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History of Bickford's Australia

A. M. Bickford and Sons was one of the first manufacturing chemists in South Australia. Until 1930, it was one of the State's most significant family-owned companies. In 1930, they amalgamated with half a dozen other similar Australian companies to form "Drug Houses of Australia" (DHA), which continued to produce "A. M. Bickford and Sons" products: "drugs" and "chemicals" under the DHA brand; and cordials and soft drinks under the "A. M. Bickford and Sons" brand.

Wm. Bickford, chemist
IndustryPharmacist,
pharmaceutical chemist
Founded1839
FounderWilliam Bickford
Headquarters
Adelaide, South Australia
Key people
William Bickford
Ann Margaret Bickford
A. M. Bickford & Sons
Company typePartnership
IndustryPharmaceutical chemist,
beverage manufacturer
Founded1864
FounderAnn Margaret Bickford
Headquarters
Adelaide, South Australia
Key people
Ann Margaret Bickford
William Bickford (jr.)
Harry Bickford
A. M. Bickford & Sons Ltd
Company typeLimited liability company
IndustryPharmaceutical chemist,
beverage manufacturer
Founded1903
Headquarters
Adelaide, South Australia
Bickford's Australia Pty Ltd
Company typeLimited liability company
IndustryBeverage manufacturer
Founded1991
Headquarters
Salisbury South,
South Australia
Key people
Angelo Kotses[1]
OwnerKotses family
Websitewww.bickfords.net

In the late 1960s, DHA became the target of a corporate raider and asset stripper. By the mid-1970s DHA had collapsed under the burden of servicing the imposed level of debt. What was left was split up and sold. Reckitt & Colman acquired the major "drugs" and "chemicals" product and brands, while other parts of the company were acquired by others. Melburnian Peter Abbott purchased the pharmacy products, eucalyptus oil operations, and soft drink products. The pharmacy products were on-sold; the eucalyptus oil operations were incorporated into "FGB" (Felton Grimwade & Bickford). The soft drink products continued under the revived "A. M. Bickford and Sons" brand. In the late 1980s, FGB decided to concentrate on their "core businesses" under the FGB brand, and sold the soft drink businesses and the Bickford brand names, which by this stage had been established for over a century. The history of the Bickford's products and company names between 1987 and 1999 is not clear.

In 1999 the soft drink business and company names were purchased by the Kotses family. "Bickford's" once again became a South Australian family-owned business, known for its range of cordials and flavourings. These are made today by Bickford's Australia.

Foundation & establishment (1839–1864) edit

William Bickford (1815–1850) edit

 
William Bickford Sr. (1815–1850)

William Bickford (18 August 1815 – 11 September 1850) was the seventh child (of fourteen) of a well-to-do couple of West Alvington of Devon, England. When Bickford's father died, the greater part of his fortune went to his eldest son by an earlier marriage. William's family was provided for, but had to work to secure their future. For the fifteen-year-old William, that meant taking an apprenticeship to Mr Buxton, a druggist.[2]

In September 1838, aged 23, the chemist's assistant left England from Plymouth,[3] rounded the Cape of Good Hope in December,[4] and arrived in Port Adelaide on 15 February 1839 on the barque Platina.[2][3] Though he aspired to become a shepherd in South Australia, soon after his arrival he began working as assistant in the dispensary attached to the North Terrace surgery of one Dr Bright at a salary of 40/- (£2) a week with board and lodging provided. On 18 August 1839, his 24th birthday, he married Ann Margaret Garrett, whom he had met on the trip from Portsmouth.[2][3] They were soon expecting their first child, but it died shortly after birth on 6 June 1840, and Ann was seriously ill for some time.[2] In March 1840, William wrote that Dr and Mrs Bright had left the colony for New Zealand, (leaving William to deal with his creditors), and that he had secured another position as manager of a retail shop and dispensary owned by a partnership of two surgeons, at a salary of £3 per week.[2]

Despite an economic downturn in the colony, his business thrived. He left the security of the dispensary and by September 1840 had opened his own shop in Hindley Street near Rosina Street with borrowed capital of £220.[2] It, too, prospered, and soon he moved into larger premises at 67 Hindley Street opposite Club Lane.[2][5] As business flourished, the wholesale lines became the larger part of the firm's business.[6]

In April 1841 he wrote "Business is going on prosperously, and I have a comfortable home at my own fire side and a good wife, who studies my interest in every respect". Ann was very supportive of her husband and was able to keep his shop running during any forced absence, jury duty for instance.[2] Their first son, William, was born on 19 November 1841, followed by Harry in February 1843, and Elizabeth in November 1844. In December 1845 they lost a baby, (Eulalia), so William decided to move his family away from the unsanitary conditions of the city. He purchased 16 acres (6.4 ha) of land at Glen Osmond, "just 3 miles from the Adelaide city centre", and in the winter of 1846 built a house, later to be called "Benacre",[7] moving the family there before the onset of the next summer. He commuted daily to his business in the city. They lost another baby, (James), in 1848, but Edward was born in 1849.

William was concerned with the development of Adelaide. In 1847 he was one of the founders of the South Australian Institute (alongside others, including a business competitor Francis Faulding).[8]

In February 1850, William wrote that he had established a garden and had planted fruit trees and vines. However, he did not live to enjoy the fruits, dying on 11 September 1850 at the age of 35 of "brain fever", after a 3-day illness, leaving his wife pregnant (with Mary) and with four young children, (William, Harry, Elizabeth and Edward) to care for.[2][9]

Ann Margaret Bickford edit

 
"Anne" Margaret Bickford (née Garrett 1810–1877)

Ann Margaret Bickford (née Garrett) (1810 – 24 January 1877) was determined to carry on her husband's business. With five children under the age of ten, she enrolled the help of a retired pharmacist Mr Paxton to 'hold the fort' until more permanent help could be found. She soon engaged qualified chemists Edwin Page and Robert Hutton, and "with their able assistance" carried on the business for 14 years.[5] (Mr Hutton was to open a pharmacy of his own at 76 Rundle Street in 1863.[10]) On 29 May 1865 the shop shifted yet again – to 19 Hindley Street,[11] later the site of Tattersall's Hotel.[2] Early 1873 they opened a shop in Taylor Street, Kadina.[12] It ceased being advertised in 1888.

Remarkably, her death was marked in the newspapers of the time with the most cursory of death notices and no more.[13] Whatever funeral arrangements there might have been were not advertised. A vault at West Terrace Cemetery bears the names of both Ann and William Snr. A nearby stone commemorates Charlotte Jane Bickford.

Second generation edit

The second generation were:

  • unnamed Bickford on 6 June 1840
  • William Bickford (19 November 1841 – 20 September 1916)
  • Harry Bickford (24 February 1843 – 6 September 1927
  • Elizabeth "Bessie" Bickford on 29 November 1844 – England)[14][2][15]
  • Eulelia Bickford (8 November 1846 – 25 February 1847)
  • James Bickford (19 February 1848 – 29 February 1848)
  • Edward Bickford (30 May 1849 – 7 January 1907, Brooklyn, New York, United States)[16]
  • Mary Bickford (25 April 1851 – 12 December 1882 Bournemouth, England)[17]

The children's education did not suffer. They were already studying at the Adelaide Educational Institution, an academy run by J. L. Young in Freeman Street, and continued there for some years. Harry (or Henry as he was then called), was thriving there in 1853.[18] Both he and Edward were mentioned at the prizegiving in 1855[19] Harry kept a close association with his alma mater, being president of the Adelaide Educational Institution Old Scholars in 1866.[20]

Although not as academically inclined, William must have made his mark as he was prominent in the Institution's 1863 welcome to "old scholars" W. P. Auld, James Frew and Stephen King, returning members of the Stuart's sixth expedition which had successfully crossed Australia from south to north.[21]

William Bickford (1841–1916) edit

 
William Bickford Jr. (1841–1916), ca.1900
 
Harold Bickford (1876–1958), 1887 – son of William Jr.

