessman employing 17 men in 1881 he had  moved to Caerleon House, Boston    Road and his son, also William was the brewer  living in Catherine Wheel Yard with his family. 
        
        William senior then became involved in local politics and  when Brentford Local Board was formed was elected as a Councillor. His name is  on the dedication stone of the Sewage Pumping Station which was the first  public building that was erected. A large part of the building has been  attractively restored and is still standing in Town Meadow to the east of Heidelberg. 
        
        William was re-elected to the Local Board in 1883 with the  highest number of votes but died the following year.
        His son William junior (1844-1887) continued the brewing  business but died only four years later in 1887 leaving his sons William John  (1867-1908) and Henry Thomas or Harry (1879-1939) running the brewery.
        
         William John (pictured left in 1897) was elected to the District Council in 1894 and  his name is on the foundation stones at the Baths in Clifden Road (1895), the Fire Station in  the High Street (1897) and the Monument now outside the County Court (1909)  although he had died aged only 41 in 1908.
William John (pictured left in 1897) was elected to the District Council in 1894 and  his name is on the foundation stones at the Baths in Clifden Road (1895), the Fire Station in  the High Street (1897) and the Monument now outside the County Court (1909)  although he had died aged only 41 in 1908.
        
        He had served as Chairman of the Council in 1901.
        Both he and his brother Harry were rowers in their youth and  thus involved with Brentford Football Club when it was formed. They were  members of Brentford Philanthropic Society and the Ealing and Brentford  Licensed Victuallers Association.
        
        In 1907 when the Half Acre was widened to give access to the  trams, the Beehive was rebuilt becoming the Beehive Hotel and the corner building.
        
        The following year the brothers sold the brewery and their  34 licensed premises to Fullers Brewery and as stated above William John died  that year.
Harry was landlord of the Princess Royal when he stood for  the Council in 1911.
            
        He was advertising that he sold malt liquors, wines, spirits  and cigars of the finest quality and had a first class billiard table. Dinners,  Teas and Private Parties were catered for at the pub and he advised that if  elected he was opposed to the New Recreation Ground Scheme which would mean  Higher Rates and Dearer Rents. He was later landlord at the Bunch of Grapes which  became known as the Ferry Hotel.
There are photographs of the Beehive on the Brentford Family  History website. 
            
        As a photograph was taken it’s likely it marked some special  event. This might have been the reopening after the rebuild. The building looks  much as nowadays but I wonder if any of the men in the picture are the Gomm  brothers?
 There’s more information about pubs in the town in Brentford  and Chiswick Pubs by Gillian Clegg available at the library.
There’s more information about pubs in the town in Brentford  and Chiswick Pubs by Gillian Clegg available at the library.
            
        Copies of the newspaper obituaries for these gentlemen are  available from
Janet McNamara
        November 2012
November 21, 2012