Factory-tour offer honoured 48 years later

Marilyn Bethell (62) at the Cadbury factory in Dunedin, with her 1969 letter inviting her to tour...
Marilyn Bethell (62) at the Cadbury factory in Dunedin, with her 1969 letter inviting her to tour the facility. Photo by Peter McIntosh.
Finally, a Cadbury story with a sweet ending.

Marilyn Bethell had just turned 14 when she found 5c on the floor of the family car.

It was 1969 and 5c was a lot of money in those days.

Knowing she would get into trouble for spending it, she snuck down to her local dairy in New Plymouth and bought a block of Cadbury peppermint chocolate.

''Of course, when I got it home, the chocolate bar was all white and I had to sort of 'fess up. It had been melted somehow.

''I asked Mum if I could still eat it and she suggested we send it back to the factory.''

Upset at the quality of the product, she wrote a letter of complaint to Cadbury Fry Hudson Ltd (as it was known then) in Dunedin.

And in response, she was sent a letter from the company, which reimbursed her with another block of Cadbury peppermint chocolate, the 5c cost of postage for her original letter, and the offer of a free tour of the Dunedin factory to see how the chocolate was made.

This week, nearly 50 years after receiving the offer, she travelled from her home in Wanganui to take the tour.

''My daughter finished university, so I've come down and I've bought a van in Dunedin, and we're taking all her stuff back up to the North Island.

''I haven't been here since I was 8. I've never really had an opportunity to come back and cash the letter in.

''I'm sorry to hear the factory is going. I thought, if I don't do it now, I'll never get another chance.''

Ms Bethell said the tour was ''marvellous''.

''They [Cadbury] gave myself, my partner and my daughter a free hot chocolate and a free tour of the factory.

''I felt like Charlie with his golden ticket.''

She said the van ride home would be arduous, ''but at least we'll have plenty of chocolate treats to munch on on the way back''.

john.lewis@odt.co.nz

Comments

Cadbury must be scratching trying to find some positive blurb for local consumption.

Bottom line is Cadbury don't care about Dunedin and after the plant closes they will quickly forget about New Zealand. New Zealanders should forget about Cadbury just as quickly.

 

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