Record Details
NHER Number: | 55686 |
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Type of record: | Monument |
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Name: | Cantley Sugar Factory |
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Summary
Dutch built factory for the refining of sugar beet into granular sugar.
Images - none
Location
Grid Reference: | TG 3851 0342 |
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Map Sheet: | TG30SE |
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Parish: | CANTLEY, BROADLAND, NORFOLK |
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Full description
Built in 1912 by a Dutch company, it ran at a loss and closed in 1916. After the First World War sugar imports from the continent dried up, so the English Beet Sugar Corporation was founded and in 1920 the factory at Cantley was reopened. As of 1999 (date of survey) the factory had a permanent workforce of 112, often doubling in the processing season. The factory was supplied by nearly 900 sugar beet farmers from a radius of over 40 miles. Production averaged a processing rate of 8,200 tonnes of beet a day. The machinery generates enough motive power to drive dynamos, which supply enough electricity to run the factory systems without help from the national grid.
Over its century long history the site has been vastly expanded to its current 200 hectares.
See (S1).
W. Arnold (HES), 15 June 2011.
Monument Types
- SUGAR REFINERY (Early 20th Century to 21st Century - 1912 AD to 2100 AD)
Associated Finds - none
Protected Status - none
Sources and further reading
<S1> | Archive: NIAS. Norfolk Industrial Archaeology Society Records. |
Related records - none