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| | George Cadbury |
 | | John Cadbury, a tea and coffee dealer, was born in Edgbaston, Birmingham in 1839. |  | | John Cadbury's health was also poor so George's education came to an end and he joined family business. |  | | Cadbury Brothers made their first milk chocolate in 1897. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/REcadbury.htm
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| | George Cadbury |
 | | Born in Edgbaston 1839 George Cadbury was the son of a tea and coffee dealer John Cadbury. |  | | In 1897 Cadbury's made their first chocolate bar, using fresh cream milk to make it a lighter coloured more tasty chocolate, it was called Cadbury's Dairy Milk and soon became Britain's best selling chocolate bar. |  | | Cadbury's home was Northfield Manor and he had a new building constructed in the grounds to hold 700 people, every year in the summer months in this building he provided entertainment and food for deprived children from all areas of Birmingham. |
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http://www.birminghamuk.com/georgecadbury.htm
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| | Cadbury - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | John Cadbury (1801-1889) - Businessman, Quaker, founder of the chocolate firm |  | | George Cadbury (1839-1922) - British businessman who developed the Cadbury chocolate firm and perfected the recipe for Dairy Milk |  | | Cadbury Castle - Great Western Railway 4073 Class locomotive |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadbury
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| | The history of Cadbury Schweppes in Bournville, Birmingham, West Midlands,UK |
 | | John Cadbury moved into the manufacturing of drinking chocolate and cocoa. |  | | In 1915 Cadbury's Milk Tray followed and became a resounding success. |  | | Cadbury's moved on to become a limited company and after the death of Richard Cadbury the sons of the two brothers joined the firm headed by George Cadbury. |
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http://www.birminghamuk.com/cadburyhistory.htm
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| | John Cadbury - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | John Cadbury (1801–12 May 1889), was proprietor of a small chocolate business in Birmingham, England, that later became part of Cadbury-Schweppes, one of the world's largest chocolate producers. |  | | Cadbury was born in Birmingham to a wealthy Quaker family that moved to the area from the west of England. |  | | Cadbury was influenced in his choice of trade by his temperance beliefs – he felt alcohol was a major cause of poverty and other social ills, and saw cocoa and chocolate as alternatives. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Cadbury
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| | Cadbury Schweppes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Independently, in 1824, John Cadbury began vending tea, coffee, and (later) chocolate in Birmingham in England and sometime in India and Pakistan. |  | | After John Cadbury's retirement, his sons, Richard and George, opened a major factory in the purpose-built suburb of Bournville, four miles south of the city. |  | | In the United States, most Cadbury branded chocolates are produced in Pennsylvania by the Hershey's chocolate company. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadbury-Schweppes
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| | Cadbury Schweppes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Independently, in 1824, John Cadbury began vending tea, coffee, and (later) chocolate in Birmingham in England. |  | | Although Cadbury Schweppes chocolate products have been sold in the U.S. since 1988 under the Cadbury trademark name, the chocolate itself has been manufactured by Hershey's. |  | | Cadbury UK also owns Trebor Bassett, Fry's, Maynards, and Halls. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadbury-Schweppes
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| | Haverford College Libraries - Special Collections - Jones-Cadbury Family Papers, ca. 1770-1994 |
 | | Seals of Joel Cadbury (wax seals and the "Demosthenes Seal" [and chain]), tortoise shell box [given by R.T. Cadbury to John Warder in 1820 and by Joel Cadbury to William H. Bacon in 1870, inscribed on each end of box] |  | | Genealogy [chiefly research of John W. Cadbury (1912-1989)], coat of arms, Warder School (Amsterdam), information on artifacts. |  | | Spectacles (3 pair sunglasses, 1 regular), small "butter" (?) knife with horn (?) handle, mother of pearl bobbin in box inscribed "Elizabeth Cadbury, a small token of love from her affec. |
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http://www.haverford.edu/library/special/aids/jonescadbury/page4.html
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| | cadbury |
