Fry family (chocolate)


This Fry family was prominent in England, especially Bristol, in the Society of Friends, and in the confectionery business in the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries under the company name J. S. Fry & Sons. They intermarried with many of the other prominent Quaker families and were involved in business and social and philanthropic causes.

Origins

The earliest ancestor that can be reliably traced is John Frye, who was born about 1474 in Wiltshire. He married Johanna about 1499 in Corston. Some genealogies say his parents were Richard Frye and Joan Beaufort, great granddaughter of John of Gaunt, but there is doubt about the linkage.
John and Johanna had a son John Frye, who was born in 1500 in Corston. He in turn is an ancestor of Zephaniah Fry, who was the first known member of the family to embrace the Quaker faith; he did so while still single and became a leader of his local Quaker meeting in Kington Langley. A record of one meeting held in their house is given in George Fox’s Journals: "At... Frye’s in Wiltshire we had a very blessed meeting and quiet, though the officers had purposed to break it up by thieves, and they were required to go back again with speed, to search after and pursue them; by which our meeting escaped disturbance and we were preserved out of their hands." However, meetings of more than five persons were forbidden by the Conventicle Act, and, once arrested, Quakers would be ordered to take the oath of allegiance, which they refused to do, taking the command ‘Swear not at all’ literally. Zephaniah was arrested in 1683 and sent to Ilchester Gaol for three months, but "emerged unscarred". Zephaniah was a cloth worker, as seen from this quote "There was a fuller in the parish in 1611, and clothworkers, among whom were Zephaniah Fry and his son Zephaniah, in the later 17th century and the 18th."
Zephaniah married Jane Smith on 8 April 1686 in Marden, Wiltshire. and lived in Sutton Benger, Wiltshire. Their youngest son, John, described them as "industrious, frugal, pious". Zephaniah died on 4 May 1724. Jane died on 15 November 1731 in Sutton Benger. Zephaniah and Jane had four sons and four daughters.
The patriarch of the most important branch of the family was Zephaniah's son, John Fry. John moved to London at the age of 13 or 14, probably to take up an apprenticeship, but he disliked London. He is identified as the John Fry of Melksham whose clocks sometimes appear at auction, though it is possible that it was his son who was the clockmaker. He appears to have already made his fortune by the age of 25 and married Mary Storrs of Chesterfield, Derbyshire, on 23 March 1727 whom he met while in London. With his wife, John returned to Sutton Benger, where he built a small house, carved their initials above the door, fathered six children, employed one servant, and enjoyed to the end of his days a quiet, rural life. His house was certified for Quaker meetings. He was active in the unpaid ministry of the Society of Friends and wrote poetry; he was also an author. He published a Quaker book of Selected Poems Containing Religious Epistle etc. which was prefaced "Sutton Benger 25th March 1774".
John's son, William Storrs Fry was probably born in Wiltshire, where his parents stayed when he moved to London. He married Elizabeth Lambert from Walsingham, Norfolk on 2 June 1769. William was a tea dealer, though Elizabeth is credited as being the one with "the financial acumen which had enabled money both to be acquired and prudently managed: it was a quality which perhaps neither of the sons inherited". William and Elizabeth lived in Plashet House, a mansion in East Ham, which passed into the hands of William Storrs Fry in 1787.
William was the father of Joseph Fry the tea merchant who married the prison reformer Elizabeth Fry née Gurney. William Storrs Fry was one of the 11 children of Joseph and Elizabeth Fry; he married Sally Juliana Pelly, daughter of Sir John Henry Pelly, first baronet Pelly, governor of the Bank of England.

The start of the chocolate dynasty

John Fry's other son, Joseph Fry, was apprenticed to Henry Portsmouth of Basingstoke as an apothecary and doctor. He married Portsmouth's daughter, Anna. Joseph Fry founded a chocolate company called Fry, Vaughan & Co. in Bristol. He also founded Fry and Pine, later Joseph Fry & Co., a typefoundry.

Typefounding Frys

Joseph Fry & Co., the typefoundry, was continued by Joseph Fry's middle son, Edmund Fry and renamed Edmund Fry & Co. Edmund had two sons who survived to adulthood: Windover and Arthur. Windover joined him in the business. An example of a font that the firm designed is Fry's Ornamented.

Chocolate-making Frys

After Joseph Fry's death in 1787 his wife, Anna Fry, took over the chocolate company and it was renamed Anna Fry & Son. Their son was the first Joseph Storrs Fry who, after his mother's death, renamed the firm J. S. Fry & Sons under which name it became quite well known. Joseph Storrs Fry was the first to introduce factory methods into the making of chocolate and the first to use a Watt's steam engine to grind the beans.
The sons of Joseph Storrs Fry and his wife Ann Allen are
They also had four daughters. The sons all became partners in the firm.

Francis Fry (1803–1886)

Francis Fry was the son of Joseph Storrs Fry and his wife Ann Allen. Besides the directorship of the chocolate firm, he was also involved in porcelain, typefounding, the Bristol Waterworks where he was a director, and railways. He was also a well known collector of old Bibles. He headed the firm when it started producing the first chocolate bars in 1847.
He married Matilda Penrose. They had four sons and three daughters including:
F.J. Fry was the son of Francis Fry. He was Sheriff of Bristol in 1887. He married twice and had two daughters and four sons.
.
His daughter, Norah Cooke-Hurle born Fry, was an advocate of better services for people with learning difficulties. In 1988, the University of Bristol named their new research centre after Norah Fry, because she did so much for people with learning difficulties.
One of his sons was Geoffrey Storrs Fry, from 1929, the first Baronet Fry of Oare in Wiltshire. He was private secretary to Bonar Law and Stanley Baldwin. He married Alathea Gardner, the second daughter of Lord Burghclere.
, was the son of Francis Fry. He was Liberal MP for Darlington and made baronet. His wife, Sophia Fry née Pease was a prominent philanthropist and political activist. Their son, John Pease Fry, the second baronet, became Chairman and managing director of Bearpark Coal & Coke of Durham.

Joseph Fry and his family

Joseph Fry, son of the first Joseph Storrs Fry, and Mary Anne Swaine were the parents of:
and three other daughters, one of whom died in infancy.

Other members of the family

Other Quaker Frys who might or might not be related to this family are:
For other people with the surname "Fry" but probably not related to the Quaker Chocolate manufacturing Fry family see Fry.