Record

Ref NoMS 466/1/1/14
Finding NumberMS 466/165/1-2 and MS 466/166-168
TitlePapers relating to Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury and Cadbury's jubilee and centenary anniversaries
LevelSeries
Date1929 - 1931
DescriptionThis section contains documents relating to Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury's involvement in celebrations commemorating Cadbury's jubilee and centenary anniversaries in 1929 and 1931. The section includes a printed copy of Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury's address entitled 'George Cadbury' which she delivered at the Cadbury jubilee celebrations in 1929. A which accompanied printed copies of this address when it was distributed in 1931 also features alongside the address itself. The printed programme for the family gathering held to celebrate Cadbury's centenary anniversary in 1931 and a copy of Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury's speech delivered at the centenary luncheon are also included. In addition, the section contains a provisional list of people who would receive a copy of the booklet produced to commemorate Cadbury's centenary anniversary and a newscutting from the 'Lincolnshire Chronicle' relating to celebrations held to mark the event.
Extent6
FormatItems
Access StatusOpen
AdminHistoryIn 1831 John Cadbury (1801-1889), a tea and coffee manufacturer based in Birmingham, began manufacturing cocoa and chocolate products, leading to the establishment of the Cadbury chocolate manufacturing enterprise in Bridge Street in the city. In 1879 Cadbury's sons George and Richard Cadbury moved the family's rapidly expanding manufactory out of Birmingham's industrial city centre to suburban Bournville. A larger factory was built in Bournville along with housing and community facilities which were developed in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries to provide improved living conditions for Birmingham workers. Richard and George Cadbury's decision to relocate the Cadbury factory was informed by contemporary debate about the unhealthy conditions of urban life in Birmingham's overcrowded slums. The move to Bournville benefitted the Cadbury business by improving the marketability of the wholesome image of their chocolate products, but was also undertaken to support the health and efficiency of their workforce who the Cadburys believed would benefit from the opportunity of working amongst the fresh air and green fields of Bournville.

Following her marriage to George Cadbury in 1888, Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury became involved in work supporting the welfare, health and education of Cadbury employees and residents in Bournville village. When George Cadbury died in 1922, Taylor Cadbury succeeded her husband as Chairman of the Bournville Village Trust, responsible for directing the development of the village. As the only surviving representative of her husband's generation, Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury played an important role at celebrations commemorating Cadbury's jubilee and centenary anniversaries in 1929 and 1931.
LanguageEnglish
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