Otago Daily Times

Treasure trove of history saved from Cadbury demolition

- MIKE HOULAHAN DEMOLITION CREW @ Page 27

ARCHAEOLOG­ISTS have not stuck a trowel in the dirt on the former Cadbury factory site yet, but have already unearthed a treasure trove of precious historical material.

Their prize find has been 16 books containing the business records of Hudson & Co, the Dunedin biscuit and confection­ery firm that was founded in 1899 and merged with Cadbury and Fry in 1929.

‘‘When [demolition contractor] Ceres were clearing out the buildings, they came across them and set them aside for us to have a look,’’ New Zealand Heritage Properties principal archaeolog­ist Megan Lawrence said.

‘‘We do find some quite extraordin­ary things on archaeolog­ical sites right around the country, but this was really something.’’

The books, found abandoned in a secondfloo­r office cupboard, date back to 1899.

An opening handwritte­n entry records: ‘‘A meeting of the Directors of this Company was held at the office of R Hudson & Co, Moray Place Dunedin on Monday the 20th February 1899 at 4pm.’’

Amid the shareholdi­ng certificat­es, meeting minutes, wage books and other material is a documentar­y history of a small business that became a family firm before joining a multinatio­nal company.

There are records of upgrades and repairs to workers’ cottages originally on the site, the firm’s first automobile purchase in 1913 — although it hedged its bets on the new technology by also upgrading its stables — and the impact of world wars on the firm’s fortunes.

‘‘There’s someone’s masters or PhD thesis right there, and now they will be available for the historians of the future,’’ Ms Lawrence said.

It was still to be decided where the Hudson company records would be housed.

Archaeolog­ists have also documented and photograph­ed the former factory prior to demolition and as its structures have been pulled apart.

‘‘There are other things we have found like old bottles and old doors; things which weren’t clearly visible when we did our first walk through,’’ Ms Lawrence said.

Digging the history beneath the Cadbury factory, which was originally harboursid­e land, has to await the demolition of the buildings on site.

Archaeolog­ists will soon turn their attention to the adjacent, largely demolished, former Wilson car park site.

‘‘On that site, there was extensive residentia­l developmen­t in the 1860s and ’70s.

‘‘We’re really excited to be able to compare between the deeply industrial Cadbury block and the history of human occupation right next door.’’

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