 | | John Cadbury began vending tea and coffee in 1824 in Birmingham, England, but soon moved to chocolate. |  | | The two companies merged to form Cadbury-Schweppes in 1969. |  | | Jacob Schweppe developed a method to make mineral water in Geneva, Switzerland in 1783. |
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http://www.yourencyclopedia.net/Cadbury
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| | ZoomInfo Web Summary: Cadbury Schweppes plc |
 | | Cadbury and Schweppes merged in 1969, though our origins go back over 200 years to 1783, when Jacob Schweppe perfected his process for manufacturing mineral water in Geneva, Switzerland and John Cadbury first started selling cocoa and chocolate in late 1820's in Birmingham, England. |  | | With origins stretching back over 200 years, today Cadbury Schweppes' products - which include brands such as Cadbury, Schweppes, Halls, Trident, Dr. Pepper, Snapple, Trebor, Dentyne, Bubblicious and Bassett - are enjoyed in almost every country around the world. |  | | Cadbury Schweppes is a major international Group which manufactures, markets and distributes branded beverages and confectionery products around the world. |
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http://www.zoominfo.com/Search/CompanyDetail.aspx?CompanyID=18976963&cs=QHBIZDDUk
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| | Chocolate trends and top sellers - PeanutAllergy.Com |
 | | While Nestlé tries to woo consumers with new tastes, Cadbury is sticking with the tried-and-true approach, although it did come out with a dark version of its Caramilk bar two years ago and a white chocolate bar, called Dream, around the same time. |  | | John Rowsome, president of the Confectionary Manufacturers Association of Canada, says chocolate consumption is on the rise in this country and new flavours, styles and textures (such as cookie chunks suspended in chocolate) of bars have all contributed to that. |  | | Caramilk is a little skewed to women, but not as much as you'd think," says Cadbury's Lysyj. |
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http://www159.pair.com/nutalle2/peanutallergy/Forum22/HTML/001622.html
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| | Cadbury snaps up Snapple - Sep. 18, 2000 |
 | | The acquisition of Snapple will "significantly expand Cadbury Schweppes' position in the U.S. soft drink market," Chief Executive John Sunderland said in a statement. |  | | Cadbury snaps up Snapple- Sep. 18, 2000 |  | | The acquisition, which includes the beverages Snapple, Mistic, Stewart's and Royal Crown Cola, signals a major push in the beverage industry for Cadbury, which has sold a large portion of its overseas beverage business to Coca-Cola Co. (KO: Research, Estimates). |
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http://money.cnn.com/2000/09/18/deals/cadbury
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| | Cadbury Castle ~ The Land of Arthur King Arthur & The Knights of the Round Table |
 | | Cadbury has been associated with Arthur since at least the sixteenth century, when the distinguished antiquarian John Leland described it in his |  | | Cadbury Castle ~ The Land of Arthur |  | | Whether the association of Cadbury is a genuine one has been hotly disputed for a number of years. |
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http://www.kingarthursknights.com/theland/cadbury.asp
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| | Cadbury Schweppes plc |
 | | And in 1824 John Cadbury opened in Birmingham selling cocoa and chocolate. |  | | With a history stretching back over 200 years, today Cadbury Schweppes employs around 55,000 people and its brands are enjoyed in almost every country around the world. |  | | At Cadbury Schweppes our purpose is to work together to create brands people love. |
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http://company.monster.co.uk/cadschwpuk
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| | Britannia King Arthur: Cadbury Castle |
 | | Usually translated as Battle-Fort, Cadbury may really mean Cado's Fort: Cado being the name of an early 6th century King of Dumnonia! |  | | However, Cadbury lay within the Kingdom of Dumnonia, and there seems little reason to doubt that it was the capital of the Dumnonian Kings. |  | | The stories of King Arthur at the hillfort of South Cadbury, near the villages of Queen and West Camel, are actually not particularly old. |
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http://www.britannia.com/history/arthur/cadbury.html
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| | Haverford College Libraries - Special Collections - Jones-Cadbury Family Papers, ca. 1770-1994 |
 | | Genealogy [chiefly research of John W. Cadbury (1912-1989)], coat of arms, Warder School (Amsterdam), information on artifacts. |  | | Handmade friendship calendar with verses, photographs and illustrations pasted in for Anna K. Cadbury, put together by Rachel and John Cadbury from contributions from family and friends of AKC. |  | | George Cadbury (1839-1922) and Elizabeth (Mary Taylor) Cadbury (1858-1951) and family (tree #7). |
