Photograph of visitors from Africa being shown a cocoa press in the old cocoa block, probably in the 1950s
I think the person in the dark suit is probably either Paul or Lawrence Cadbury
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Hi mikejee, having read a bit about the plantations and farms, not only in Africa but other countries where the beans are grown, it seems as though there are terrible malpractices everywhere. Perhaps 'The Fairtrade Organisation' could get involved and stamp out awful exploitation.And also turning in their grave about the sale to Kraft, it happening just after the American chief executive had come back from a holiday in the Us - what a coincidence. When I was in Ghana in the 1970s many local people kept coming up to me to ask when Cadbury were coming back. Before the Ghanaian government had taken over the cocoa buying operation a few years before, it had been run by the firm, who always gacve what was considered a fair price. The government operation at the time first took a proportion of the money obtained "for development purposes", before paying out what were much lower prices for the product.
Strange how all the original chocolate makers i.e. Cadbury, Rowntree, and Fry, were all pacifist Quakers.Oops just looked up Roses and they are/were Cadbury’s. For some reason I thought they were Rowntrees ! Viv..
The coal that Cadburys used was stacked along the private railway which ran just yards away from our back garden in Umberslade road. The stack was as high as our prefab and ran half the length of the road.Advert issued by Coal Board and presumably paid for entirely by them. Yet the Cadbury name is more prominent. Nice way to get someone else to pay to advertise your firm.
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I think the sandbag photo was probably taken by no 2 lodge . Present view below:Sandbag prep for Bournville. They seem to be filling the bags alongside the (Cadbury?) railway track. Maybe the Cadbury train delivered the sand ? Viv.View attachment 161399
Source: British Newspaper Archive
No wonder there was food rationing after the war in Britain. It wasn't just chocolate that was sent, every sort of food and drink was despatched there. A little known fact at the time perhaps.The Cadbury train carrying vitaminised chocolate during WW2. Viv.
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Source: British Newspaper Archive, Birmingham Mail