On our first full day in Ireland we will visit Waterford Ireland. Waterford Ireland is known for Waterford Crystal.
Here is a little information.
Click on this link check out a tour. http://www.waterfordvisitorcentre.com/waterford-crystal-factory-tour
Waterford
Crystal is a
manufacturer of crystal. It is named
after the city of Waterford, Ireland.
Waterford Crystal is owned by WWRD Group Holdings
Ltd, a luxury goods group which also owns and operates the Wedgwood and Royal
Doulton brands.
In January 2009
its Waterford base was closed down due to the bankruptcy of the Wedgwood Group.
After several difficulties and takeovers, it re-emerged later that year. In
June 2010, Waterford Crystal relocated almost back to its original roots, on
The Mall in Waterford City. This new location is now home to a manufacturing
facility that melts over 750 tonnes of crystal a year. This new facility offers
visitors the opportunity to take guided tours of the factory and also offers a
retail store, showcasing the world's largest collection of Waterford Crystal.
The origins of
the crystal production in Waterford dates back to 1783[1] when George
and William
Penrose started their business. It produced extremely fine flint glass that became world-renowned. However,
their company closed in 1851.[2]
In 1947, Czech
immigrant Charles Bacik,
grandfather of Irish senator Ivana Bacik,
established a glass works in the city, due to the superb reputation of the
original glassware.[citation needed] Skilled
crystal workers were not available in Ireland so continental Europeans were
used. Aided by fellow countryman and designer Miroslav Havel,[3] the company started operations in a depressed Ireland.
By the early 1950s it had been taken over as a subsidiary of the Irish
Glass Bottle company, owned by Joseph McGrath,
Richard Duggan and Spencer Freeman of the Irish Hospitals'
Sweepstake, heavy investors in Irish business at that time.[4]
In 1970 John
Aynsley and Sons was taken over by Waterford and renamed Aynsley China Ltd.
Jasper Conran began designing his signature range
of crystal for Waterford in 1999. The endeavour has evolved into four unique
lines for Waterford and a complementary tableware collection in fine bone china
for Wedgwood in 2001. In May 2005, Waterford Wedgwood announced the closure of
its factory in Dungarvan in order to
consolidate all operations into the main factory in Kilbarry, Waterford City,
where 1,000 people were employed by the company.
Waterford
Crystal Limited was, until March 2009, a subsidiary of Waterford Wedgwood
plc, itself formed through the acquisition by the then Waterford Glass Group of
the famous pottery manufacturer Josiah Wedgwood in 1986. The last chairman was Tony O'Reilly, and the CEO John Foley. The
leading shareholders of the holding company were former billionaire O'Reilly
and his family, joined in the last decade by O'Reilly's brother-in-law, Greek
shipping heir Peter
Goulandris. Waterford Wedgwood was forced into receivership in early
2009. On 5 January 2009, news of the receivership of Waterford Wedgwood Ltd.
was announced in Ireland and the UK.[5]
On 30 January
2009 it was announced that the Waterford Crystal plant in Kilbarry was to shut
down immediately, despite earlier promises to discuss any such move with the
unions in advance. The Kilbarry operation featured a tourist centre offering
guided tours of the factory, a gift shop, café, and gallery. Many of the
employees performed an unofficial sit-in[6] The sit-in made the BBC News,[7] hoping to prevail upon receiver Deloitte to retain those
jobs.[8] On 4 February 2009, there were protests across the city
at how the workers were being treated. On 27 February 2009, the receiver, David Carson of Deloitte,
confirmed US equity firm KPS Capital were to purchase certain overseas assets
and businesses of the Waterford Wedgwood Group.[9] The sit in ended in March, 2009 after workers agreed to
split a payment of €10m.[10] The fight by the workers to keep the factory open is
chronicled in a PBS online documentary.[11]
Under the
receivership managed by Deloitte, ownership of most
of Waterford Wedgwood plc's assets was transferred to KPS Capital Partners
in March 2009. Waterford Crystal, along with Wedgwood, Royal Doulton, and other brands, were transferred
to the new company WWRD Holdings Ltd.[12] The sale did not include the factory or visitor centre
in Kilbary, Ireland. The visitor centre shut its doors on 22 January 2010.[13] A new visitor and manufacturing facility opened in June
2010.[14]
On 11 May 2015 in a deal expected to close July
2015, the Fiskars Corporation, a Finnish maker of home
products, agreed to buy 100% of the holdings of WWRD
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