Rowntree's – The Early History
eBook - ePub

Rowntree's – The Early History

  1. 216 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Rowntree's – The Early History

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

The Rowntree family, especially Henry and the younger Joseph Rowntree are, along with the Fry’s, Cadbury’s, Mars and Terry’s, synonymous with the birth and growth of the chocolate industry in Britain. Between them, they were the chocolate industry in Britain. This book charts the fascinating story behind the birth and development of the chocolate empire that was Rowntrees. Background information to this astonishing business comes by way of chapters on the early history of the Rowntrees, contemporary York, the relationship between Quakers and chocolate, and the Tuke family – without whom there would have been no Rowntrees, and no Kit Kats. Henry, it is usually forgotten, was the founder of Rowntree’s – he made the momentous decision to sign the deal with the Tukes and we join him in those very early days of the fledgling company and watch how he helped it through some very dark, and sometimes humorous, times in what was then a very shambolic set up – cash strapped and making it up as the company lurched from crisis to crisis. Joseph, his elder brother, it was, who became the driving force to eventual global success, mixing his hectic business life with acts of compassion and a benevolent management model, all of which paved the way for decent wages, pensions, insurance and mutual respect in the workplace. Charity work extended beyond the factories to lift workers and others out of the slums of York to a life in a healthy model village, to provide a good social life, an extensive park, swimming pool and education for children and adults. More context is given with chapters on Joseph’s relentless industrial espionage, the advancements in chocolate production and 20th century rivals in the domestic and export markets, and mergers and acquisitions. Rowntree’s role in the two world wars is also covered along with the struggle Joseph Rowntree had accepting the importance of advertising. Altogether this book gives two fascinating biographies of two exceptional and driven brothers who came together to form one of our greatest companies - producing some of our best loved confectionery products.

Frequently asked questions

Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on “Cancel Subscription” - it’s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time you’ve paid for. Learn more here.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlego’s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan you’ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes, you can access Rowntree's – The Early History by Paul Chrystal in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Business Biographies. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Year
2021
ISBN
9781526778901