Older son William Bickford (jr.) (19 November 1841 – 20 September 1916), being less academically inclined than Harry, gained experience travelling and picking up a variety of jobs.

In 1871 he married Margaret Jane Ferguson.[22] They had seven children:

  • William Ferguson Bickford "Willie" (30 November 1871 – 22 June 1889) died aged 17 in riding accident
  • Sidney Bickford (10 August 1874 – 10 December 1938) moved to Perth in 1895.
  • Harold Bickford (16 May 1876 – 23 October 1958) Managing director A. M. Bickford & Sons Ltd 1908–1930?[23] He married Tessie Veronica Murphy in 1916; they had one child, Ronald Ferguson Bickford (1918–2011); he divorced her in 1922 citing four co-respondents, including Napier K. Birks (1876–1953) of the prominent Birks family.[24]
  • Evelyn Victoria Bickford (later Mrs Robert Ezekiel Reid of Geelong) (b.7 June 1878)
  • Reginald Bickford (26 January 1880 – 20 November 1948) m. Rosa Florence Cudmore (30 September 1879 – 22 July 1954)[25] on 17 November 1910
  • Norman Forsyth Bickford (1881 – )
  • Leslie Bruce Bickford (b.30 December 1885 at Alvington) m. Dorothy Murray

Their first home was "Fairfield" in Somerton, followed by "Alvington" near the Brighton Esplanade (see chapter below). Both William and Harry sent their sons to St. Peter's College, a tradition that was largely continued in following generations.[2]

He was made Justice of the Peace in 1886 and elected president of the Justices' Association from 1903 to 1904. He was elected to Brighton council and Mayor of Brighton 1886–1887 and 1890–1891.[2] He was president of the Adelaide Chamber of Commerce from 1894 to 1895.[2]

He and brother Harry bought Burnside Station near Naracoorte in 1886, and though neither ever lived there, they installed a manager and visited frequently. The fine merino wool produced there always found a ready buyer. By the turn of the century they had decided to free themselves of the responsibility, so after the South Australian Government showed no interest at their price of £49,540, subdivided the 40,978 acres into 28 lots and put them up for auction on 23 October 1908.[2]

Harry Bickford (1843–1927) edit

Her son Harry Bickford (24 February 1843 – 6 September 1927) (He may have been christened "Henry".[26]) was sent to England in 1859[27] to gain qualifications and experience as a chemist,[9] and returned in 1863.

He took little interest in civic affairs, but was a keen horseman and was Master of the Adelaide Hounds from 1882 and a committeeman with the South Australian Jockey Club from 1889. He was a crack shot, and won significant trophies for pigeon shooting.[27]

When the company was floated on the Stock Exchange in January 1903, he was elected first managing director, relinquishing the position to his nephew Harold in 1906.[27]

He was married three times: on 24 February 1866 to Charlotte Jane Farr (c. 1842 – 4 September 1866). They had no children. He married again, on 10 March 1870 to Rosina Mary Ferguson (1845 – 5 October 1898).[22] They had three children:

  • (Isabella) May Bickford (12 April 1872 – 28 July 1933) (never married)
  • H(arry) Fairweather "H.F." Bickford (1874 – 8 July 1906) married May Innes-Ker (1876 – 22 August 1906) on 18 March 1903. They had no children.
  • Harding William Bickford (14 January 1877 – 5 August 1919) (never married)

On 8 December 1904 he married Priscilla Simms (née Chambers) (c. 1852 – 17 November 1924) They had no children. Priscilla was a daughter of John Chambers (1814–1889).

The two brothers were also major investors in the "Paramatta" copper mine at Moonta in the late 1890s.[28]

A. M. Bickford & Sons (1864–1930) edit

 
An AM Bickford & Sons "marble bottle" for aerated water

Bickford & Son (1864–1871) edit

In 1863, Harry, now qualified, returned from England and began working for her. On his 21st birthday, she formally took him into partnership with her as 'Bickford and Son'. She drew up a deed, dated 23 February 1864, for a seven-year agreement whereby she held a two-thirds interest, and Harry a one-third interest.[2]

A. M. Bickford & Sons (1871–1903) edit

William was not ready to be tied down, and travelled about the State in a multitude of occupations. Seven years later, he was ready to join the business and a new Deed of Trust was drawn up in 1871 for the new partnership 'A.M. Bickford and Sons'.[2][5][29][30][31][32] William took the role of manager and promoter of the business.

Expansion and move into wholesale edit

With the continued expansion of the wholesale and manufacturing side of the business, the retail arm was sold around 1870, and substantial offices and warehouse were built at 42–46 Currie Street (on the Leigh Street corner),[5] which remained the company's headquarters from 1879 until well into the 20th Century; the building was still standing in 2010.[33]

In 1872 they built the South Australian Cordial Factory on the north side of Waymouth Street where, under Stephen Bickford (about whom little is known), a range of cordials was manufactured, principally lime juice cordial, raspberry vinegar and raspberry balm, but peppermint, cloves, lemon, sarsaparilla, orange bitters, stomach bitters, Canadian bitters and quinine wine were also produced.[34] Production commenced in 1874, and Bickford's Australia labels continue to carry the Bickford's logo which states: "Since 1874".[35] In 1876 the factory was expanded and became the South Australian Cordial and Aerated Water Factory with Mons. H. Foureur in charge of the aerated drinks.[36][37] Mons. Foureur had previously run a similar factory in Glenelg but like the equipment over which he presided, was of French origin.[38]

With the mother's death in 1877, the two sons continued and expanded the business. William maintained personal contact with important and potential clients statewide, and along the Murray as far as Wentworth and then up the Darling to Wilcannia, a 3-month journey he executed twice per year "for some years".[5][9] Harry was in control at Hindley Street. He served as the first President of the Pharmaceutical Association of S.A. and was known as a sportsman, being Master of the Adelaide Hunt Club for many years.[39]

Alvington edit

 
Somerton Crippled Children's Home, about 1939

Around 1880, with business prospering and his family expanding, William built a substantial residence "Alvington" at New Glenelg (now Somerton Park) on a property with a beach frontage of 160' and depth of 360' (49m x 110m) at the corner of The Esplanade and Madge Terrace (now Bickford Terrace). It was named after West Alvington, the home village of his grandparents, and the location to which his sister Elizabeth had "migrated". William Bickford did not live long to enjoy its grandeur, and on his death in 1918 left his widow Margaret and son Harold with a substantial overdraft. They were able to maintain a gracious lifestyle however, retaining a coachman and other servants.[2]

In the period 1938–1976, Alvington became "Somerton Home" of the Crippled Children's Association, an organisation created to support children with poliomyelitis.[40] In 1976 the children were transferred to a new facility at Regency Park.[41] The property was then sold and the building demolished.[2]

Third generation edit

Sidney Bickford (10 August 1874 – 10 December 1938), second son of William (jr.), opened the Perth branch.

Harold Bickford (1876–1958) succeeded his father William (jr.) as managing director.

