Monochrome Confectioners and chocolate shop, Frys, Cadburys, Chocolate Veal, painted on store windows - 1930s, West Midlands, UK
Image details
Contributor:
Tony Smith / Alamy Stock PhotoImage ID:
2NBWGECFile size:
46 MB (890.4 KB Compressed download)Releases:
Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?Dimensions:
5136 x 3132 px | 43.5 x 26.5 cm | 17.1 x 10.4 inches | 300dpiDate taken:
11 February 2023Location:
Black Country, West Midlands, England, UKMore information:
J. S. Fry & Sons, Ltd., better known as Fry's, was a British chocolate company owned by Joseph Storrs Fry and his family. Beginning in Bristol in the 18th century, the business went through several changes of name and ownership, becoming J. S. Fry & Sons in 1822. In 1847, Fry's produced the first solid chocolate bar. The company also created the first filled chocolate sweet, Cream Sticks, in 1853. Fry is most famous for Fry's Chocolate Cream, the first mass-produced chocolate bar, which was launched in 1866, and Fry's Turkish Delight, launched in 1914. Fry, alongside Cadbury and Rowntree's, was one of the big three British confectionery manufacturers throughout much of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and all three companies were founded by Quakers. The company became a division of Cadbury in the early twentieth century. The division's Somerdale Factory near Bristol was closed after the 2010 takeover of Cadbury's by Kraft Foods Inc