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Chad Valley (toy brand)

Chad Valley
Subsidiary
Industry Retail
Founded Early 19th Century
Headquarters Birmingham (formerly), Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire
Parent Home Retail Group
Website Home Retail Group

Chad Valley is a long-established brand of toys in the United Kingdom owned by Home Retail Group.

The company has its roots in a printing business established by Anthony Bunn Johnson in Birmingham in the early 19th century. Under the management of his son Joseph and grandson Alfred the company moved to the suburb of Harborne, in the valley of a stream called the Chad, giving its name to the Chad Valley district, from which the company name is derived.

Chad Valley made a decision to expand their range to soft toys before World War I. They mass-produced their new Teddy bears in Harborne

In 1938 the company received a royal warrant as 'Toymakers to H.M. The Queen'. When Princess Elizabeth acceded to the throne in 1952 the warrant was changed to read 'Toymakers to H.M. Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother'.

The company moved away from manufacturing toys in the Second World War. Instead they produced goods to help the war effort such as wooden instrument cases, cases for the barrels of anti-aircraft guns, hospital beds and electrical coils and starters.

In 1945 the company resumed toy production. Tin plate toys were produced for the first time although manufacture was outsourced to Metal Box Ltd, a company with the skills and machinery needed to produce printed toys. This new tin plate range was such a success that in 1946 the company moved production in-house. They purchased the Birmingham metalworking company AS Cartwright Ltd to cut and fold metal, Winfield Ltd to produce clockwork mechanisms and Barronia Metals Ltd and True to Type Products Ltd to produce precision engineering equipment.

The radio broadcaster Kenneth Horne was Chairman and Managing Director of the company from 1956 to 1958.

The company was one of the UK's leading toymakers for most of the 20th century, by 1960 it was operating seven factories and employing over 1,000 people. In the 1970s however it closed several factories and cuts were made in staffing and production, 1975 saw only two factories remaining. The company was taken over by Palitoy in 1978.


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