Crosse & Blackwell

Crosse & Blackwell is a British food production company that has been in existence since 1706.

Crosse & Blackwell
Piccalilli label as used by Crosse & Blackwell around 1867[1]
Product typeFood
OwnerPrinces Group (United Kingdom)
The J.M. Smucker Company (North America)
Tiger Brands (South Africa)
Introduced1706
Previous ownersNestlé
Websitewww.crosseandblackwell.co.uk (UK)
www.crosseandblackwell.com (NA)
www.crosseandblackwell.co.za (SA)

Early history

Jackson's, a colonial produce business, was established in London in 1706, later becoming West & Wyatt and specialising in pickles, sauces and condiments,[2] plus salted fish, and it held Royal appointments to George III, George IV and William IV.[3] Described as "oilmen and salters," West & Wyatt had factory premises at 11 King Street (now Shaftesbury Avenue) in Soho in 1818,[4] packaging and supplying sweet oils, foods preserved in oil, and crystallised fruits and preserves.[5]

In 1819, the company was joined by two apprentices: Edmund Crosse (1804–1862) and Thomas Blackwell (1804–1879). In 1830 they borrowed £600 from their families to buy the business, which became known as Crosse & Blackwell.[3] The company was one of the first to secure a Royal Warrant from Queen Victoria, in 1837.[6][7]

By 1839 the company had expanded and moved its offices and shop to 20-21 Soho Square.[2][8] During the following decade, it pioneered the use of celebrity chefs as endorsers and collaborators, working with Alexis Soyer from 1850 to create the tangy Soyer's Sauce, Soyer's Relish and Soyer's Sultana Sauce products.[5][6][7] It was also a wholesaler of Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce.[6]

Crosse & Blackwell opened a vinegar brewery in Caledonian Road and started pickle packing at Soho Square (described by Henry Mayhew in his 1865 book The Shops and Companies of London, and the Trades and Manufactories of Great Britain, in a report entitled 'Girls in Pickle').[2] Crosse & Blackwell also acquired a small Bermondsey canning firm, Gamble & Company, established in 1812 (as Donkin, Hall and Gamble)[9][10][11] to produce preserved fruit, vegetables and meat to supply long distance vessels.[2] In 1849, the company also established a plant in Cork, Ireland to produce canned salmon.[7]

Over the latter years of the 19th century, Crosse & Blackwell developed several buildings in Charing Cross Road, close to its Soho Square premises. In 1875-76, the company commissioned a two-storey stable complex at 111 Charing Cross Road, designed by architect Robert Lewis Roumieu.[7] Roumieu died in 1877, but his son, Reginald St Aubyn Roumieu, trading as Roumieu & Aitchison, completed a further warehouse at 151-155 Charing Cross Road (which remained in use until 1921), and in 1888 designed another warehouse at 157 Charing Cross Road (completed in 1893; in 1927, this was redeveloped as the Astoria theatre).[7] From 1888 until the 1920s, Crosse & Blackwell also had offices at 114-116 Charing Cross Road, again designed by Roumieu & Aitchison.[7]

Early 20th century

Before World War I, Crosse & Blackwell (a limited company since 1892) established its first factory in continental Europe, in Hamburg.[7] After the war, it acquired another Bermondsey-based business, sauce and pickle maker E Lazenby & Son Ltd, in 1919, and Dundee-based marmalade manufacturer James Keiller & Son Ltd in 1924. The latter had a factory at Tay Wharf in east London's Silvertown district, close to the River Thames, rail links and Henry Tate's sugar refinery.[2]

1937

Further acquisitions included Cosmelli Packing Company, Robert Kellie & Son, Batzer & Co, and Alexander Cairns & Sons.[7] After World War I, Crosse & Blackwell established further factories overseas (by 1930, it had plants in Baltimore, Brussels, Buenos Aires, Paris and Toronto, as well as in the UK and Hamburg).[7]

Branston

In 1920, Crosse & Blackwell made a successful £612,856 bid to acquire a factory site in Branston, just outside Burton upon Trent, which they pledged to turn into the largest and best-equipped food preserving plant in the British Empire.[12] This allowed the company to vacate its Soho properties (nearly 100 years later the Soho Square premises were the subject of an archaeological investigation during construction of the London Crossrail project).[6]

In 1922 they started to produce Branston Pickle (to a recipe attributed to Mrs Caroline Graham and her daughters Evelyn and Ermentrude)[12] at their new factory, but this factory proved uneconomic and production was moved to the Lazenby site in Crimscott Street, Bermondsey.[13] Production at Branston ended in January 1925, leading to large scale local unemployment, and many local people boycotted Crosse & Blackwell products as a result.[12]

The Bermondsey site was expanded with new buildings in 1924 and 1926 and remained in use until 1969.[13]

Keiller

The Keiller factory in Silvertown had been destroyed in an 1889 fire and rebuilt the following year. It continued manufacture of preserves, chocolates and confectionery until it was again destroyed, this time bombed during the first daylight air raid on London on 7 September 1940. Chocolate and confectionery work was transferred to Dundee, but preserves manufacture was eventually restarted. This then transferred to Dundee in 1956.[2]

Nestlé

In 1960, Nestlé bought the Crosse & Blackwell Group[14] and developed the name across a number of food categories worldwide. The acquisition increased Nestlé's output (adding 11 factories) and included the largest fish-canning factory in the UK (located in Peterhead, Aberdeenshire). Crosse & Blackwell employed 4,700 workers in production and 1,900 other employees and salespeople at the time of the acquisition. The brand was later owned by Premier Foods.

Since 2002

The company divested the Crosse & Blackwell operations in 2002. Today ownership of the Crosse & Blackwell brand is divided between The J.M. Smucker Company in North America, Princes Group in Europe and Tiger Brands in South Africa.

See also

References

  1. Maxwell Alexander Robertson, English reports annotated, 1866-1900, Volume 1, Publisher: The Reports and Digest Syndicate, 1867. (page 567)
  2. "Crosse & Blackwell Ltd, Factory Road, London E16". GLIAS Notes & News. Greater London Industrial Archaeology Society. June 1984. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
  3. "A Tinned History of Crosse & Blackwell (1706–1914)". Let's Look Again. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
  4. Johnstone, Andrew (1818). Johnstone's London Commercial Guide, and Street Directory. London: Barnard & Farleg. p. 280.
  5. Cowen, Ruth (2010). Relish: The Extraordinary Life of Alexis Soyer, Victorian Celebrity Chef. Hachette. ISBN 9780297865575.
  6. "Thousands of jars reveal Britain's saucy history". The History Blog. Retrieved 13 September 2017.
  7. "Crosse & Blackwell". Cook's Info. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  8. 'Soho Square Area: Portland Estate, No. 21 Soho Square', in Survey of London: Volumes 33 and 34, St Anne Soho, ed. F H W Sheppard (London, 1966), pp. 72-73. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vols33-4/pp72-73 [accessed 18 September 2017].
  9. "John Hall (of Dartford)". Grace's Guide. Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  10. Greenland, Maureen; Day, Russ (2016). Bryan Donkin: The Very Civil Engineer, 1768-1855. England: Phillimore Book Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9934680-1-8.
  11. Robertson, Gordon L. (2005). Food Packaging: Principles and Practice. CRC Press. p. 123. ISBN 0-8493-3775-5.
  12. "Branston Depot History". The local history of Burton upon Trent. Retrieved 13 September 2017.
  13. "Crosse and Blackwell / E Lazenby & Sons". Exploring Southwark. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
  14. Nestlé (1991)- 125 Years 1866-1991, Published by Nestlé SA, Vevey
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