Artificial poppies for the first poppy appeal in 1921 were imported from France by Madame
Anna Guérin. In 1922 the Disabled Society, a charity established in 1920 by Major
George Howson MC and Major
Jack Cohen, received a grant of £2,000 from the
British Legion's Unity Relief Fund to employ
disabled ex-service personnel to make remembrance poppies in England. Later that year, Howson wrote to his parents, "I do not think it can be a great success, but it is worth trying. I consider the attempt ought to be made if only to give the disabled their chance." They set up in a former collar factory on the
Old Kent Road in London. Soon the factory was employing 50 disabled veterans. In November 1924, the
Prince of Wales (later
Edward VIII) visited the Poppy Factory, which made 27 million poppies that year. Most of the employees were disabled, and by then there was a long waiting list for prospective employees. The old collar factory eventually proved too small as demand increased, and in 1926 the factory moved to a disused brewery in Petersham Road, Richmond, Surrey. The Poppy Factory organised the first annual
Field of Remembrance at
Westminster Abbey in 1928. The current Art Deco Poppy Factory building was built on the brewery site and was completed in 1933. In November 2016, former chief executive Melanie Waters became the chief executive of
Help for Heroes charity. Deirdre Mills was later appointed the new chief executive; she had previously been a Director at the
Commonwealth War Graves Commission. In July 2017,
Queen Elizabeth II visited the factory to celebrate the charity's 90th anniversary. In February 2024,
Queen Camilla held a reception at Clarence House to mark the Poppy Factory's centenary. ==Lady Haig's Poppy Factory in Scotland==