Chapter 1

Henry Rowntree and That Decision

The night of Sunday 1 June, or thereabouts, in 1862, may well have been troubled for Henry Isaac Rowntree. He had arranged a meeting the following day with the Tukes, owners of a cocoa, chicory and chocolate firm in York’s Castlegate.
Throughout November and December of 1861, and in the early part of January 1862, Henry had been indecisive, procrastinating over whether or not to purchase the Tukes’ business. When Samuel Tuke died in 1857 his sons engaged John Casson as a partner. The Tukes then moved the tea dealership part of their business to London – Tukes & Co, 20 Fenchurch Street near Mincing Lane, the epicentre of the London tea market – and eventually, in June 1862, sold it to Casson leaving the York-based cocoa and chicory business somewhat up in the air. In the early twentieth century, the London firm presumably thrived and became Tuke Mennell & Co, Wholesale Tea and Coffee Dealers, at Great Tower Street, London.
Back in York, chicory was big business but the Tuke business was not listed in the trade directories as ‘Chicory Manufacturers’ – the sole entry under this heading was for Thomas Smith & Son of Orchard Street, Phoenix House, Castle Mills Bridge and Jewbury. They remained the only entry in Kelly’s for many a year but were joined by H. Wilberforce & Son at 124 Walmgate in the 1861 Post Office Directory and thereafter, both are listed under ‘Chicory Grinders’. Mr Wilberforce knew what he was doing – Walmgate was home to many Irish immigrants who had a long tradition of chicory cultivation in and around York, even before the mass immigration caused by the potato famine.
During 1861, all three Rowntree brothers – John Stephenson, Joseph and Henry – all declared an interest in the cocoa side of the Tuke firm, but blew hot and cold. John’s letter to Joseph dated 30 September 1861 indicates that they were contemplating renting the property for manufacturing – ‘£80 is quite as high a rent as we should pay’ – although the Tuke family rated it £30 higher at £110. John concluded: ‘I think I can quietly settle down in the belief it is best for us not to take the concern.’ He apparently felt that Joseph might be interested in acquiring it for himself: ‘In considering it lately I have felt rather apprehensive. I should feel very closely bound to the Pavement business if thou were withdrawn.’ Joseph, for his part, in a 24 November 1861 letter, perhaps looking to the long term, kept his fiancée Julia in the loop: ‘Nothing has yet transpired about the Castlegate business, the question remains unsettled as ever’; then on 29 December: ‘John Casson comes next 5th day and a good deal may hang upon his visit’, and finally in January 1862: ‘I have almost fixed not to take Tuke’s old place on Castlegate but what the other brothers will do in a business way is not known.’
Henry’s appetite for the business had been whetted by work experience in his family’s grocery shops first in Scarborough (established by his grandfather, John Rowntree, on Bland’s Cliff) and then in York’s Pavement. His experience as acting manager of the Tuke & Casson company enthused him as he enjoyed free rein in a world of machinery and professionals, immersed in weighing, counting, measuring – all requiring exactitude and meticulous procedures for which the Quakers in business were famous. The younger Tukes, meanwhile, focused on their banking interests, building up a business with their relatives the Barclays. They had no interest in the humble York shop, originally leaving it to a Henry Hipsley to run. Henry Rowntree succeeded Henry Hipsley in November 1859 when Joseph, his father, died of cancer.
We know that Henry was enthusiastic about the cocoa trade from a story about a chance meeting with a relative, William S. Rowntree, in the early 1860s when he was a pupil at Bootham School. Henry dragged him along to see a new cocoa grinding machine installed in a small room in his works near the corner of Coppergate and Castlegate. Henry explained to William that his objective in life was to make something that would be an essential commodity, a must-have item, in every home.
And so it was in early June 1862 that Henry Isaac Rowntree left that pivotal meeting having bought, as sole owner with a £1,000 legacy from his father’s will, the Tukes’ cocoa, chocolate and chicory business, which was based in a workshop at the back of the Tuke premises in Castlegate, re-branding it the ‘Cocoa, Chocolate and Chicory Works’. Henry’s letter to Julia Seebohm, dated 4 June 1862, reveals that he cannot attend her wedding to his brother Joseph on 15 August as the ‘striking event’ when he ‘begins business’ was scheduled for 1 July 1862.
The notice of sale posted by William Tuke read as follows:
We have to inform you that we have relinquished the manufacture of cocoa, chocolate and chicory in favour of our friend, H. I. Rowntree, who has been for some time practically engaged on the concern, and whose knowledge of the business in its several departments enables us with confidence to recommend him to the notice of our connections.
Henry, in turn, circulated the following sales letter to his customers:
The genuine Rock Cocoa introduced by my predecessors, and which from its superiority commands an exclusive sale [sic]. I shall continue to supply in its integrity and purity my special attention will be directed to this branch of the business with a view to the introduction of such improvements in the manufacture as may present themselves. My representative Richard Wilson expects to have the pleasure of waiting upon you about the usual time your orders will at all oblige and receive my careful and prompt attention.

Chicory

Chicory (Cichorium intybus) is a perennial herbaceous plant of the dandelion family Asteraceae, used in salads, and as a coffee substitute and food additive. A coffee additive, it is mixed in filter coffee in India, parts of Southeast Asia, South Africa, and the southern United States, particularly New Orleans. Prussia lays claim to opening the first chicory factory to powder the root in 1770. In France, a mixture of sixty per cent chicory and forty per cent coffee is sold as Ricoré. It was widely used during the Great Depression in the 1930s and the Second World War. In Napoleonic France, chicory was an adulterant in coffee, or a coffee substitute. Chicory was adopted as a coffee substitute first by the Dutch around 1750. It was consumed by Confederate soldiers during the American Civil War, and is still common in the United States. Chicory root has long been used as a substitute for coffee in US prisons. By the 1840s, New Orleans was the second largest importer of coffee after New York because Louisianans began to add chicory root to their coffee when Union naval blockades during the American Civil War cut off the port of New Orleans. It was also used in the UK during the Second World War, where Camp Coffee, a coffee and chicory essence, had been on sale since 1885. Chicory, with sugar beet and rye, was used as an ingredient of the East German Mischkaffee introduced during the ‘East German coffee crisis’ of 1976–79.
In York, chicory allowed cultivation and employment opportunities for women as well as men, and in 1851 about a third of the women in the Irish community were employed in chicory.

