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Worksop Factory

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Worksop Factory
Premier Foods Worksop
The Oxo factory seen in February 2006
Worksop Factory is located in Nottinghamshire
Worksop Factory
Location within Nottinghamshire
General information
TypeFood production plant
AddressDukeries Industrial Estate, Worksop, S81 7AY
Coordinates53°19′05″N 1°08′24″W / 53.318°N 1.14°W / 53.318; -1.14
Elevation43 m (141 ft)
Construction started1980
Completed1982
Inaugurated17 November 1982
ClientUnilever
OwnerPremier Foods

The Worksop Factory is a main food manufacturing site in Bassetlaw District in north Nottinghamshire that makes well-known types of instant food, such as instant noodles, as well as well-known gravy products.

History

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In July 1969, £750,000 was invested in a new plant for packet soups, to open in 1971.[1] In 1969, the extension to the factory was begun by local MP Joe Ashton; it would employ 300 more people.[2]

Industrial action

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In September 1977, a nine-week strike by the TGWU cost the company £5.5m. [3][4][5][6][7]

Production

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In the mid-1980s, £2m was invested at the site. Cardboard for the tubs is provided by Sonoco Europe, in Chesterfield; the former Robinson Paperboard Packaging was bought in July 2011.[8]

Oxo

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Oxo was made at Great Harwood from 1939 to December 1992, when production was moved to Worksop by Unilever. Around four hundred employees had been at the Great Harwood site in Lancashire, but Unilever had tried to build a new factory in the 1980s, which was blocked by the local council. Oxo became part of Van den Bergh Foods in 1995 at Crawley.

Gravy and salt

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Saxa salt and Bisto were made at Middlewich in Cheshire until September 2008, which was the former Cerebos until 1968.

Food sauces

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In 1995 Ragú sauce and Chicken Tonight started to be made at the site, the first in the UK; there were many TV advertisements. The process line was built by T Musk Engineering of Swadlincote, part of WT Parker.[9]

Visits

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  • The site was featured on BBC Two on Tuesday 14 August 2018.[10]
  • In 2005 mathematician Marcus du Sautoy visited the factory, in the first part of his BBC Radio 4 series Five Shapes, where he discussed the cube, with Alan Mansbridge, head of production, and where he watched cubes being made on the production line; 40 million were made each week[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Times Saturday July 12, 1969, page 11
  2. ^ Retford, Gainsborough & Worksop Times Friday 22 August 1969, page 1
  3. ^ Times Wednesday July 20, 1977, page 18
  4. ^ Times Saturday July 30, 1977, page 15
  5. ^ Times Saturday, August 27, 1977, page 17
  6. ^ Times Wednesday September 7, 1977, page 17
  7. ^ Times Friday September 9, 1977, page 23
  8. ^ Sonoco Europe 2011
  9. ^ Burton Daily Mail Thursday 20 April 1995, page 27
  10. ^ BBC Two August 2018
  11. ^ Radio 4
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