Cadbury Heritage Collection
Cadbury Heritage Collection playing cards, United Kingdom, 1998.
Produced by the Heritage Playing Card Company in 1998, all 54 cards in this pack show different posters from Cadbury’s advertising archives. Cadbury was started in 1824, and was joined by Fry’s in 1919. The Cadbury family were Quakers and treated their workers with great respect and offered relatively high wages and good working conditions. At the beginning of the 20th century Cadbury founded a model village exclusively for their workers in Bournville, Birmingham. A brand of dark chocolate produced by Cadbury, is named after the model village, and was first sold in 1908. Both the village and the chocolate appear prominently in the advertising. See the box►
By Peter Burnett
Member since July 27, 2022
I graduated in Russian and East European Studies from Birmingham University in 1969. It was as an undergraduate in Moscow in 1968 that I stumbled upon my first 3 packs of “unusual” playing cards which fired my curiosity and thence my life-long interest. I began researching and collecting cards in the early 1970s, since when I’ve acquired over 3,330 packs of non-standard cards, mainly from North America, UK and Western Europe, and of course from Russia and the former communist countries.
Following my retirement from the Bodleian Library in Dec. 2007 I took up a new role as Head of Library Development at the International Network for the Availability of Scientific Publications (INASP) to support library development in low-income countries. This work necessitated regular training visits to many sub-Saharan African countries and also further afield, to Vietnam, Nepal and Bangladesh – all of which provided rich opportunities to further expand my playing card collection.
Since 2019 I’ve been working part-time in the Bodleian Library where I’ve been cataloguing the bequest of the late Donald Welsh, founder of the English Playing Card Society.
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