Harding William Bickford (14 January 1877 – 5 August 1919), youngest son of Harry, was in his youth a prominent cyclist. After a few years' work in the company laboratories he left for London in 1898 to gain qualifications as a pharmacist, and on return to Adelaide in 1903, was employed as assistant lecturer at the University of Adelaide.[42] then as manager of A. M. Bickford & Sons' offices in Sydney then Brisbane, where he died of pneumonia.[43]

Reginald Bickford (26 January 1880 – 20 November 1948) a younger son of William (jr.), was in charge of the Cordial and Aerated Waters factory for many years,[2] succeeding one Stephen Bickford, about whom little is known but was not of the immediate family.

Leslie Bruce Bickford (born 30 December 1885), youngest son of William (jr.) became manager of the Surgical and Veterinary Department.[44]

Felton Grimwade & Bickford Ltd. (1902–1930) edit

In 1895 the partnership decided to expand west, and sent Sidney Bickford and Robert McClure, an experienced hand from the Adelaide firm to set up a Perth branch. They were in direct competition with Felton Grimwade & Co. of Melbourne and after a few years decided to amalgamate.[2]

In 1902, Felton Grimwade & Bickford Ltd. was founded in Western Australia. It was a joint venture between Felton Grimwade & Co, Melbourne and A.M. Bickford & Sons, Adelaide,[45] with Robert McClure their first managing director. Sidney Bickford married a Perth girl and settled down, breaking most ties with the Adelaide firm and family.[2]

A. M. Bickford & Sons Ltd (1903–1930) edit

 
A.M. Bickford & Sons Ltd, Laboratories & Works, Waymouth Street, 1916

In 1903 the firm became a limited liability company A. M. Bickford & Sons Ltd.[46]

In 1914 the manufacturing laboratory was transferred to Waymouth Street alongside the cordial factory. Facilities installed included a large (6'6" or 1.9m diameter) autoclave, a bond store and plant for manufacturing absolute alcohol.[47]

In 1920 its dental requisites branch was made a separate company Commonwealth Dental Supply Company Ltd. with headquarters in King William Street.[46]

Products edit

In 1874, following the foundation of the South Australian Cordial and Aerated Water Factory and laboratories on Waymouth Street, the company began producing premium cordials and aerated drinks. Before long these quality products, including the now famous Bickford's Lime Cordial, gained international award recognition for their superiority.

"Maltox" was a "tonic" based on port wine with barley malt and beef extract added.[48] Like its competitor Sedna it was susceptible to abuse for its alcohol content, and sales from chemist's shops and other unlicensed premises were subject to police "sting operations".[49]

In 1920, Bickford's commenced production of branded Coffee and Chicory Essence, (later renamed Bickford's Iced Coffee Mix), winning the gold medal at the All-Australian Exhibition in 1930. These and other products are still made to the same original recipes today.

In 1922 Bickford's "Sal Vital", an effervescent "health salt" powder which "contains all the elements that tend to cool and purify the blood, and makes as well, a refreshing and cooling beverage", first went on sale.[50]

Drug Houses of Australia (1930–1974) edit

In 1930, a holding company Drug Houses of Australia (DHA) was formed with a capital of £5,000,000 which combined Bickford's with a number of similar Australian companies representing all states except Tasmania. No shares were offered to the public.[51][52][53]

The companies involved were:[45][52]
      A.M. Bickford & Sons Ltd, South Australia[29]       Duerdin & Sainsbury Ltd, Victoria[54]
Felton Grimwade & Bickford Ltd, Western Australia[55] Elliott Brothers Limited, New South Wales[56]
Felton Grimwade & Co, Victoria[57] Taylors Elliotts Ltd, Queensland[58]
Rocke Thompsitt, Victoria[59]

Pursuant to the amalgamation agreements, A.M. Bickford & Son Ltd shareholders received 4.6572 £1 Drug Houses of Australia Ltd shares for each £1 A.M. Bickford & Son Ltd share.[53]

In 1956 D.H.A. (SA) Ltd. moved to new premises at 599 Port Road, West Croydon.

In 1961 Drug Houses of Australia's net profit after tax exceeded a million pounds.[45]

In 1968, DHA was taken over by the corporate raider, asset stripper and now-defunct British bank Slater Walker.[31] The remnant struggled on until 1974, at which point it was decided to break the company up and sell it. The major products including Dexcal, Sal Vital and Sapoderm were sold to Reckitt & Colman.[45]

Peter Abbott purchased DHA Manufacturing Pty Ltd, which included the eucalyptus oil operations, the business name Drug Houses of Australia, as well as other business and trade names and products including Bickford's Lime Juice Cordial and Bickford's Coffee Essence. An office and warehouse was set up at 17 Capella Crescent, Moorabbin. The name Drug Houses of Australia and some of the pharmacy only products were on-sold to Australian Pharmaceutical Industries (API) NSW.[45] Currently, DHA is listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange and is located in Singapore.

Felton Grimwade & Bickford Pty. Ltd. (1975–1987) edit

In 1975 the name DHA Manufacturing Pty. Ltd. was changed to Felton Grimwade & Bickford Pty. Ltd. (FGB),[60] one of the business names that had been taken over.

In 1987 FGB sold Bickford's Lime Juice Cordial and Coffee Essence, together with the business name A.M. Bickford & Sons. (It is not clear to whom they sold them.) FGB continue in business pursuing their other interests and using the FGB brandname, however the company name now appears to be Felton Grimwade & Bosisto's Pty Ltd.[45]

1987–1999 – A. M. Bickford & Sons again ... edit

It is remarkably difficult to find anything definitive about this period, particularly the period 1987–1991, and it is not clear why.

At some time, (most likely 1987, but supporting evidence is yet to be located), the Lloyd Family (of Lloyd Helicopters / Lloyd Aviation / Pearl Aviation fame) purchased various companies and brands, etc., which allowed them to manufacture and sell soft drinks in general, and Bickford's Lime Cordial in particular, from somewhere in the Adelaide Hills. But to date, and somewhat peculiarly, no supporting evidence has been located.

According to the Bickford's Australia website, Angelo Kotses became involved with the Lloyds some time in the early 1990s.

In 1991 the company extended the premium cordial range to include blackcurrant syrup and other new flavours, and throughout the 1990s further expanded the range with "old style sodas", fruit juice flavoured mineral water, bottled water and other products.[30][61]

1999– Kotses family: A. M. Bickford & Sons / Bickford's Australia edit

In 1999, the Kotses family bought the company.[30][61]

In the early 2000s iced teas and milkshake mixes were added to the range of products.[30][61]

In 2005, the cordial and soft drink related parts of the company, now called "Bickford's Australia", moved into "a new state of the art manufacturing facility" in Salisbury, South Australia.[61] Since the move to the new manufacturing plant in 2005 the range of products has expanded considerably.[62]

In 2006, Bickfords lime juice cordial was recognised by the National Trust of South Australia as a Heritage Icon.[63] Into the second decade of the 21st century, the range of products continues to expand,[64] along with the Bickford's Group[65] which also includes Vok,[66] Wheel & Barrow,[67] and Karma Living.[68]

