Wilkin & Sons

Wilkin & Sons
Private
Industry Food manufacture
Predecessor Britannia Fruit Preserving Company
Founded 1885
Founder Arthur Charles Wilkin
Headquarters Tiptree, Essex, England
Area served
Global
Products Preserves, Jams, Marmalades, Christmas Puddings, Honey, Sauces, Chutneys, Tea, Curds, Ice Cream
Number of employees
220
Website www.tiptree.com

Wilkin & Sons Limited established in Tiptree, Essex, England in 1885, makes preserves, marmalades and associated products.

History

The Wilkin family came to Tiptree, Essex and started farming at Trewlands farm in the early 1700s. By 1865, the farm was beginning to move from arable crops to fruit, which were shipped to markets in London. From 1904 this was via the Kelvedon and Tollesbury Light Railway, with the company providing most of the freight traffic at Tiptree station until its closure in 1962.

After Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone commended fruit preserving to the British population, Arthur Charles Wilkin founded the Britannia Fruit Preserving Company in 1885. This produced the first "Tiptree" branded preserves, with all production sold that year to a merchant who shipped it to Australia. 10 years later 400 seasonal pickers were annually harvesting 200 tons of fruit, of which half was turned into jam and preserves.[1]

Reformed as Wilkin & Sons, the company leased farms as far away as Dagenham and Suffolk. By 1906, the company owned 800 acres (320 ha) of land on farms in Tiptree, Tollesbury and Goldhanger producing 300 tons of fruit per year, and feeding a factory capable at peak production of making 10 tons of strawberry jam per day. The company has held a Royal Warrant for preserves and marmalades continuously since 1911.[1]

With the need for a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit to produce 2 lb of preserves, production was halted during World War I due to a lack of essential supplies. But by 1922, and now owning 1,000 acres (400 ha) of farmland across eight farms, the company was creating new record outputs of fruit and preserves. An integrated production facility, the company also owned 100 houses, the village's windmill and blacksmith’s forge, the Factory Club and the freehold of the Salvation Army hall.[1]

During World War II, the company and factory came under the control of the Ministry of Food, and kept producing its preserves alongside other essential food products.[1]

In 2010, the company celebrated its 125th anniversary, highlighted by a visit from HM Queen Elizabeth II. The company commissioned a stage play to relate the life of John Joseph Mechi, silversmith, inventor and experimental farmer at Tiptree Hall. Writtle College was commissioned to create a "Tiptree" garden at the Chelsea Flower Show.[1]

Present

The present chairman of the business, Peter Wilkin, is the great-grandson of the founder. Through a Trust, employees own a proportion of the business.

The company farms 1,000 acres (400 ha) in and around Tiptree and grows much of its own fruit, including strawberries, plums, cherries, raspberries, mulberries, quinces, medlars and Little Scarlet, a small fruiting variety of strawberry with a unique and intense flavour. Turnover exceeded £34 million in 2012, and the business employs over 250 full-time staff with many more during the fruitpicking season.

Wilkins' Tea Shop

Wilkin & Sons Limited operate six tea rooms in Essex, a specialist bakery and patisserie producer (Tiptree Patisserie) and sells fresh fruit grown on the Tiptree estate. The Tiptree Visitor Centre features a tearoom, shop, and museum about the company's history, jam-making, and village life. The visitor centre and museum are located in the grounds of the jam factory.

Other brands

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "History". Wilkin & Sons Ltd. Retrieved 11 March 2013.

External links

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