Chubb Locks

The company worked out of a number of premises in Wolverhampton, including the purpose-built factory on Railway Street, still known today as the Chubb Building.In 1851, they designed a special secure display case for the Koh-i-Noor diamond for its appearance at The Great Exhibition.In the late 1960s, the company, working with Smiths Industries, introduced its first automated teller machine (ATM) called the Chubb MD2.In 2010, the "Chubb Locks" brand licence expired, and Assa Abloy decided not to renew.The products are still sold, but rebranded as Yale and Union locks, other well known brands owned by Assa Abloy.
The former Chubb factory in Wolverhampton , England, which is still known as the Chubb Building
WolverhamptonMul-T-LockAssa Abloylocking systemsCharles ChubbWinchesterEnglandPortsmouthlocksmithJeremiah Chubbdetector lockKing George IVGeneral Post OfficeHis Majesty's Prison ServiceLondondisplay caseKoh-i-NoorThe Great ExhibitionSmiths Industriesautomated teller machineNational Westminster BankErnest HarrisonWilliams plcsmoke detectorsfire alarmsburglar alarmsglass break detectorsChubb SecurityBaron HayterGlass break detectorYale (company)Business Technology AssociationWestminster GroupSecurity lightingExpress & Starmanufacturing