In February 2014, Bickford's announced plans for a new distillery in the South Australian Riverland. The article states, (amongst other things), that the "key to Bickford's success has been buying unloved brands and working out ways to rebuild them".[69]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Angelo Kotses, 9 February 2014, News Limited
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Scales, Marjorie An Alchemist's Dream pub. Ronald F. Bickford 1990 ISBN 0-7316-9106-7
  3. ^ a b c Adelaide's first chemist, The Letters of William Bickford, The Register, Saturday 13 June 1925, pg.7. Retrieved 30 January 2011
    William was a diligent letter writer; a collection of his letters was found in a deed box in the 1920s, and they were placed in the archives of the State Library of South Australia. A two part article summarising their contents appeared in The Register, part I on Saturday 13 June 1925, part II the following Saturday.
  4. ^ The letters of William Bickford to his relatives in England in the period 1838–1850, Archives of the State Library of South Australia. (Click on the "Archival items" tab for a list of the letters.)
  5. ^ a b c d e Mr Harding Bickford, The Advertiser 31 March 1898 p.6 accessed 31 January 2011
    Harding William Bickford (1877–1919) was the youngest son of Harry (1843–1927)
    The article reports on "A Valedictory Social" held for Mr Harding Bickford prior to his departure for England to "improve his knowledge of pharmacy". The gathering was presided over by Mr William Bickford (jr. – his uncle), who provided a summary of the history of the company, its key personnel, its locations and its business.
  6. ^ Blue Stone, South Australian Register, 8 April 1843, p.1 col.1
    Advertisement for the sale of 700lbs of Blue Stone (ie.copper sulphate) "at a low price". Retrieved 31 January 2011
  7. ^ "Benacre" was named after the village of Benacre in Suffolk, and the neighbouring Benacre Estate 18 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
  8. ^ South Australian Institute South Australian Advertiser 27 October 1863 p.4 accessed 5 March 2011
  9. ^ a b c Adelaide's first chemist (part 2), The Letters of William Bickford, The Register, Saturday 20 June 1925, pg.8. Retrieved 30 January 2011
  10. ^ Advertisement South Australian Register 18 November 1863 p.1 accessed 5 March 2011
  11. ^ Advertisement South Australian Advertiser 12 June 1865 p.1 accessed 4 May 2011
  12. ^ Advertisement South Australian Register 18 February 1873 p.6 accessed 4 March 2011
  13. ^ Deaths South Australian Register Thursday 25 January 1877 p.4 accessed 5 March 2011
  14. ^ visited her grandparents home village of West Alvington and married Henry T. Adams of nearby Kingsbridge, Devon
  15. ^ 11 Sep 1884 – Family Notices. Trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved on 16 July 2013.
  16. ^ Edward Bickford, Death notice, 20 February 1907, The Advertiser, pg.6. Retrieved 8 February 2011
    On 7 January, at Brooklyn, New York, America, Edward, youngest son of the late William Bickford of Adelaide, aged 57 years.
  17. ^ Mary Bickford, Death notice, 24 January 1883, The Register, p. 4. Retrieved 8 February 2011
    On 12 December, at Bournemouth, Hants, England, Mary, youngest daughter of the late William and Ann M. Bickford, of Adelaide, South Australia.
  18. ^ Adelaide Educational Institution The South Australian Register 16 June 1853 p. 3 accessed 10 February 2011
  19. ^ Adelaide Educational Institution The South Australian Register Tuesday 16 December 1856 accessed 10 February 2011
  20. ^ Old Scholars Dinner South Australian Register Saturday 15 September 1866 p. 3 accessed 10 February 2011
  21. ^ Dinner to Auld Frew and King South Australian Register 31 January 1863 p.3 accessed 10 February 2011
  22. ^ a b Daughter of William Ferguson (1809–1892) and Rosina (née Forsyth) (1810–1893)
  23. ^ dates from gravestone in St Jude's Cemetery
  24. ^ "Divorce Case". The Journal. Vol. LVII, no. 15869. Adelaide. 5 July 1922. p. 1. Retrieved 7 November 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  25. ^ both sets of dates from gravestone in St Jude's Cemetery
  26. ^ http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article47089221, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article37166906, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article36424730/2300491
  27. ^ a b c Obituary The Register 7 September 1927 p8
  28. ^ The Copper Revival The Advertiser Saturday 2 September 1899 p.11 accessed 4 March 2011
  29. ^ a b A. M. Bickford & Sons (1863–1930), Encyclopaedia of Australian Science, www.eoas.info
  30. ^ a b c d Bickford's History, www.bickfords.net
  31. ^ a b Bickford's, SA Memory, State Library of South Australia
  32. ^ Wm. Bickford, Chemist Australian Postal History
  33. ^ City of Adelaide Thematic History, adelaidecitycouncil.com
  34. ^ The South Australian Cordial Factory, The Advertiser, 23 December 1872. Retrieved 31 January 2011
  35. ^ Bickford's labels also still continue to carry the statement: "On account of spurious imitations none is genuine unless bearing the signature of A M Bickford & Sons".
  36. ^ Advertisement, for the newly opened "South Australian Cordial and Aerated Water Factory", South Australian Register, 18 October 1876, p.2. Retrieved 31 January 2011
  37. ^ Advertisement 17 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine, for the newly opened "South Australian Cordial and Aerated Water Factory", page 155 from the South Australian Directory – undated (ca. 1876). Reproduced in the "photo album", pg.13, www.bickfords.net
  38. ^ Messrs. Bickford's Cordial Factory The Advertiser 23 October 1876 accessed 7 February 2011
  39. ^ Death of Mr Harry Bickford, Chronicle, 10 September 1927, p. 36, col. b
  40. ^ New Home for Crippled Children, The Advertiser, 20 September 1938, p.17. This was the time of a major epidemic of infantile paralysis.
  41. ^ History, www.novita.org.au
  42. ^ 09 Apr 1903 – Rough Weather on the Coast. Trove.nla.gov.au (9 April 1903). Retrieved on 16 July 2013.
  43. ^ 07 Aug 1919 – Personal. Trove.nla.gov.au (7 August 1919). Retrieved on 16 July 2013.
  44. ^ General Price List 1926 17 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Photo Album, pp.16–17, www.bickfords.net
  45. ^ a b c d e f History 17 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Felton Grimwade & Bickford Ltd, www.fgb.com.au
  46. ^ a b A Story of Enterprise The Advertiser 28 April 1923 p.18 accessed 31 January 2011
  47. ^ Death of Harry Bickford The Advertiser 7 September 1927 p.19 accessed 31 January 2011
  48. ^ "Advertising". Queensland Times. Vol. LXII, no. 10, 779. Queensland, Australia. 17 September 1920. p. 3. Retrieved 2 November 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  49. ^ "Sold Sedna and Maltox". Murray Pioneer and Australian River Record. Vol. 29, no. 48. South Australia. 1 December 1922. p. 24. Retrieved 2 November 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  50. ^ Sal Vital Advertisement, The Advertiser Tuesday 21 November 1922, pg.? col.5. Retrieved 31 January 2011
  51. ^ Firms amalgamate The Advertiser 1 July 1930 p.16 accessed 1 February 2011
  52. ^ a b Drug Houses of Australia Ltd (DHA) (1930–1974), Encyclopaedia of Australian Science, www.eoas.info
  53. ^ a b Interpretation of Will, 8 September 1934, The Advertiser, pg.23
  54. ^ Duerdin and Sainsbury Ltd (? – 1930), Encyclopaedia of Australian Science, www.eoas.info
  55. ^ Felton Grimwade & Bickford Ltd (1902–1930), Encyclopaedia of Australian Science, www.eoas.info
  56. ^ Elliott Brothers Limited (? – 1930), Encyclopaedia of Australian Science, www.eoas.info
  57. ^ Felton Grimwade & Co (1867–1930), Encyclopaedia of Australian Science, www.eoas.info
  58. ^ Taylor-Elliotts Ltd ( – 1930), Encyclopaedia of Australian Science, www.eoas.info
  59. ^ Rocke Thompsitt ( – 1930), Encyclopaedia of Australian Science, www.eoas.info
  60. ^ Felton Grimwade & Bickfords Pty Ltd (c. 1974 – ), Encyclopaedia of Australian Science, www.eoas.info
  61. ^ a b c d Company Timeline 27 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine, www.bickfords.net
  62. ^ 2010 Product Catalogue, www.bickfords.net
  63. ^ 2006 Heritage Icon Awards 25 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine, South Australian National Trust
  64. ^ 2012 Product Catalogue, www.bickfords.net
  65. ^ Bickford's Group 9 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine, www.bickfords.net
  66. ^ Vok Beverages, vok.com.au
  67. ^ Wheel & Barrow, www.wheelandbarrow.com.au
  68. ^ Karma Living, www.karma-living.com.au
  69. ^ "Bickford's plans new spirits distillery in the Riverland". Adelaide.now. News Ltd. 9 February 2014. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
    . Press Release. Bickford's Australia / Vok Beverages. 7 February 2014. Archived from the original on 3 June 2014. Retrieved 30 May 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Blair Speedy (12 August 2013). "Brands quench cordial maker Bickford's thirst for growth". The Australian. News Ltd.
  • "Bickford's/Vok Speed to Market Assured with StayinFront Mobile Retail Execution". Media Release. IDG Communications. 31 March 2014.

