Candy Buttons, Candy Dots, or Pox are small rounded flat pegs of candy that are attached to a strip of paper. This classic sugar candy was originally introduced by the Cumberland Valley company and J Sudak and Son of Williamsburg, Brooklyn. In 1977, Sudak, which changed its name to Uncle Nibbles Candy Factory, sold to a repackager in Manhattan named CeeDee Candy, they sold to NECCO. After that acquisition, Necco bought the Cumberland Valley Company in 1980, which made them the exclusive manufacturer of this product in the United States. Each strip of the candy includes three flavors: cherry (pink), lime (blue), and lemon (yellow). Candy Buttons come in two strip sizes: long and short. The long is 221⁄2 inches, while the short is 111⁄4 inches. NECCO made 750 million candy buttons in the course of a year.[1] Following NECCO's 2018 bankruptcy, Candy Buttons were bought at auction by Cincinnati's Doscher's Candies.[2] They were subsequently the first former Necco candy back to market.[3]
Engineer and inventor George Theofiel Dib is credited with the invention of the candy button machine.[4]
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edit- ^ "Necco Candy". Archived from the original on 2015-12-31. Retrieved 2016-01-11.
We make approximately 750 million NECCO candy buttons each year.
- ^ Brownfield, Andy (27 September 2018). "Cincinnati candy company acquires childhood favorite". Cincinnati Business Courier.
- ^ "Candy Buttons Are First NECCO Candy to Return, Thanks to Doscher's". CandyStore.com. 2019-03-06. Retrieved 2019-03-20.
- ^ Rubino, Anthony (2010). Why didn't I think of that? : 101 inventions that changed the world by hardly trying. Avon, Mass.: Adams Media. p. 61. ISBN 978-1-4405-0010-7.