Devon village shop pours cider down drain in angry protest

The owner of a shop in a village where Inch’s cider was first made before it was taken over by a national company has defiantly refused to stock the cider and instead poured it all down the drain. Redmond Hanlon has run local Londis supermarket The Bakery Stores in Winkleigh for 38 years and is more than familiar with the village’s historic links with the now nationally popular cider brand.

The original creator of Inch’s cider was a postman named Sam Inch, who launched the brand in 1916. After being passed on to Sam’s son Derek, the cider factory was later sold and by the time it was taken over by Bulmers in 1996 it was a multi-billion dollar business.




The Winkleigh site closed two years later, but cider production in the village was revived by the determined David Bridgman, who joined Sam at the age of 15. The Winkleigh Cider Company was born and named Sam’s Cider in honor of its original founder.

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David is still very involved with the company, but its day-to-day management is now in the safe hands of Kylie Beardon, David’s daughter, and her husband Chris. Sam’s Cider is now recognized in its own right and has won many awards.

So when a delivery of Inch’s cider recently arrived at The Bakery Stores, Redmond staged his own protest against the way the Inch’s name was being removed from the village.


The bakery shops in Winkleigh(Image: Google Maps)

Redmond, who runs the store with his wife Lin and stepson Ben Kitchen, explains: “We are an independent store but we use the Londis name and they supply products to us. We accept from them what we allocate once a month mention, what an incentive. They send us things we might like. If you agree, you get a discount.

“Some we don’t like, like American beer, and some other things sell very slowly. But Inch’s cider is where we put our foot down, because Bulmer’s were extremely unpleasant to the village and it seemed like they didn’t care who worked there.” there and they shut it down.

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