External links edit

  • Bickford's Australia website

history, bickford, australia, this, article, about, historic, family, manufacturers, pharmaceuticals, cordials, modern, business, bickford, australia, bickford, sons, first, manufacturing, chemists, south, australia, until, 1930, state, most, significant, fami. This article is about the historic family manufacturers of pharmaceuticals and cordials For the modern business see Bickford s Australia A M Bickford and Sons was one of the first manufacturing chemists in South Australia Until 1930 it was one of the State s most significant family owned companies In 1930 they amalgamated with half a dozen other similar Australian companies to form Drug Houses of Australia DHA which continued to produce A M Bickford and Sons products drugs and chemicals under the DHA brand and cordials and soft drinks under the A M Bickford and Sons brand Wm Bickford chemistIndustryPharmacist pharmaceutical chemistFounded1839FounderWilliam BickfordHeadquartersAdelaide South AustraliaKey peopleWilliam BickfordAnn Margaret Bickford A M Bickford amp SonsCompany typePartnershipIndustryPharmaceutical chemist beverage manufacturerFounded1864FounderAnn Margaret BickfordHeadquartersAdelaide South AustraliaKey peopleAnn Margaret BickfordWilliam Bickford jr Harry Bickford A M Bickford amp Sons LtdCompany typeLimited liability companyIndustryPharmaceutical chemist beverage manufacturerFounded1903HeadquartersAdelaide South Australia Bickford s Australia Pty LtdCompany typeLimited liability companyIndustryBeverage manufacturerFounded1991HeadquartersSalisbury South South AustraliaKey peopleAngelo Kotses 1 OwnerKotses familyWebsitewww wbr bickfords wbr net In the late 1960s DHA became the target of a corporate raider and asset stripper By the mid 1970s DHA had collapsed under the burden of servicing the imposed level of debt What was left was split up and sold Reckitt amp Colman acquired the major drugs and chemicals product and brands while other parts of the company were acquired by others Melburnian Peter Abbott purchased the pharmacy products eucalyptus oil operations and soft drink products The pharmacy products were on sold the eucalyptus oil operations were incorporated into FGB Felton Grimwade amp Bickford The soft drink products continued under the revived A M Bickford and Sons brand In the late 1980s FGB decided to concentrate on their core businesses under the FGB brand and sold the soft drink businesses and the Bickford brand names which by this stage had been established for over a century The history of the Bickford s products and company names between 1987 and 1999 is not clear In 1999 the soft drink business and company names were purchased by the Kotses family Bickford s once again became a South Australian family owned business known for its range of cordials and flavourings These are made today by Bickford s Australia Contents 1 Foundation amp establishment 1839 1864 1 1 William Bickford 1815 1850 1 2 Ann Margaret Bickford 1 3 Second generation 1 3 1 William Bickford 1841 1916 1 3 2 Harry Bickford 1843 1927 2 A M Bickford amp Sons 1864 1930 2 1 Bickford amp Son 1864 1871 2 2 A M Bickford amp Sons 1871 1903 2 3 Expansion and move into wholesale 2 4 Alvington 2 5 Third generation 2 6 Felton Grimwade amp Bickford Ltd 1902 1930 2 7 A M Bickford amp Sons Ltd 1903 1930 2 8 Products 3 Drug Houses of Australia 1930 1974 4 Felton Grimwade amp Bickford Pty Ltd 1975 1987 5 1987 1999 A M Bickford amp Sons again 6 1999 Kotses family A M Bickford amp Sons Bickford s Australia 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksFoundation amp establishment 1839 1864 editWilliam Bickford 1815 1850 edit nbsp William Bickford Sr 1815 1850 William Bickford 18 August 1815 11 September 1850 was the seventh child of fourteen of a well to do couple of West Alvington of Devon England When Bickford s father died the greater part of his fortune went to his eldest son by an earlier marriage William s family was provided for but had to work to secure their future For the fifteen year old William that meant taking an apprenticeship to Mr Buxton a druggist 2 In September 1838 aged 23 the chemist s assistant left England from Plymouth 3 rounded the Cape of Good Hope in December 4 and arrived in Port Adelaide on 15 February 1839 on the barque Platina 2 3 Though he aspired to become a shepherd in South Australia soon after his arrival he began working as assistant in the dispensary attached to the North Terrace surgery of one Dr Bright at a salary of 40 2 a week with board and lodging provided On 18 August 1839 his 24th birthday he married Ann Margaret Garrett whom he had met on the trip from Portsmouth 2 3 They were soon expecting their first child but it died shortly after birth on 6 June 1840 and Ann was seriously ill for some time 2 In March 1840 William wrote that Dr and Mrs Bright had left the colony for New Zealand leaving William to deal with his creditors and that he had secured another position as manager of a retail shop and dispensary owned by a partnership of two surgeons at a salary of 3 per week 2 Despite an economic downturn in the colony his business thrived He left the security of the dispensary and by September 1840 had opened his own shop in Hindley Street near Rosina Street with borrowed capital of 220 2 It too prospered and soon he moved into larger premises at 67 Hindley Street opposite Club Lane 2 5 As business flourished the wholesale lines became the larger part of the firm s business 6 In April 1841 he wrote Business is going on prosperously and I have a comfortable home at my own fire side and a good wife who studies my interest in every respect Ann was very supportive of her husband and was able to keep his shop running during any forced absence jury duty for instance 2 Their first son William was born on 19 November 1841 followed by Harry in February 1843 and Elizabeth in November 1844 In December 1845 they lost a baby Eulalia so William decided to move his family away from the unsanitary conditions of the city He purchased 16 acres 6 4 ha of land at Glen Osmond just 3 miles from the Adelaide city centre and in the winter of 1846 built a house later to be called Benacre 7 moving the family there before the onset of the next summer He commuted daily to his business in the city They lost another baby James in 1848 but Edward was born in 1849 William was concerned with the development of Adelaide In 1847 he was one of the founders of the South Australian Institute alongside others including a business competitor Francis Faulding 8 In February 1850 William wrote that he had established a garden and had planted fruit trees and vines However he did not live to enjoy the fruits dying on 11 September 1850 at the age of 35 of brain fever after a 3 day illness leaving his wife pregnant with Mary and with four young children William Harry Elizabeth and Edward to care for 2 9 Ann Margaret Bickford edit nbsp Anne Margaret Bickford nee Garrett 1810 1877 Ann Margaret Bickford nee Garrett 1810 24 January 1877 was determined to carry on her husband s business With five children under the age of ten she enrolled the help of a retired pharmacist Mr Paxton to hold the fort until more permanent help could be found She soon engaged qualified chemists Edwin Page and Robert Hutton and with their able assistance carried on the business for 14 years 5 Mr Hutton was to open a pharmacy of his own at 76 Rundle Street in 1863 10 On 29 May 1865 the shop shifted yet again to 19 Hindley Street 11 later the site of Tattersall s Hotel 2 Early 1873 they opened a shop in Taylor Street Kadina 12 It ceased being advertised in 1888 Remarkably her death was marked in the newspapers of the time with the most cursory of death notices and no more 13 Whatever funeral arrangements there might have been were not advertised A vault at West Terrace Cemetery bears the names of both Ann and William Snr A nearby stone commemorates Charlotte Jane Bickford Second generation edit The second generation were unnamed Bickford on 6 June 1840 William Bickford 19 