Why did he do it?

The stimulus for Henry to buy the Tuke business may have come from the fact that his father’s, Joseph Rowntree’s, existing business in Pavement was already well established and capably run by Henry’s brothers, John Stephenson (1834–1907) and Joseph who were, to the exclusion of Henry, made partners on reaching their majority. Henry, accordingly, could see little room for himself in Pavement; the business would survive without him. It may have been triggered by a desire to offer the public a non-alcoholic beverage consonant with Quaker temperance convictions as pioneered by Joseph Fry in Bristol and then George Cadbury in Bournville.
George Cadbury was himself apprenticed at the Pavement shop for three years, and would have no doubt been a persuasive influence on his colleagues. Lewis Fry was another apprentice although he was not, as is often thought, a member of the Bristol chocolate family. The Lewis Fry working at Pavement was the son of a Devon corn merchant while the chocolate family Lewis Fry is in the census as a solicitor who trained in Bristol. Henry will also have been seduced by the prospect of manufacturing as opposed to simply retail and wholesale. We know that he loved the practical and mechanical – working with cocoa and chocolate machines would have delighted him. Whatever the reason for the purchase, Henry had benefitted financially from his father’s will and perhaps he chose the Tuke option for the independence it offered, as opposed to a future in the Pavement business with its attendant and inevitable family-driven constraints. Looking at Fry and Cadbury and further afield towards European chocolatiers, Menier and Cailler, he may even, presciently, have identified not just a growing market, but an incipient mass market. In 1820, cocoa consumption in Britain was 267,000 lbs or 0.01 lb per head of population; this had grown to 4,583,000 lbs or 0.16lb per head by 1860, and by 1900 to 43,680,000 lb or 1.06 lb per head.
Who knows? Joseph senior’s will was published four years before his death and it shows how far the Pavement grocery business, worth £13,400 – equivalent to more than £1 million today – had developed since 1822 around the Lady Peckett’s Yard part of Pavement. Crucially, as noted, Joseph Rowntree senior left the business to first sons John Stephenson and Joseph. Henry may have been insulted and sidelined not just by this but also when his father, obviously not envisaging the Pavement business being run by all three sons, left £1,000 to each of his children with instructions to his trustees John and Joseph to advance to Henry a further sum of money ‘for the purpose of enabling him to engage in business’. This was a discretionary advance out of the estate ‘on security of his promissory notes bearing interest at 5% per annum such sums as they may think suitable not exceeding £2000’. His father probably intended this as a well-intentioned helping hand to get Henry started in business, but not in the family business. Joseph senior must have believed that young Henry did not possess the required commercial acumen, the attention to detail and a facility with figures – qualities which his brothers John and Joseph exhibited in spades. Henry took this as a slight and resolved to show father and brothers that he too was going to be a successful businessman.
John Stephenson Rowntree, Joseph’s first son, had left Bootham School in the autumn of 1850 and went straight to work in his father’s grocer’s shop; when he was 21 he was made partner in the business and moved into rooms above the shop to live alongside the apprentices.
Henry’s pivotal decision would have far-reaching consequences for the Rowntree family, for the emerging European confectionery industry and for the social and industrial welfare of the British people. His decision was, in effect, the first step in the inexorable rise of Rowntree’s as a powerful force in the global confectionery industry.

