About Hartley's Black Cherry Jam
About Hartley's Black Cherry Jam
Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage
IngredientsIngrédients
AllergensAllergènes
May contain: fragments of fruit stones.
Peut contenir : fragments of fruit stones.
StorageConservation
Frequently asked questions about Hartley's Black Cherry Jam
More about Hartley's Black Cherry Jam
Additional Information
Packaging Accuracy. We keep product information as accurate and up to date as possible. Manufacturers sometimes change packaging, ingredients, nutritional information, allergen advice, pack sizes or branding without notice, so the product you receive may look slightly different from the images shown. If you have a question about ingredients or allergens before ordering, please get in touch and we will gladly check for you.
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The story of Hartley's Black Cherry Jam
A black cherry jar with very little fuss
Hartley’s Black Cherry Jam is not the sort of thing that needs a grand entrance. It is a dark, glossy cupboard regular, the kind that sits behind the tea bags until someone makes toast and suddenly remembers exactly why it was bought. Black cherry has a slightly deeper, richer character than the school-lunch strawberry and raspberry brigade, but it still belongs firmly in the sensible British jam tradition. On toast, in a sponge, with rice pudding, or applied to a scone with the seriousness that only jam can provoke, it does the job without trying to be clever.
Read the full story
The Hartley’s story starts with a missing jam delivery
There is no well-sourced separate origin tale for this particular black cherry jar, so the honest story is the Hartley’s one. It is a good one, fortunately. The business began in 1871 when a supplier failed to deliver a consignment of jam, leaving William Pickles Hartley to make his own and pack it in earthenware pots of his own design. The jam sold well enough that, in 1874, the business moved to Bootle, near Liverpool, where marmalade and jelly were added to the range. By 1884 it had become William Hartley and Sons Limited, and in 1886 it moved again, this time to Aintree, Liverpool, where a new factory was built. Not bad for what was, essentially, a Victorian supply problem handled with a pan and some nerve.
Lancashire roots, Liverpool scale
Hartley’s began in Colne, Lancashire, a place that gives the brand a proper northern industrial setting rather than a polished marketing backstory. William Pickles Hartley was a grocer before he became a jam name, and that matters. This was not a product imagined in a boardroom with mood boards and a committee for lid colour. It grew from shopkeeping, supply, making do, and discovering that customers rather liked the result. The later move towards Liverpool put the business closer to larger transport links and a bigger industrial world. That is the sort of detail corporate histories often tidy into a neat sentence, but it tells you something useful: jam became a serious business because people bought it in serious quantities.
The jam village, because Victorians did not do small gestures
One of the more memorable Hartley’s details is the model village built at Aintree for key employees after the factory opened. It began with houses around a central bowling green and later expanded, with streets named after jam ingredients. Sugar Street, Red Currant Court and Cherry Row sound as though someone let a breakfast table name a housing estate, which is oddly pleasing. Hartley was also known for a more paternal kind of Victorian philanthropy, including profit-sharing, medical care for employees and civic giving connected to hospitals and universities. It is still business history, so best not to sprinkle it with too much fairy dust, but it does place Hartley’s among those nineteenth-century food firms where factory, family name and social ambition all got mixed together in the same preserving pan.
How the modern Hartley’s name settled on the label
Like many British grocery names, Hartley’s did not travel in a straight line from Victorian shelves to today’s supermarket aisle. The business was bought by Schweppes in 1959, and production later shifted to Cambridgeshire in the 1960s. The Hartley’s name also became part of a wider jam and marmalade family through later ownership changes. Premier Foods once owned the brand, and in 2004 it replaced the Chivers name on jams and marmalades with Hartley’s. In 2012, Hartley’s and the Histon factory were sold to Hain Celestial, with the brand operating under Hain Daniels in the UK. That lineage helps explain why the modern packet name carries old recognition while sitting inside a much more tangled grocery family. British jam history is rarely as tidy as the label suggests.
Why it still matters when you are far from home
For British shoppers in Canada, Hartley’s Black Cherry Jam is less about studying Victorian industry and more about getting the right jar on the breakfast table. It is the sort of thing that reminds people of grandparents’ cupboards, Saturday toast, village-hall baking, and the mild household scandal of someone leaving crumbs in the butter. Black cherry may not shout as loudly as raspberry or strawberry, but it has its loyalists, and they tend to know exactly what they are after. A familiar Hartley’s jar can make a Canadian kitchen feel briefly, stubbornly British, which is useful when the weather is doing its own strange thing outside. The Great British Shop will quietly leave it there, ready for toast, scones, and all the small arguments about how much jam is reasonable.