About Trebor Extra Strong Peppermint Mints Roll
About Trebor Extra Strong Peppermint Mints Roll
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The story of Trebor Extra Strong Peppermint Mints Roll
The Roll That Means Business
Trebor Extra Strong Peppermint Mints are not shy little handbag mints. They are the sort of mint that announces itself with brisk authority, clears the cobwebs, and makes you sit slightly straighter. The roll format is part of the ritual: twist, tap one out, offer one round if you are feeling generous, then put the rest back in a coat pocket where they will make a small, familiar rattle. For many British shoppers, these are not just mints. They are newsagent-counter mints, glove-box mints, long-train-journey mints, and “someone in the family always had a roll” mints.
Read the full story
When Trebor Was Mint Royalty
By the middle of the 1980s, Trebor was the British market leader in branded mints and boiled sweets, which helps explain why a roll of Extra Strong Peppermints feels so deeply lodged in the national memory. In December 1985, Trebor acquired Maynards, adding another famous confectionery name to its orbit. Then, on 14 September 1989, Cadbury Schweppes bought Trebor for £147 million. That sort of corporate shuffling can make sweet history look tidier than it really was, but in this case it does help explain why the Trebor name stayed visible on British mint shelves while the business behind it moved into larger confectionery families.
From Forest Gate, With a Backwards Name
The Trebor story began much earlier than those 1980s boardroom moments. The company was founded in 1907 by W.B. Woodcock, Thomas Henry King, Robert Robertson, and Sydney Herbert Marks, all from Leytonstone. Its first factory was on Katherine Road in Forest Gate, London, then in south-west Essex. The name Trebor is Robert spelt backwards, taken from Robert Robertson and registered as a trademark shortly after the First World War. It is a wonderfully British bit of naming: practical, slightly odd, and somehow more memorable than anything a modern branding meeting might produce after six weeks and a large invoice.
Factories, Sweets, and a Fair Bit of Grit
Trebor grew from its East London beginnings into a larger confectionery business, with a dedicated Trebor Works at Forest Gate by the 1930s and another factory opened in Chesterfield in 1939. The Katherine Road factory was hit by a German bomb in April 1944, a reminder that even sweet factories had to live through the same wartime Britain as everyone else. Later, Trebor became known for mints, boiled sweets, and other sturdy corner-shop favourites. The company was family-run for generations, and accounts of its working culture suggest a paternalistic streak, which is the sort of phrase that sounds respectable until you remember factories are always more complicated than the company brochure.
The Minty Bit Stronger School of British Confectionery
Trebor’s old advertising line, “Trebor mints are a minty bit stronger”, lodged itself neatly in British popular memory. It suited the product: not fancy, not delicate, just properly peppermint and rather pleased about it. Extra Strong Peppermints sit squarely in that tradition. They belong to the same world as paper rounds, petrol stations, office drawers, grandparents’ cars, and the small shelf near the till where you bought something “just in case”. They are not trying to be a pudding or a lifestyle choice. They are mints, and they know the job.
A Small Roll of Home
For British expats in Canada, a roll of Trebor Extra Strong Peppermints can do a surprising amount of emotional work for something so compact. It is the weight of it in a pocket, the white-and-blue familiarity, the peppermint hit that tastes like a school trip coach, a railway platform, or the sweet aisle at the corner shop. Not grand nostalgia, just the useful everyday sort. The Great British Shop keeps these on hand for precisely that quiet little moment when only the proper British mint will do.