Cadbury

  • Cadbury gets its start

    Cadbury gets its start
    John Cadbury, 22, opens his first grocer’s shop at 93 Bull Street, a fashionable part of Birmingham. He sells hops, mustard and a new sideline – cocoa and drinking chocolate made with cocoa beans.
  • First factory

    John Cadbury decides to produce on a larger scale. He rents an old warehouse in Crooked Lane, Birmingham to use as a factory.
  • Drinking chocolate and cocoa

    Cadbury is now selling 16 kinds of drinking chocolate and 11 kinds of cocoa.
  • Bridge Street factory

    Bridge Street factory
    John and his brother Benjamin, who had joined the business, rent a larger factory in Bridge Street.
  • Family business

    Family business
    John Cadbury hands the reins of the business to his sons Richard, 25, and George, 21, Cadbury due to poor health.
  • Van Houten Press acquisition

    Cadbury Brothers purchase the Van Houten Press, making Cadbury the first British chocolate manufacturer to use this process. The marketing of Cadbury Cocoa Essence as ‘Absolutely Pure, Therefore Best’ helps sales increase dramatically.
  • Bournville opens

    Bournville opens
    Now employing 200 people, the brothers choose a greenfield site in Bournville, four miles from the centre of Birmingham, for their new factory.
  • Chocolate bars

    Chocolate bars
    Cadbury produces its first milk chocolate bar for eating, using leftover cocoa butter from its drink powder. However, the bar is dry and not sweet enough to be successful.
  • Dairy Milk launches

    Dairy Milk launches
    Dairy Milk launched. Originally it’s sold in unwrapped blocks that could be broken down into penny bars. It becomes Cadbury’s biggest seller by the beginning of the First World War.
  • Logo designed

    Cadbury’s first logo commissioned. George Auriol, who also designed the signs for the Paris Metro, creates the logo.
  • Bournville launches

    Bournville launches
    Bournville chocolate, named after the factory where it is made, is launched.
  • Milk Tray launches

    Milk Tray launches
    Milk Tray is launched. Boxes of assorted chocolates were previously prohibitively expensive for the average consumer, but Milk Tray signals a new affordable range.
  • Cadbury buys Fry's

    Cadbury buys Fry's
    Cadbury purchases Fry’s chocolate. A new site is found for Fry’s at Keynsham. It is named Somerdale.
  • Flake launches

    Flake launches
    Flake is launched, after a Cadbury employee notices that when the excess from chocolate moulds is drained off, it falls in a stream and creates flaky, folded chocolate.
  • Cadbury goes global

    Cadbury goes global
    Cadbury becomes an international company when it opens its first overseas factory, in Tasmania. Others soon follow in Canada, Dublin and South Africa.
  • Bournville expansion

    Opening of Rowheath Pavilion in Bournville. It is a hub for sporting and recreational activities.
  • The Cadbury Foundation

    The Cadbury Foundation is set up, offering grants to the local community.
  • Somerdale

    Cadbury’s Somerdale factory opens
  • Roses launches

    Roses launches
    Roses is launched. Roses were one of the most popular flowers in the Bournville gardens at the time, hence the name.
  • Rationing

    Rationing
    ‘Ration Chocolate’ is produced. During the war, rationing is enforced and the company produces chocolate made with dried skimmed milk powder.
  • Rationing ends

    Wartime rationing comes to an end in the UK and full supplies of sugar and full cream milk are again available.
  • Schweppes merger

    Cadbury merges with Schweppes to create Cadbury Schweppes plc.
  • Milk Tray Man

    Cadbury launches its first ‘Milk Tray Man’ adverts. The ads centre upon a man going through daring actions such as diving off cliffs and jumping out of helicopters to deliver a box of Milk Tray.
  • Period: to

    Growth

    Cadbury chocolate experiences a decade of unprecedented sales growth, partially due to hugely successful television advertising campaigns.
  • Creme Egg launches

    Creme Egg launches
    Creme Egg is launched. Cadbury cream-filled eggs first appeared back in 1923, but the incarnation we know today doesn’t hit the shelves until almost 50 years later.
  • Cadbury revolution

    Dominic Cadbury institutes the biggest Cadbury revolution since the 1920s. A £110m investment replaces ageing equipment with state-of-the-art production technology.
  • Wispa launches

    Wispa launches
    Wispa is launched. The bar is discontinued in 2003 but relaunched for a limited period in 2007 and comes back into full production in October 2008.
  • Chocolat Poulain acquisition

    Cadbury Schweppes acquires French company Chocolat Poulain.
  • Hershey takes over US operations

    Cadbury Schweppes sells its US candy operations to Hershey for $300m.
  • Trebor and Bassett acquisitions

    Trebor and Bassett acquisitions
    Cadbury Schweppes acquires both Trebor Group and Bassett Foods.
  • Cadbury World opens

    Cadbury World opens
    Cadbury World opens in Bournville.
  • Period: to

    More acquisitions

    Cadbury Schweppes acquires businesses including Allan Candy (Canada), Jaret International (US), Hollywood chewing gum (France).
  • Green & Black's acquisition

    Green & Black's acquisition
    Cadbury Schweppes acquires UK premium organic chocolate brand Green & Black’s.
  • Gorilla ad

    Gorilla ad
    Cadbury Gorilla ad goes live. The ad shows a gorilla playing the drums to Phil Collins’ song In The Air Tonight.
  • Cadbury plc

    Cadbury plc
    Cadbury and Schweppes de-merge. The confections business is called Cadbury plc.
  • Cadbury aquired by Kraft

    Cadbury plc is acquired by US-based Kraft Foods in an £11.5bn deal. Kraft promises to keep the Somerdale factory open.
  • Somerdale closes

    Somerdale factory closes. On 13 January the last bar comes off the production line and the factory is closed. In September, changes are made to the Takeover Code that strengthen the hand of target companies.
  • Bournville upgrades

    Bournville upgrades
    £75m invested in manufacturing at Bournville. Four state-of-the-art factory lines are installed as part of a major investment plan.
  • Less sugar

    Less sugar
    Cadbury launches new Dairy Milk bar with 30% less sugar following three years of development taking in 35 recipes and six rounds of consumer testing.
  • Packaging

    Cadbury Dairy Milk packs switch to 30% recycled plastic, and Cadbury launches its first vegan chocolate bar, the Cadbury Plant Bar.
  • Repatriating jobs

    Cadbury brings production of 125 million Dairy Milk bars back to Bournville from overseas. The company confirms the move will not create any new jobs.
  • Less sugar dropped

    Cadbury stops production of 30% less sugar bar due to a drop in demand.