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http://www.haverford.edu/library/special/aids/jonescadbury/page4.html
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| | Cadbury Schweppes plc about us our heritage Cadbury |
 | | John Cadbury devotes the rest of his life to civic and social work in Birmingham until his death in 1889. |  | | John Cadbury's lifelong involvement with the Temperance Society had an influence on the direction of his business enterprise. |  | | The one-man business opened in 1824 by a young Quaker, John Cadbury, in Bull Street Birmingham, was to be the foundation of Cadbury Limited, one of the world's largest producers of chocolate. |
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http://www.cadburyschweppes.com/EN/AboutUs/Heritage/cadbury.htm
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| | Advertising Effectiveness - John Bradley |
 | | In 1996, John moved to Canada to assume the position of Director of Marketing, Cadbury Chocolate Canada Inc. John was promoted to the position of Vice President of Marketing for CCCI in 1997. |  | | John graduated from the University of Manchester, England in 1979 with a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics and Psychology. |  | | John is an active supporter of the Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of Canada. |
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http://www.strategymag.com/adeffectiveness/speakers/bradley.html
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| | Cadbury World: Things to do at Cadbury World |
 | | Listen while John Cadbury and his sons, Richard and George tell you about the formation and subsequent growth of their family business, how they developed their production methods and the quality of the product, the reasons behind moving in 1879 to âthe factory in a gardenâ and even how it became named Bournville. |  | | You will be welcomed by John Cadbury and hear the inspiring story of the early struggles to establish the Cadbury business. |  | | Cadbury and TV See the actual set used by Cadbury for the original Coronation Street sponsorship, Enjoy some of the cute little characters, and then take a trip down memory lane with the help of some familiar and well-loved Cadbury TV ads from the 1950's onwards. |
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http://www.cadburyworld.co.uk/EN/CWORLD/experience/experience_summary.htm
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| | Cadbury |
 | | John Cadbury lived until 1889, long enough to see his sons struggle for their first five years of management, but then develop new methods and ideas that ensured Cadbury's prosperity. |  | | A year later in 1961, John Cadbury's sons Richard and George became the second pair of Cadbury brothers to run the company when their father retired due to failing health. |  | | Modern Cadbury may be a global corporation, but it still keeps quality as a main focus because it was with their dedication to quality that the Cadbury family created such a successful brand of chocolate that has been loved for over a century. |
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http://www.about-australia-shop.com/cadbury.htm
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| | Cadbury Schweppes plc about us our heritage Cadbury |
 | | John Cadbury devotes the rest of his life to civic and social work in Birmingham until his death in 1889. |  | | The one-man business opened in 1824 by a young Quaker, John Cadbury, in Bull Street Birmingham, was to be the foundation of Cadbury Limited, one of the world's largest producers of chocolate. |  | | John Cadbury's lifelong involvement with the Temperance Society had an influence on the direction of his business enterprise. |
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http://www.cadburyschweppes.com/EN/AboutUs/Heritage/cadbury.htm
(1021 words)
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| | John Cadbury - definition of John Cadbury in Encyclopedia |
 | | John Cadbury (1801-12 May 1889), was proprietor of a small chocolate business in Birmingham, England, that later became part of Cadbury-Schweppes, one of the world's largest chocolate producers. |  | | Benjamin and John Cadbury dissolved their partnership in 1860 and John retired in 1861, leaving his sons, Richard and George to continue to build the business. |  | | Cadbury was influenced in his choice of trade by his temperance beliefs – he felt alcohol was a major cause of poverty and other social ills, and saw cocoa and chocolate as alternatives. |
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http://encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/John_Cadbury
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| | Alibris - Click here to find books by this author! |
