Christian F. Kehlet

Christian F. Kehlet was a Danish chocolate company based in Copenhagen, Denmark. The company was from 1873 based at Jagtvej 83-85 in Nørrebro. It was merged with Brødrene Cloëtta in 1929 and the factory on Jagtvej closed the following year.

Christian F. Kehlet poster

History

Christian Kehlet

The factory was founded by Christian Kehlet (1785-1846) in 1825.[1] Christian Kehlet was originally a tea and porcelain merchant. His chocolate factory may initially have been located in the groundfloor of Pilestræde 98 (later No. 11 and now replaced by the Illum Department Store)[2] but it was from 1830 based at Østergade 34. The machinery was from the beginning operated by steam engines.[3] The factory was later located at Gothersgade 25.

Advert for the "Steam Chocolate Factory Gothersgade 25"

Kehlet opened a salon with live music four nights a week in the Erichsen Mansion on Kongens Nytorv in 1840..[4] He acquired the entertainment venue Alleenberg on Frederiksberg Allé in 1841 and established a large amusement park at the site..[5]

Kehlet's son Christian F. Kehlet (1814-1882) was made a partner in the company in 1844. A new granite rolling mill arrived from Paris in 1885. Christian Kehlet's death the following year left his son as the sole owner of the company.

Interior of the Kejlet factory in 1890

The company was after Christian G. Kehlet's death in 1882 continued by his widow. A new factory at Jagtvej 85-87 was inaugurated in 1887. It was in 1888 acquired by H. G. M. Hansen (born 1849). Max Hey was from 1918 managing director of the company.

Christian F. Kehlet was in 1929 converted into a limited company had from then on the same owners as Brødrene Cloëtta. Max Hey was from then on managing director of both companies which were based at Brødrene Cloëtta's headquarters at Hørsholmsgade 20.[6] he factory on Jagtvej closed in 1930.[7]

Today

Hørsholmsgade 20 in Copenhagen

The Kehlet brand is still produced by now Sweden-based confectionary company Cloetta.

The company's former chocolate factory at Hørsholmsgade has survived.

gollark: I'm sure there's ridiculously long-lived chemical waste from stuff which people completely ignore too.
gollark: I mean, people complain it'll be around for a while, but... so what? There isn't a massive amount of it.
gollark: Plus fast breeder reactors.
gollark: Indeed. There's not *that much* of it.
gollark: Politicians are somewhat bad, but if people weren't blindly anti-nuclear we probably would end up with more nuclear power.

References

  1. "Christian F. Kehlet A/S". coneliand.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  2. "Christian Kehlet" (in Danish). Politivennen. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  3. Annette Hoffwebsite=videnskab.dk. "Flødebollen rejste til Danmark fra Amerika" (in Danish). Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  4. C. A. Clemmensen. "Tivoli gennem 75 år". gravsted.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  5. "Christian Kehlet". gravsted.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  6. "Jacobsens & Saabye's Eftf" (PDF). rosekamp.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  7. "Der var engang – på Nørrebro" (in Danish). Nørrebro Handelsforening. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
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