Our Heritage
The law firm owes its name to two sons of the Reverend Harry Adams, who came to the Transvaal in 1875 to advance the cause of the Church of England. Henry (Harry) Walter Adams born in Lydenberg, Transvaal, in 1882, while brother, Eustace Victor (EV) was born in Barberton in 1888.
In 1897, Jemima Adams returns to England with family. The younger son, Eustace Victor, later wrote: “My mother conducted a boarding house so well that she was able to take us five children to England for Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee (in 1897) and placed Harry and Melville at school there, and sent my sisters to a finishing school in Brussels.” This is one of the first recorded notes in the archives of the firm.
Two of the sons, Harry and Eustace (later known affectionately as EV), were sent to public school in England and then went up to Cambridge University. EV was then articled as an engineer with the South Eastern and Chatham Railway Company.
1902, the Transvaal Patent Law is enacted, and in 1905, after completing two and a quarter of his three year’s articles his doctor advised Harry to return to South Africa because he feared that he may contract tuberculosis. He decided there was no future in the Transvaal for a civil engineer, his career of choice, and became an attorney. Harry returned to South Africa, and articled at Messrs Findlay, MacRobert & Niemeyer.
Within a few days of admission to the profession, in July 1908, Harry opened his own office in Bureau Lane, Pretoria, under the name HW Adams, Solicitor. On 2nd July 1908 he had become registered as a patent agent. He married Mary Crawford, daughter of the Honourable Hugh Crawford, then Speaker of the Transvaal Parliament
The Union of South Africa was formed in 1910 but, for a time, each province had its own patent, trade mark and copyright laws. This meant that foreign companies like General Motors and the Motion Picture Patents Company (both founded in 1908), had to apply separately in the Cape, Natal, Transvaal and Orange Free State for their patents and trade mark registrations.
During the period before the First World War his patent practice grew steadily. One of his interesting cases, which has been reported, was Ussher vs Chamber of Mines 1912 TPD 1075. In this case his client, Ussher had invented a method of laying dust in mining operations and had applied for a patent therefore. This application was opposed by the Chamber of Mines, but unsuccessfully, because the patent was duly granted.
In 1916, the government passed the Act on Patents, Designs, Trade Marks and Copyright, replacing all provincial legislation. This made it possible to file in...
Read MoreIn 1922 Harry went to Europe, the United States and Canada to visit the firm’s intellectual property correspondents – the first of the relationship-building trips that are still undertaken by Adams & Adams.
Harry had a reputation for being completely honest and straightforward and was an extremely hard worker. Committed to good structures, he believed a firm could keep ahead of competitors by implementing advanced and efficient systems.
In 1923 the firm moves to larger offices in the Marais Building on Bureau Lane, Pretoria. Harry Adams dies in 1928. EV’s brother-in-law, Daniel Wessels is admitted as a partner. He would serve as partner to 1942.
Ulrich Rissik is admitted as a Partner to the firm. He would serve as partner until 1936. The firm moves offices again – this time to the fourth floor of the Standard Bank Building on Church Square.
In 1939, EV’s nephew Melville (Mello) MacRobert is admitted as a Partner to the...
Read MoreIn July 1940, Daniel Wessels joined the Transvaal Scottish Regiment as a lieutenant. In 1946, Harry’s son, Neville is admitted as a partner and would serve until 1951 when he resigned and joined Savage & Jooste Attorneys.
1947, Guy Braithwaite is admitted as a partner and would serve until 1962.
1952, Denis Oldridge joins as a partner and soon became head of the Commercial, Property and Litigation Department, succeeding Mello MacRobert as chairman of the firm. Oldridge served as partner until 1984.
An ever-expanding Adams & Adams moves offices again in 1954 – to the fourth floor of the Van der Stel Building in Pretorius Street, Pretoria.
1956, Jan Steyn is admitted as a partner and would become head of the Patent Department, then succeeding Oldridge as Chairman. He served until 1987.
During 1958 Eustace revised and re-edited the second edition of the Adams & Adams Handbook, in view of the new Patents Act No. 57 of 1952. He...
Read MoreIn 1961, the Union of South Africa becomes the Republic of South Africa following a referendum and country becomes increasingly isolated politically and economically.
Adams & Adams welcomes five new Partners, and the firm moves to the Allied Building in Pretorius Street, in 1962, while in 1963, Esme du Plessis becomes the first woman to serve articles of clerkship at Adams & Adams and the first woman in South Africa to qualify as a patent agent.
Chris Slabbert and Esme du Plessis become partners at Adams & Adams. Esme du Plessis was the first female partner at Adams & Adams in 1966.
1967, Don MacRobert and Bill Schuurman join as partners, with four new partners in 1972. Shortly thereafter, a voting, shareholding and retirement system is introduced to the firm’s Partnership arrangement. It was considered a revolutionary move among South African law firms at the time. The 1970s also saw some interesting inventors and inventions...
Read MoreEighteen new Partners were admitted between 1982 and 1989.
In 1983, a branch office is opened in Durban, and the firm moves to new premises in Pretoria in 1985.
Twelve new Partners joined between 1990 and 1996. In 1992, Esme du Plessis becomes the first woman to be elected to the Law Society Council, that of the Transvaal Law Society. She is then elected president of the Transvaal Law Society in 1995. She is also elected as president of the International Association for the Protection of Intellectual Property (AIPPI) South African Group.
Adams & Adams is regarded as the largest intellectual property law firm in Africa and this is proved by the addition of 52 new partners between 1997 and 2008.
In 2008, the firm celebrates 100 years of existence – over the century, Adams & Adams has grown in size and stature, both locally and internationally, and has made substantial progress in both gender and race equity.
Adams & Adams moves to a new Head Office in Lynnwood, Pretoria in 2012 and the IP practice of Bowman Gilfillan is merged with Adams & Adams. The firm also opens offices in Tanzania and Burundi, and an OAPI office in Cameroon. The African footprint of Adams & Adams steadily increases with new offices and agents across the continent.
A year later, Adams & Adams holds the first Africa Agents Meeting in Pretoria, welcoming law professionals and agents from many African countries in a bid to share information and legal developments on the continent. In 2014...
Read MoreIn 2023 Adams & Adams continues its award-winning work in Intellectual Property, Dispute Resolution and Commercial law services, as acknowledged by internationally renowned global directories such and Chambers Global and Legal 500.
Relaunch of the new firm brand strategy and corporate identify. The rebranding reflects the firm’s evolution, embodying its commitment to fostering enterprise in Africa.
Central to the rebranding is the introduction of a new tagline, ‘Realise African Enterprise’. This encapsulates the firm’s ethos to support the entrepreneurial spirit of clients on the continent and provide high-quality legal services which demonstrate professionalism, innovation and dedication to successful outcomes. The brand refresh also includes an update to and modernisation of the firm’s logo.