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W Gadsby & Son Ltd

W Gadsby & Son Ltd
Limited company
Industry Wholesale, Baskets
Founded London, England 1864
Founder William Gadsby
Headquarters Bridgwater, United Kingdom
Products Wicker Baskets, Gift Packaging
Website www.gadsby.co.uk

W Gadsby & Son Ltd is an English manufacturer and importer of wicker baskets and gift packaging. The company was established in 1864. It is based in Bridgwater, Somerset.

The company was founded by William Gadsby in Stratford, London, in the year 1864. The business sold wicker items from a shop in Gurney Road. During World War Two the original shop was bombed, and the company chose to relocate to the Somerset Levels. This location was chosen due to the prevalence of willow growth in the area, a low lying wetland region.

During World War Two the company was employed by the Ministry of Defence to produce airborne panniers, large wicker baskets that were filled with supplies and munitions and dropped to troops by plane. The company opened a new store in Somerset, near the village of Burrowbridge at the side of the A361 road. During the 1970s much passing trade was lost as a result of the creation of the new M5 Motorway.

In 1988 the company was the subject of a documentary by Transition Vision. Willow focused on the willow industry on the Somerset Levels, covering areas such as cultivation and basket making. Until the mid-1990s the business was predominantly a producer of large baskets for use as picnic hampers and employed around 25 weavers. Many of these hampers were used in new cars, such as those sold by Rolls-Royce.

Due to the low nature of the Somerset Levels, with much of the area at or below sea level, the business was regularly damaged by winter flooding. When exposed to water the wicker products became mouldy and had to be discarded on a number of occasions. This resulted in the movement of the business to a new facility near Bridgwater in 2002.

A 1996 article in the UK Financial Times examined the history of the business, as well as the shift to imported goods at that time. It also covered the issue of flooding and its effects upon the business. By 1996, W Gadsby & Son were importing around 100,000 willow hampers each year, the majority of which were from Eastern Europe. The worst flood to affect the company came during the winter of 1995, when a large amount of stock was lost during flooding that covered the Somerset Levels. Although willow thrives under wet conditions, the stock became contaminated when exposed to flood water and could not be sold.


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