Chapter 2

The Tuke Business

The firm had been established in 1725 as a grocery shop, first in Walmgate, then Castlegate, by the redoubtable Mary Tuke, (1695–1752), a Quaker whose grandfather, William Tuke I (c. 1600–1669), a contemporary of George Fox and a blacksmith working near St Denys Church, was jailed twice as a recusant (along with 4,000 other Quakers nationally) in the 1660s.
Burdened by the twin facts that she was a woman and a Quaker woman at that, Mary predictably became embroiled in a series of tortuous commercial legal wrangles with the Company of Merchant Adventurers of York. To trade in York, it was necessary to be a freeman of the city and to achieve such a status it was necessary to pay £25, to serve an apprenticeship, or else to be related to an existing freeman. Mary was accorded the status of freeman by patrimony, citing her father as a deceased member. The inscription on the Freeman’s Roll of the City of York reads, in a curious mixture of English and Latin: ‘Maria Tewk, spinster Fil Willelmi Tuke, blacksmith’.
But Mary was still not permitted to trade. Now she was required to be a member of the Company of Merchant Adventurers, or else be granted a licence by them; but she had no means of achieving either. After flouting what was essentially a pointless and outmoded law, Mary was prosecuted for trading without a licence at the Midsummer Court in June 1725 (‘Merchandising and following Trade without being free of this Fellowship’). She then went on to defy the company (the court had offered leniency if she mended her ways) for a further two years when she was allowed six months to dispose of her stock. She was later permitted to trade until the next Lady Day Court was in session, at which time she would be liable for a fine or prosecution. In July 1728, the Merchant Adventurers finally relented (on grounds of cost alone, presumably) and allowed her to trade at the pleasure of the court, on payment of 5 shillings every six months, and on condition she bought all her goods locally and took on no apprentices. In 1732, Mary was finally allowed the concession to trade in perpetuity after a one-off payment of £10. The significance of Mary’s achievement against all odds in a conservative male world against a powerful, exclusive monopoly should not be underestimated. Her tenacity, patience and courage served as a profound example and symbol of hope to the Tukes, and others – not least the Rowntrees – who followed her.
In 1733 Mary married Henry Frankland, a local Quaker stuff weaver, and moved the shop to Castlegate – then one of York’s busiest streets. It lay en route to the market around Pavement, the prison, the castle, the gallows and, crucially, it was conveniently close to the Friends’ Meeting House and other non-conformist places of worship for Wesleyans and Unitarians, and the patronage that such a location would have brought. Henry gave up stuff weaving for groceries in 1736, after another protracted and unseemly battle with the Merchant Adventurers and a £25 fee. Mary was left on her own in 1739 when Henry died.
The business was continued by her nephew William, William Tuke III, or ‘Old William’ (1732–1822) in 1746, who had started off as a 14-year-old apprentice. He inherited the business on Mary’s death in 1752 when he was 20 with two years to run on his apprenticeship. He graduated as a freeman grocer and, in 1754, a member of the difficult Merchant Adventurers. The Castlegate shop now specialised in the sale of tea, coffee, chicory and the making of drinking chocolate. William’s son Henry (1755–1814), at that time hoping to become a doctor, joined the firm in 1770, having renounced his ‘taste for the physic’ and in 1785, in a typically Quakerish act, committed himself to the business as a partner.
