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Clyde Wharf Sugar Refinery

From London's Ghost Acres


The sugar refinery at Clyde Wharf in Silvertown began producing sugar in 1864. It was, at the time, the largest and most profitable sugar refinery in London; producing up to 2 thousand tons of sugar per week. Interestingly, it was also capable of producing small amounts of potash from the crude solutions of sugar. Ultimately, the Clyde Wharf refinery would not survive into the 20th century as the other refineries at Silvertown, as stiff competition from cheaper German sugar forced it to cease production in 1886. It was ultimately destroyed in a fire in 1893.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Duncan_%28art_collector%29 http://archive.org/stream/sugarcanebeetobj00martuoft/sugarcanebeetobj00martuoft_djvu.txt https://books.google.ca/books?id=gEkDAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA500&lpg=PA500&dq=clyde+wharf+suga&source=bl&ots=i6tfn4NAni&sig=gaNiQnu9U1HjWH68j4AA3W7S8-Y&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CDkQ6AEwBmoVChMIht699Nb-xwIVDaKICh3P8wLZ#v=onepage&q=clyde%20wharf%20suga&f=false http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/James_Duncan


Operation

1864 to 1886


Location

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Located in

London


Produced

Sugar, potash


Used Raw Materials

Sugar beets


Ownership

From To Owner
1864 1886 James Duncan


Industry

From To Industry
1864 1886 Food Industry