November 1841 20 September 1916 Harry Bickford 24 February 1843 6 September 1927 Elizabeth Bessie Bickford on 29 November 1844 England 14 2 15 Eulelia Bickford 8 November 1846 25 February 1847 James Bickford 19 February 1848 29 February 1848 Edward Bickford 30 May 1849 7 January 1907 Brooklyn New York United States 16 Mary Bickford 25 April 1851 12 December 1882 Bournemouth England 17 The children s education did not suffer They were already studying at the Adelaide Educational Institution an academy run by J L Young in Freeman Street and continued there for some years Harry or Henry as he was then called was thriving there in 1853 18 Both he and Edward were mentioned at the prizegiving in 1855 19 Harry kept a close association with his alma mater being president of the Adelaide Educational Institution Old Scholars in 1866 20 Although not as academically inclined William must have made his mark as he was prominent in the Institution s 1863 welcome to old scholars W P Auld James Frew and Stephen King returning members of the Stuart s sixth expedition which had successfully crossed Australia from south to north 21 William Bickford 1841 1916 edit nbsp William Bickford Jr 1841 1916 ca 1900 nbsp Harold Bickford 1876 1958 1887 son of William Jr Older son William Bickford jr 19 November 1841 20 September 1916 being less academically inclined than Harry gained experience travelling and picking up a variety of jobs In 1871 he married Margaret Jane Ferguson 22 They had seven children William Ferguson Bickford Willie 30 November 1871 22 June 1889 died aged 17 in riding accident Sidney Bickford 10 August 1874 10 December 1938 moved to Perth in 1895 Harold Bickford 16 May 1876 23 October 1958 Managing director A M Bickford amp Sons Ltd 1908 1930 23 He married Tessie Veronica Murphy in 1916 they had one child Ronald Ferguson Bickford 1918 2011 he divorced her in 1922 citing four co respondents including Napier K Birks 1876 1953 of the prominent Birks family 24 Evelyn Victoria Bickford later Mrs Robert Ezekiel Reid of Geelong b 7 June 1878 Reginald Bickford 26 January 1880 20 November 1948 m Rosa Florence Cudmore 30 September 1879 22 July 1954 25 on 17 November 1910 Norman Forsyth Bickford 1881 Leslie Bruce Bickford b 30 December 1885 at Alvington m Dorothy Murray Their first home was Fairfield in Somerton followed by Alvington near the Brighton Esplanade see chapter below Both William and Harry sent their sons to St Peter s College a tradition that was largely continued in following generations 2 He was made Justice of the Peace in 1886 and elected president of the Justices Association from 1903 to 1904 He was elected to Brighton council and Mayor of Brighton 1886 1887 and 1890 1891 2 He was president of the Adelaide Chamber of Commerce from 1894 to 1895 2 He and brother Harry bought Burnside Station near Naracoorte in 1886 and though neither ever lived there they installed a manager and visited frequently The fine merino wool produced there always found a ready buyer By the turn of the century they had decided to free themselves of the responsibility so after the South Australian Government showed no interest at their price of 49 540 subdivided the 40 978 acres into 28 lots and put them up for auction on 23 October 1908 2 Harry Bickford 1843 1927 edit Her son Harry Bickford 24 February 1843 6 September 1927 He may have been christened Henry 26 was sent to England in 1859 27 to gain qualifications and experience as a chemist 9 and returned in 1863 He took little interest in civic affairs but was a keen horseman and was Master of the Adelaide Hounds from 1882 and a committeeman with the South Australian Jockey Club from 1889 He was a crack shot and won significant trophies for pigeon shooting 27 When the company was floated on the Stock Exchange in January 1903 he was elected first managing director relinquishing the position to his nephew Harold in 1906 27 He was married three times on 24 February 1866 to Charlotte Jane Farr c 1842 4 September 1866 They had no children He married again on 10 March 1870 to Rosina Mary Ferguson 1845 5 October 1898 22 They had three children Isabella May Bickford 12 April 1872 28 July 1933 never married H arry Fairweather H F Bickford 1874 8 July 1906 married May Innes Ker 1876 22 August 1906 on 18 March 1903 They had no children Harding William Bickford 14 January 1877 5 August 1919 never married On 8 December 1904 he married Priscilla Simms nee Chambers c 1852 17 November 1924 They had no children Priscilla was a daughter of John Chambers 1814 1889 The two brothers were also major investors in the Paramatta copper mine at Moonta in the late 1890s 28 A M Bickford amp Sons 1864 1930 edit nbsp An AM Bickford amp Sons marble bottle for aerated water Bickford amp Son 1864 1871 edit In 1863 Harry now qualified returned from England and began working for her On his 21st birthday she formally took him into partnership with her as Bickford and Son She drew up a deed dated 23 February 1864 for a seven year agreement whereby she held a two thirds interest and Harry a one third interest 2 A M Bickford amp Sons 1871 1903 edit William was not ready to be tied down and travelled about the State in a multitude of occupations Seven years later he was ready to join the business and a new Deed of Trust was drawn up in 1871 for the new partnership A M Bickford and Sons 2 5 29 30 31 32 William took the role of manager and promoter of the business Expansion and move into wholesale edit With the continued expansion of the wholesale and manufacturing side of the business the retail arm was sold around 1870 and substantial offices and warehouse were built at 42 46 Currie Street on the Leigh Street corner 5 which remained the company s headquarters from 1879 until well into the 20th Century the building was still standing in 2010 33 In 1872 they built the South Australian Cordial Factory on the north side of Waymouth Street where under Stephen Bickford about whom little is known a range of cordials was manufactured principally lime juice cordial raspberry vinegar and raspberry balm but peppermint cloves lemon sarsaparilla orange bitters stomach bitters Canadian bitters and quinine wine were also produced 34 Production commenced in 1874 and Bickford s Australia labels continue to carry the Bickford s logo which states Since 1874 35 In 1876 the factory was expanded and became the South Australian Cordial and Aerated Water Factory with Mons H Foureur in charge of the aerated drinks 36 37 Mons Foureur had previously run a similar factory in Glenelg but like the equipment over which he presided was of French origin 38 With the mother s death in 1877 the two sons continued and expanded the business William maintained personal contact with important and potential clients statewide and along the Murray as far as Wentworth and then up the Darling to Wilcannia a 3 month journey he executed twice per year for some years 5 9 Harry was in control at Hindley Street He served as the first President of the Pharmaceutical Association of S A and was known as a sportsman being Master of the Adelaide Hunt Club for many years 39 Alvington edit nbsp Somerton Crippled Children s Home about 1939 Around 1880 with business prospering and his family expanding William built a substantial residence Alvington at New Glenelg now Somerton Park on a property with a beach frontage of 160 and depth of 360 49m x 110m at the corner of The Esplanade and Madge Terrace now Bickford Terrace It was named after West Alvington the home village of his grandparents and the location to which his sister Elizabeth had migrated William Bickford did not live long to enjoy its grandeur and on his death in 1918 left his widow Margaret and son Harold with a substantial overdraft They were able to maintain a gracious lifestyle however retaining a coachman and other servants 2 In the period 1938 1976 Alvington became Somerton Home of the Crippled Children s Association an organisation created to support children with poliomyelitis 40 In 1976 the children were transferred to a new facility at