7-579: George Bassett (c. 1818–1886) was the founder in 1842 of Bassett's , a confectionery firm in Sheffield . The company (after his death) introduced Liquorice allsorts . He went on to become Mayor of Sheffield (1876). Whilst Mayor, he had US President Ulysses S. Grant as a house guest. He was born in Ashover , Derbyshire , and married as his first wife, Sarah Hodgson, they had six daughters. He married as his second wife, Sarah Ann Hague: they had two sons. He
14-610: Is buried in Sheffield General Cemetery with his second wife, Sarah Ann. Bassett was the great-uncle of noted conservationist and countryside campaigner Ethel Haythornthwaite (1894–1986). This United Kingdom business-related biographical article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about a mayor in England is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Bassett%27s George Bassett & Co. , known simply as Bassett's ,
21-460: The Bertie Bassett mascot was created; Bertie continues to represent the product today. Jelly Babies were produced by the brand since 1918. The Sheffield Directory of 1842 records George Bassett as being "wholesale confectioner, lozenge maker and British wine trader". In 1851, Bassett took on an apprentice called Samuel Meggitt Johnson, who later became Bassett's son-in-law. His descendants ran
28-611: The company until Gordon Johnson retired as chairman in the 1970s. Bassett's was first listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1929. They opened up a factory in Broad Street, Sheffield in 1852. The site moved in 1933 to Owlerton in another district of the city and remains there today. Unclaimed Babies were being produced during the 19th century, especially in the North West of England. In 1918, Bassetts launched their own range of
35-451: The soft sweets which they called Peace Babies. They were re-launched as Jelly Babies in the 1950s and were allegedly thrown at the Beatles during concerts as they were a favourite of George Harrison . The Liquorice Allsorts variety was created by accident when Bassett salesman Charlie Thompson dropped the samples of several different products in front of a prospective client. The client
42-474: Was an English confectionery company and brand. The company was founded in Sheffield by George Bassett in 1842. The company became a brand of Cadbury Schweppes in 1989. The brand's final owner was Mondelēz International , which merged the brand with Maynards to create Maynards Bassetts in 2016. The company's best-known sweets, the Liquorice Allsorts , were created by accident in 1899 and in 1926
49-409: Was taken by the idea of selling the sweets all mixed up and in return for the success, the company allowed the client to name the new brand. Barratt & Co. Ltd. was acquired in a friendly takeover by Bassett's in 1966. In 1989, the combined firms were acquired by the then-united Cadbury-Schweppes company in a deal brokered for £91 million. In 2016, all the products were re-marketed under
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