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Liquorice stamp, Dunhill's Ltd, early 1900s
Collected in 1985
Currently on display at Pontefract Museum
This stamp was used to make Pontefract Cakes, the famous liquorice sweets. The stamp would flatten blobs of liquorice into discs with the Pontefract Castle symbol on them.
The workers who did this were called ‘thumpers’. They were mostly women.
This stamp comes from Dunhill’s. They were the first to make Pontefract cakes.
Since 1720 and maybe even earlier, they were renting land in Pontefract to grow liquorice. By 1779 George Dunhill owned a house, warehouse and garden in Broad Lane near the castle. The story is that George Dunhill invented liquorice sweets. The first Pontefract Cakes were probably made at Broad Lane.
The Dunhill business was successful and grew much bigger in the 1800s. In the early 1900s it moved to a purpose-built factory on Front Street.
At the end of the 1900s, German sweet company Haribo bought Dunhill's.
Haribo still make Pontefract Cakes in the old Dunhill factory. Today, they use machines, not ‘thumpers’.
See incredible objects from Pontefract's past at Pontefract Museum! The museum is free entry and open year round.
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