Regency Park 41 The property was then sold and the building demolished 2 Third generation edit Sidney Bickford 10 August 1874 10 December 1938 second son of William jr opened the Perth branch Harold Bickford 1876 1958 succeeded his father William jr as managing director Harding William Bickford 14 January 1877 5 August 1919 youngest son of Harry was in his youth a prominent cyclist After a few years work in the company laboratories he left for London in 1898 to gain qualifications as a pharmacist and on return to Adelaide in 1903 was employed as assistant lecturer at the University of Adelaide 42 then as manager of A M Bickford amp Sons offices in Sydney then Brisbane where he died of pneumonia 43 Reginald Bickford 26 January 1880 20 November 1948 a younger son of William jr was in charge of the Cordial and Aerated Waters factory for many years 2 succeeding one Stephen Bickford about whom little is known but was not of the immediate family Leslie Bruce Bickford born 30 December 1885 youngest son of William jr became manager of the Surgical and Veterinary Department 44 Felton Grimwade amp Bickford Ltd 1902 1930 edit In 1895 the partnership decided to expand west and sent Sidney Bickford and Robert McClure an experienced hand from the Adelaide firm to set up a Perth branch They were in direct competition with Felton Grimwade amp Co of Melbourne and after a few years decided to amalgamate 2 In 1902 Felton Grimwade amp Bickford Ltd was founded in Western Australia It was a joint venture between Felton Grimwade amp Co Melbourne and A M Bickford amp Sons Adelaide 45 with Robert McClure their first managing director Sidney Bickford married a Perth girl and settled down breaking most ties with the Adelaide firm and family 2 A M Bickford amp Sons Ltd 1903 1930 edit nbsp A M Bickford amp Sons Ltd Laboratories amp Works Waymouth Street 1916 In 1903 the firm became a limited liability company A M Bickford amp Sons Ltd 46 In 1914 the manufacturing laboratory was transferred to Waymouth Street alongside the cordial factory Facilities installed included a large 6 6 or 1 9m diameter autoclave a bond store and plant for manufacturing absolute alcohol 47 In 1920 its dental requisites branch was made a separate company Commonwealth Dental Supply Company Ltd with headquarters in King William Street 46 Products edit In 1874 following the foundation of the South Australian Cordial and Aerated Water Factory and laboratories on Waymouth Street the company began producing premium cordials and aerated drinks Before long these quality products including the now famous Bickford s Lime Cordial gained international award recognition for their superiority Maltox was a tonic based on port wine with barley malt and beef extract added 48 Like its competitor Sedna it was susceptible to abuse for its alcohol content and sales from chemist s shops and other unlicensed premises were subject to police sting operations 49 In 1920 Bickford s commenced production of branded Coffee and Chicory Essence later renamed Bickford s Iced Coffee Mix winning the gold medal at the All Australian Exhibition in 1930 These and other products are still made to the same original recipes today In 1922 Bickford s Sal Vital an effervescent health salt powder which contains all the elements that tend to cool and purify the blood and makes as well a refreshing and cooling beverage first went on sale 50 Drug Houses of Australia 1930 1974 editIn 1930 a holding company Drug Houses of Australia DHA was formed with a capital of 5 000 000 which combined Bickford s with a number of similar Australian companies representing all states except Tasmania No shares were offered to the public 51 52 53 The companies involved were 45 52 A M Bickford amp Sons Ltd South Australia 29 Duerdin amp Sainsbury Ltd Victoria 54 Felton Grimwade amp Bickford Ltd Western Australia 55 Elliott Brothers Limited New South Wales 56 Felton Grimwade amp Co Victoria 57 Taylors Elliotts Ltd Queensland 58 Rocke Thompsitt Victoria 59 Pursuant to the amalgamation agreements A M Bickford amp Son Ltd shareholders received 4 6572 1 Drug Houses of Australia Ltd shares for each 1 A M Bickford amp Son Ltd share 53 In 1956 D H A SA Ltd moved to new premises at 599 Port Road West Croydon In 1961 Drug Houses of Australia s net profit after tax exceeded a million pounds 45 In 1968 DHA was taken over by the corporate raider asset stripper and now defunct British bank Slater Walker 31 The remnant struggled on until 1974 at which point it was decided to break the company up and sell it The major products including Dexcal Sal Vital and Sapoderm were sold to Reckitt amp Colman 45 Peter Abbott purchased DHA Manufacturing Pty Ltd which included the eucalyptus oil operations the business name Drug Houses of Australia as well as other business and trade names and products including Bickford s Lime Juice Cordial and Bickford s Coffee Essence An office and warehouse was set up at 17 Capella Crescent Moorabbin The name Drug Houses of Australia and some of the pharmacy only products were on sold to Australian Pharmaceutical Industries API NSW 45 Currently DHA is listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange and is located in Singapore Felton Grimwade amp Bickford Pty Ltd 1975 1987 editIn 1975 the name DHA Manufacturing Pty Ltd was changed to Felton Grimwade amp Bickford Pty Ltd FGB 60 one of the business names that had been taken over In 1987 FGB sold Bickford s Lime Juice Cordial and Coffee Essence together with the business name A M Bickford amp Sons It is not clear to whom they sold them FGB continue in business pursuing their other interests and using the FGB brandname however the company name now appears to be Felton Grimwade amp Bosisto s Pty Ltd 45 1987 1999 A M Bickford amp Sons again editThis section s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message It is remarkably difficult to find anything definitive about this period particularly the period 1987 1991 and it is not clear why At some time most likely 1987 but supporting evidence is yet to be located the Lloyd Family of Lloyd Helicopters Lloyd Aviation Pearl Aviation fame purchased various companies and brands etc which allowed them to manufacture and sell soft drinks in general and Bickford s Lime Cordial in particular from somewhere in the Adelaide Hills But to date and somewhat peculiarly no supporting evidence has been located According to the Bickford s Australia website Angelo Kotses became involved with the Lloyds some time in the early 1990s In 1991 the company extended the premium cordial range to include blackcurrant syrup and other new flavours and throughout the 1990s further expanded the range with old style sodas fruit juice flavoured mineral water bottled water and other products 30 61 1999 Kotses family A M Bickford amp Sons Bickford s Australia editIn 1999 the Kotses family bought the company 30 61 In the early 2000s iced teas and milkshake mixes were added to the range of products 30 61 In 2005 the cordial and soft drink related parts of the company now called Bickford s Australia moved into a new state of the art manufacturing facility in Salisbury South Australia 61 Since the move to the new manufacturing plant in 2005 the range of products has expanded considerably 62 In 2006 Bickfords lime juice cordial was recognised by the National Trust of South Australia as a Heritage Icon 63 Into the second decade of the 21st century the range of products continues to expand 64 along with the Bickford s Group 65 which also includes Vok 66 Wheel amp Barrow 67 and Karma Living 68 In February 2014 Bickford s announced plans for a new distillery in the South Australian Riverland The article states amongst other things that the key to Bickford s success has been buying unloved brands and working out ways to rebuild them 69 See also editSouth Australian food and drinkReferences edit Angelo Kotses 9 February 2014 News Limited a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Scales Marjorie An Alchemist s Dream pub Ronald F Bickford 1990 ISBN 0 7316 9106 7 a b c Adelaide