Cranswick plc

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FormerlyCranswick Mill Group p.l.c. (1972–1991)[1]
Company typePublic
ISINGB0002318888 Edit this on Wikidata
Cranswick plc
FormerlyCranswick Mill Group p.l.c. (1972–1991)[1]
Company typePublic
ISINGB0002318888 Edit this on Wikidata
IndustryFood
Founded1972
HeadquartersHull,
England
Key people
RevenueIncrease £2,723.3 million (2025)[2]
Increase £190.6 million (2025)[2]
Increase £134.3 million (2025)[2]
Number of employees
12,268 (2025)[2]
Websitecranswick.plc.uk

Cranswick plc is a United Kingdom food producer and supplier of premium, fresh and added-value food products. The company is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index.

Cranswick was founded by Jim Bloom, Mike Field and twenty-one other East Riding of Yorkshire farmers producing pig feed under the name Cranswick Mill in 1972.[1] The company subsequently diversified into food production. It was first listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1985.[3] In 1993 Cranswick diversified into pet products with the purchase of George Buckton and then, in 2009, sold its pet products business.[4] The company moved back to breeding and rearing its own British pigs after acquiring East Anglian Pigs Limited and livestock and assets from Dent Ltd in 2013.[5]

Cranswick has developed through a combination of acquisitions and subsequent organic growth, enabling the company to build upon its philosophy of working with artisan producers to provide premium, market leading products to a much wider audience. The company now serves its customers from twelve production facilities across the UK.[6]

On 25 July 2016, the company announced it had sold The Sandwich Factory Holdings Ltd for £15 million to Greencore.[7][8]

Animal abuse

On 11 March 2023, a site rearing pigs for Cranswick gained media attention after video emerged showing pigs living in squalor with others being left for hours to die. Footage showed bins filled with dead pigs and animals cannibalising each other.[9]

On 1 April 2024, footage emerged from a Cranswick site in Norfolk showing workers hitting pigs in the face and back before they entered a carbon dioxide gas chamber.[10] After reviewing the footage the RSPCA stated "alternatives to CO2 [gas chambers] need to be developed as a matter of urgency and we urge the UK government to follow the EU's lead to seek a phase-out by investing in research to find a more humane alternative". Protesters occupied the site on 3 April 2024.[11]

In May 2025 undercover filming at a Red Tractor certified pig farm operated by the company observed numerous examples of cruelty including piglets being killed by being grabbed by their hind legs and smashed on to the floor.[12]

In August 2025 further undercover footage from another Red Tractor certified Cranswick facility documented numerous examples of pigs being routinely struck with force and going without necessary veterinary care when injured.[13]

Acquisitions

  • 2001: Continental Fine Foods[14]
  • 2003: Cranswick plc acquires The Sandwich Factory[15]
  • 2005: Perkins Chilled Foods[16]
  • 2006: Delico, a cooked meats producer[17]
  • 2009: Bowes of Norfolk[18]
  • 2012: Kingston Foods, a cooked meats business[19]
  • 2013: East Anglian Pigs Ltd and Dent Ltd, pig rearing businesses[20]
  • 2014: Benson Park, a premium cooked poultry business[21]
  • 2016: CCL Holdings Limited and Crown Chicken Limited, a leading integrated poultry producer[22]
  • 2016: Dunbia Ballymena, a leading Northern Irish pork processing business[23]
  • 2019: Katsouris Brothers, a London-based Mediterranean food producer[24]
  • 2021: Ramona's Kitchen (Watford-based Ramona manufacturer of plant-based dips and Mediterranean foods) and Atlantica UK (Exeter-based importer of continental produce)[25]

Operations

References

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