 | | Calabrese, Adrian ~ Calabrese, Alphonse ~ Calabrese, Andrew ~ Calabrese, Edward J. Calabrese, Elisa ~ Calabrese, John ~ Calabrese, Omar ~ Calabrese, Raymond L. Calabrese, Richard J. Calabrese, Salvatore |  | | Cadbury, Adrian ~ Cadbury, B. Bartram ~ Cadbury, Betty ~ Cadbury, Deborah ~ Cadbury, Edward ~ Cadbury, Henry J. Cadbury, Henry Joel ~ Cadbury, Warder H. Caddel, Richard |  | | Caird, Edward ~ Caird, F. Caird, G. Caird, G. Caird, George Bradford ~ Caird, James, Sir ~ Caird, Janet ~ Caird, John ~ Caird, Rod |
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http://www.alibris.com/authors/authors0061.html
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| | Company History |
 | | During the mid 1850s, the Cadburys business began to decline and in 1860, the partnership between John and Benjamin Cadbury was dissolved. |  | | In 1831, in an old malthouse, John Cadbury became a manufacturer of drinking chocolate and cocoa. |  | | This merger led Cadbury Schweppes to become a major force in the confectionery and soft drink markets in the UK as well as becoming a major force internationally. |
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http://home.midsouth.rr.com/alexmemphis/company_history.html
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| | Chocolate History |
 | | A larger factory in Bridge Street Birmingham was rented in 1847, John Cadbury was joined by his brother Benjamin and the business became Cadbury Brothers of Birmingham. |  | | By 1831 the business had changed from a grocery shop and John Cadbury had become a manufacturer of drinking chocolate and cocoa. |  | | The opening of the Cadbury 'factory in a garden' also heralded a new era in industrial relations and employee welfare with joint consultation being just one of the initiatives introduced by the pioneering Cadbury brothers. |
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http://www.middleboro.k12.ma.us/Middleboro/CHOC/Chocolate.htm
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| | British Eugenics Society - Ca-Cl |
 | | 1907; son of George Cadbury (who was the brother of Laurence John Cadbury q.v.); educ. |  | | Laurence John OBE, MA The Davids, Northfield, Birmingham 1937, 1957 |  | | Campbell, Rev. Ronald John MA Eugenics Society V.P. 1909-11, First International Eugenics Congress 1912, General Committee |
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http://www.eugenics-watch.com/briteugen/eug_cacl.html
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| | Collective Worship (P): Honesty and Fairness: a tale of two chocolate bars |
 | | Cadbury's was started in 1831 in a small factory in Birmingham by John Cadbury. |  | | John Cadbury made and sold drinking chocolate because he believed that it was better for people to drink chocolate than to drink alcohol. |  | | George Cadbury was also concerned about the workers in other countries who grew and harvested the beans from which the chocolate is made. |
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http://www.culham.ac.uk/cw/assemblies/051p_chocolate.php
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| | Eurofood: Russian slump overshadows Cadbury results - 1998 earnings |
 | | While the proposed sale of its non-US beverage business to Coca-Cola will eventually bring in a much needed 1.1bn [pounds sterling], Cadbury CEO John Sunderland admitted that the disposal is unlikely to be complete before the third quarter of this year. |  | | Cadbury chairman Sir Dominic Cadbury expressed confidence that the group will see further growth and progress in 1999 after a year of significant strategic change. |  | | Cadbury's core confectionery arm saw profits up 6% at constant exchange rates, with the five main divisions (Cadbury, Trebor Bassett, Cadbury Ireland, Cadbury Australia and Cadbury New Zealand) together generating over 80% of confectionery profits. |
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http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0DQA/is_1999_March_11/ai_54207969
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| | Carnegie Corporation - News |
 | | Driven by a passion for social reform linked to the family’s Quaker beliefs, John Cadbury, who founded the chocolate business in 1831, was committed to public service and a significant supporter of charitable causes, notably child labourers. |  | | George Cadbury was a modest yet extremely generous philanthropist who notably established the UK’s first self-supporting garden city, ‘Bourneville Village&; in 1878, designed to provide affordable quality homes in a healthy environment for industrial workers. |  | | The Barrow Cadbury Trust is a charitable foundation that seeks to encourage an equal, peaceful and democratic society. |
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http://www.carnegie.org/sub/news/medal2005.html
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