s first chemist The Letters of William Bickford The Register Saturday 13 June 1925 pg 7 Retrieved 30 January 2011William was a diligent letter writer a collection of his letters was found in a deed box in the 1920s and they were placed in the archives of the State Library of South Australia A two part article summarising their contents appeared in The Register part I on Saturday 13 June 1925 part II the following Saturday The letters of William Bickford to his relatives in England in the period 1838 1850 Archives of the State Library of South Australia Click on the Archival items tab for a list of the letters a b c d e Mr Harding Bickford The Advertiser 31 March 1898 p 6 accessed 31 January 2011Harding William Bickford 1877 1919 was the youngest son of Harry 1843 1927 The article reports on A Valedictory Social held for Mr Harding Bickford prior to his departure for England to improve his knowledge of pharmacy The gathering was presided over by Mr William Bickford jr his uncle who provided a summary of the history of the company its key personnel its locations and its business Blue Stone South Australian Register 8 April 1843 p 1 col 1Advertisement for the sale of 700lbs of Blue Stone ie copper sulphate at a low price Retrieved 31 January 2011 Benacre was named after the village of Benacre in Suffolk and the neighbouring Benacre Estate Archived 18 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine South Australian Institute South Australian Advertiser 27 October 1863 p 4 accessed 5 March 2011 a b c Adelaide s first chemist part 2 The Letters of William Bickford The Register Saturday 20 June 1925 pg 8 Retrieved 30 January 2011 Advertisement South Australian Register 18 November 1863 p 1 accessed 5 March 2011 Advertisement South Australian Advertiser 12 June 1865 p 1 accessed 4 May 2011 Advertisement South Australian Register 18 February 1873 p 6 accessed 4 March 2011 Deaths South Australian Register Thursday 25 January 1877 p 4 accessed 5 March 2011 visited her grandparents home village of West Alvington and married Henry T Adams of nearby Kingsbridge Devon 11 Sep 1884 Family Notices Trove nla gov au Retrieved on 16 July 2013 Edward Bickford Death notice 20 February 1907 The Advertiser pg 6 Retrieved 8 February 2011On 7 January at Brooklyn New York America Edward youngest son of the late William Bickford of Adelaide aged 57 years Mary Bickford Death notice 24 January 1883 The Register p 4 Retrieved 8 February 2011On 12 December at Bournemouth Hants England Mary youngest daughter of the late William and Ann M Bickford of Adelaide South Australia Adelaide Educational Institution The South Australian Register 16 June 1853 p 3 accessed 10 February 2011 Adelaide Educational Institution The South Australian Register Tuesday 16 December 1856 accessed 10 February 2011 Old Scholars Dinner South Australian Register Saturday 15 September 1866 p 3 accessed 10 February 2011 Dinner to Auld Frew and King South Australian Register 31 January 1863 p 3 accessed 10 February 2011 a b Daughter of William Ferguson 1809 1892 and Rosina nee Forsyth 1810 1893 dates from gravestone in St Jude s Cemetery Divorce Case The Journal Vol LVII no 15869 Adelaide 5 July 1922 p 1 Retrieved 7 November 2016 via National Library of Australia both sets of dates from gravestone in St Jude s Cemetery http nla gov au nla news article47089221 http nla gov au nla news article37166906 http nla gov au nla news article36424730 2300491 a b c Obituary The Register 7 September 1927 p8 The Copper Revival The Advertiser Saturday 2 September 1899 p 11 accessed 4 March 2011 a b A M Bickford amp Sons 1863 1930 Encyclopaedia of Australian Science www eoas info a b c d Bickford s History www bickfords net a b Bickford s SA Memory State Library of South Australia Wm Bickford Chemist Australian Postal History City of Adelaide Thematic History adelaidecitycouncil com The South Australian Cordial Factory The Advertiser 23 December 1872 Retrieved 31 January 2011 Bickford s labels also still continue to carry the statement On account of spurious imitations none is genuine unless bearing the signature of A M Bickford amp Sons Advertisement for the newly opened South Australian Cordial and Aerated Water Factory South Australian Register 18 October 1876 p 2 Retrieved 31 January 2011 Advertisement Archived 17 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine for the newly opened South Australian Cordial and Aerated Water Factory page 155 from the South Australian Directory undated ca 1876 Reproduced in the photo album pg 13 www bickfords net Messrs Bickford s Cordial Factory The Advertiser 23 October 1876 accessed 7 February 2011 Death of Mr Harry Bickford Chronicle 10 September 1927 p 36 col b New Home for Crippled Children The Advertiser 20 September 1938 p 17 This was the time of a major epidemic of infantile paralysis History www novita org au 09 Apr 1903 Rough Weather on the Coast Trove nla gov au 9 April 1903 Retrieved on 16 July 2013 07 Aug 1919 Personal Trove nla gov au 7 August 1919 Retrieved on 16 July 2013 General Price List 1926 Archived 17 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Photo Album pp 16 17 www bickfords net a b c d e f History Archived 17 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Felton Grimwade amp Bickford Ltd www fgb com au a b A Story of Enterprise The Advertiser 28 April 1923 p 18 accessed 31 January 2011 Death of Harry Bickford The Advertiser 7 September 1927 p 19 accessed 31 January 2011 Advertising Queensland Times Vol LXII no 10 779 Queensland Australia 17 September 1920 p 3 Retrieved 2 November 2016 via National Library of Australia Sold Sedna and Maltox Murray Pioneer and Australian River Record Vol 29 no 48 South Australia 1 December 1922 p 24 Retrieved 2 November 2016 via National Library of Australia Sal Vital Advertisement The Advertiser Tuesday 21 November 1922 pg col 5 Retrieved 31 January 2011 Firms amalgamate The Advertiser 1 July 1930 p 16 accessed 1 February 2011 a b Drug Houses of Australia Ltd DHA 1930 1974 Encyclopaedia of Australian Science www eoas info a b Interpretation of Will 8 September 1934 The Advertiser pg 23 Duerdin and Sainsbury Ltd 1930 Encyclopaedia of Australian Science www eoas info Felton Grimwade amp Bickford Ltd 1902 1930 Encyclopaedia of Australian Science www eoas info Elliott Brothers Limited 1930 Encyclopaedia of Australian Science www eoas info Felton Grimwade amp Co 1867 1930 Encyclopaedia of Australian Science www eoas info Taylor Elliotts Ltd 1930 Encyclopaedia of Australian Science www eoas info Rocke Thompsitt 1930 Encyclopaedia of Australian Science www eoas info Felton Grimwade amp Bickfords Pty Ltd c 1974 Encyclopaedia of Australian Science www eoas info a b c d Company Timeline Archived 27 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine www bickfords net 2010 Product Catalogue www bickfords net 2006 Heritage Icon Awards Archived 25 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine South Australian National Trust 2012 Product Catalogue www bickfords net Bickford s Group Archived 9 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine www bickfords net Vok Beverages vok com au Wheel amp Barrow www wheelandbarrow com au Karma Living www karma living com au Bickford s plans new spirits distillery in the Riverland Adelaide now News Ltd 9 February 2014 Retrieved 30 May 2014 Bickford s Australia to establish a new Spirits Distillery in the Riverland Press Release Bickford s Australia Vok Beverages 7 February 2014 Archived from the original on 3 June 2014 Retrieved 30 May 2014 Further reading editBlair Speedy 12 August 2013 Brands quench cordial maker Bickford s thirst for growth The Australian News Ltd Bickford s Vok Speed to Market Assured with StayinFront Mobile Retail Execution Media Release IDG Communications 31 March 2014 External links editBickford s Australia website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Bickford 27s Australia amp oldid 1219401959, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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