Dickinson Robinson Group


The Dickinson Robinson Group or DRG was a listed British paper, printing and packaging company founded in 1966 as a result of a merger of John Dickinson Stationery Ltd and E. S. & A. Robinson Ltd, creating one of the world's largest stationery and packaging companies. Products with a high public profile included Sellotape, which it owned in the 1960s to 1980s, and Basildon Bond, which dated from 1911.
In 1978 DRG took over the Royal Sovereign group of companies.
In 1989 Roland Franklin acquired DRG's packaging business with a leveraged buyout worth £900 million and the assets of that company were stripped. In 1992 the packaging business was acquired by Bowater-Scott.
The John Dickinson stationery business was acquired by DS Smith in 1996 and in turn in 2005 by Hamelin, a French company.

Paper cup production

DRG Cups manufactured and distributed disposable paper cups throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, but with the emergence of the plastic cup, which could be produced more economically and was of higher quality, the company began to decline. This led to the closure of its production plant in Liverpool in 1983, as it proved too costly for DRG Cups to maintain a competitive position. The company was eventually bought out by Polarcup, which opened a new paper cup manufacturing plant in Devizes, Wiltshire, in 1984.