As well as co-founding, with his father, York’s The Retreat, the world’s first humane asylum for the mentally ill based on revolutionary Quaker principles, Henry was also a subscriber to the African Institution, a body which set out to create a viable, civilised refuge for freed slaves in Sierra Leone. By now he was also a prominent tea dealer with a solid reputation, particularly in the north of England. Henry Tuke was eager to dramatically expand his product base: possibly with an eye on Fry’s success in Bristol and the French, Swiss and Dutch imports flooding the market. He brought to market brands such as Tuke’s Rich Cocoa, Tuke’s Plain Chocolate, British Cocoa Coffee (mocha chocolate), Tuke’s Superior Rock Cocoa and Tuke’s Milk Chocolate (not milk chocolate as we know it but chocolate used for mixing with milk). There was now a warehouse in Coppergate to support the shop. A 1785 price list shows ‘best congou leaf tea, fine souchongs, good common green teas, good coffee, good chocolate, milk chocolate, Churchman’s Patent Chocolate, fine cocoa shells and cocoa nibs’.
His son Samuel Tuke (1784–1857), also a Quaker, social and mental health reformer of some repute and philanthropist, joined the firm in 1795, became a partner in 1805 and managed the business until 1852. Henry died in 1814 and William retired in 1818; their places filled by Robert Waller and Favill Copsie to form Tuke, Waller & Copsie.
The Articles of Company Partnerships report that Tuke, Waller and Copsie had formed their partnership on 2 February 1818. It was:
between Samuel Tuke of the City of York Merchant and Teadealer of the first part Robert Waller of the same City Merchant and Teadealer of the second part James Favill Copsie of the same City Merchant and Teadealer of the third part and William Tuke of the same City Merchant and Teadealer of the fourth part.
The capital and stock was valued at £20,000 ‘and upwards’; Waller and Copsie paid Samuel Tuke £3,000. That partnership was dissolved on 1 October 1838.
The East India Company’s monopoly on tea ended in 1834 and meant that tea traders could now unload in northern ports and not just London. To take advantage of this, Tuke, Waller and Copsie opened a Henry Tuke & Co office in Liverpool with warehousing in Bristol and Hull. This shrewd move streamlined importation and enabled them to sell and transport manufactured goods to their customers more economically and direct from all parts of the country.
Another partner was appointed, John Casson, to join Samuel Tuke, James Hack Tuke and William Murray Tuke and the firm was renamed Tuke & Casson: ‘carrying on business as Wholesale Tea and Coffee Dealers, in the city of London and also in the city of York’. This, in turn, was dissolved on 22 May 1851. Samuel retired in 1852 due to ill health and in 1857, James Hack moved on to bankers Sharples & Co in Hitchin. As mentioned above William Tuke then relocated the tea dealership part of his business to London and eventually, in June 1862, sold it to John Casson. In the early 1900s it became Tuke, Mennell & Co, Wholesale Tea and Coffee Dealers, at St Dunstan’s Buildings, Great Tower Street, L...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. About the Author
  6. Acknowledgements
  7. Introduction
  8. Chapter 1 Henry Rowntree and That Decision
  9. Chapter 2 The Tuke Business
  10. Chapter 3 Joseph Rowntree (1801–1859): A Profound Influence
  11. Chapter 4 Henry Isaac Rowntree (1838–1883): Early Days
  12. Chapter 5 York in the Mid-nineteenth Century
  13. Chapter 6 The Confectionery Industry in Mid-nineteenth Century England
  14. Chapter 7 Chocolate and Quakers
  15. Chapter 8 H. I. Rowntree & Co: ‘The Cocoa, Chocolate & Chicory Works’
  16. Chapter 9 Henry the Quaker: Life Outside Tanner’s Moat
  17. Chapter 10 Enter Joseph Rowntree Junior
  18. Chapter 11 Joseph Rowntree II (1836–1925): From Bootham School to Pavement to Tanner’s Moat
  19. Chapter 12 The Haxby Road Years (1890–1925)
  20. Chapter 13 The Cocoa and Chocolate Competition at the Start of the Twentieth Century
  21. Chapter 14 Cocoa Works Magazine
  22. Chapter 15 Out Of The Slums: New Earswick Garden Village
  23. Chapter 16 Early Twentieth-Century Rowntree’s
  24. Chapter 17 Rowntree’s at War, and After
  25. Chapter 18 Benefits in the Workplace
  26. Epilogue: Epitaph
  27. Appendix I: The Last Will and Testament of Henry Isaac Rowntree
  28. Appendix II: Rowntree’s Ongoing Heritage
  29. Appendix III: A Rowntree Family Tree
  30. Appendix IV: A Rowntree Timeline
  31. Appendix V: The Rowntrees and York Adult Schools
  32. Further Reading
  33. Plate section