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Oatfield (confectioner)

Irish chocolate and confectionery manufacturer

Oatfield (confectioner)

Irish chocolate and confectionery manufacturer

FieldValue
nameOatfield
logoOatfield Logo.jpg
logo_size150px
typeConfectionery Manufacturer
foundation1927
defunct2012 (Brand and products still produced by Valeo Confectionery)
locationLetterkenny, County Donegal, Ireland
area_servedWorldwide
productsConfectionery
num_employees95 (peak)
parentZed Candy Ltd.

Oatfield was a chocolate and confectionery manufacturer located in Letterkenny, County Donegal, Ireland. The company was the oldest confectionery manufacturer in Ireland.

History

Early years

Oatfield premises in Letterkenny

The business began as a wholesale and retail outlet on the Port Road in the town. The McKinney family began to make their own sweets, and on 15 August 1927, the first sweets were made on an open coke fire in a shed at the back of the shop. The land on which the factory stood was purchased in November 1929, the first sod was cut in February 1930. Six people were employed at the time.

The company at the time was known as Mayfield Confectionery but the name was changed soon afterwards as another company in Manchester traded by this name. The company name was changed to Oatfield. The land on which the factory was built was known as Oatfield. The May was dropped, and Oat was substituted and hence the name "Oatfield". The weekly production of confectionery was about 3 tons. Today the company produces approximately 65 tons a week.

Sugar was purchased in the 1930s from Tate & Lyle. Glucose came from Manchester. They were delivered by ship and rail via Derry to Letterkenny railway station. Later, glucose was shipped from the Netherlands to the Letterkenny Port. In later years, only Irish sugar and Irish glucose were used. Butter had always been Irish Creamery Butter.

Recent years

By 1960, Oatfield decided to stop marketing packed sweets made by Cadbury's, Rowntree, Urney's Chocolates, Bassetts Licorice Allsorts, Jacobs Biscuits, William and Wood, Ritchies Mints and Milroy Confectionery and focus entirely on selling Oatfield sweets. This was a major decision and proved a major success for the company. Exporting began in August 1964. The first sweets were 'exported' to Northern Ireland. At the peak of the company's popularity, the sweets were exported worldwide to countries including the United States, Canada, Hong Kong, Australia, Kuwait, Greece and France.

Today

Donegal Creameries PLC purchased the company in February 1999 for £783,750. In 2007, Zed Candy—an Irish confectionery company famous for its Chewing Gum—bought the brand from Donegal Creameries.

Up until closure, the factory employed approximately 15 people and up to 65 tonnes of sugar and chocolate confectionery were produced each week. The main production lines were Emerald, Toffees, Eclairs, Boiled sweets. The biggest sellers were Emerald, Colleen Assortment and Orange Chocolate.

The factory was closed by the current operators, Zed Candy, on 27 May 2012. Production was soon after moved to the UK. In May 2014 the factory was demolished. Since then, the Oatfield brand and all its products continue to be manufactured by Valeo Foods and are still sold across Ireland.

Products

  • Oatfield Emerald
  • Oatfield Eskimo Mints
  • Oatfield Clove Drops
  • Oatfield Eclairs
  • Oatfield Glucose Barley
  • Oatfield Glucose Fruits
  • Oatfield Irish Butter Toffee
  • Oatfield Liquorice Toffee
  • Oatfield Mint Humbugs
  • Oatfield Orange Chocolate

References

References

  1. "A History of Oatfield".
  2. Barrington, Kathleen. (16 February 1999). "Donegal Creameries buys sweet maker". Independent News & Media.
  3. "About Us". Zed Candy.
  4. (27 April 2012). "Oatfield to close Letterkenny sweet factory". RTÉ.
  5. Maguire, Stephen. "WHEN LETTERKENNY'S SWEETNESS TURNED SOUR – A PERSONAL STORY – Donegal Daily".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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