Peter Pan Chocolates McCormick's Box
DimensionsOverall: 11 x 21 x 6.4 cm
Credit LineGift of Mrs. Eleanor Somerville, London, Ontario, 1975
Object number1975.009.002
Label TextThomas McCormick emigrated from Ireland about 1849. He settled briefly in Buffalo, where he met his future wife, and then moved in the ealry 1850s to London, where he worked for several years as a grocery clerk. In 1858, he began manufacturing confectionary - primarily hard candy - on a small scale for local, wholesale distribution, pitting himself against another London confectioner, Daniel Simmons Perrin, who had established his business four years earlier.
McCormick's was one of the first Canadian manufacturers of food products to adopt unit packaging for retail sales when, in 1880, the company began distributing soda-biscuits in three-pound paperboard boxes. Prior to this time, biscuits were distributed to retail stores in bulk. In the 1890s, McCormick adopted another marketing technique: the use of trade names and trademarks. He began distributing Jersey Cream Sodas, a premium product so named to differentiate it from his standard goods, but also to form a link with the consumer who was expected to recognize its superior qualities and remain loyal to the brand.
This box is made by another London business, Somerville Box Company. To begin, the McCormick’s Biscuit Company was C. R. Somerville’s only customer. Soon, workers in his factory turned out boxes for milliners, jewellers, druggists, corset makers, hardware merchants, and more.
NamePackage, Product
After 1913