Weet-Bix was developed by Bennison Osborne in
Sydney, Australia, in the mid-1910s. Osborne set out to make a product more palatable than Granose, a biscuit that was marketed by the Sanitarium Health Food Company at that time. On 19 August 1926, he lodged an application for registration of the trademark Weet-Bix, a name which he had devised. Production began at 659 Parramatta Road,
Leichhardt, under the management of Osborne, and with the financial backing of Arthur Shannon, who created the company Grain Products to manufacture the cereal. Osborne's friend, Malcolm Ian Macfarlane, from New Zealand, joined him to take on a marketing role. The product was so successful that, in October 1928, Shannon sold the rights in the product to the Australasian Conference Association Limited (Sanitarium Health Food Company, a wholly owned subsidiary and venture of the
Seventh-day Adventist Church in Australia). Macfarlane suggested that they ship the product to New Zealand, where it proved so successful that it became difficult to adequately supply the market from Australia. Osborne and MacFarlane went to New Zealand and established factories in Auckland and Christchurch. However, once again, Shannon sold out to the Australasian Conference Association Limited. Osborne and Macfarlane then exported the product to
South Africa and, with Shannon's financial backing, went to that country and built a factory in
Cape Town, with Osborne managing sales. That enterprise was also sold subsequently, this time to
Bokomo. While in South Africa, Osborne and Macfarlane sought to obtain more satisfactory financial backing to secure Osborne's product. A group was formed, Osborne refined the product, and he and Macfarlane went to England to establish the product there. The British & African Cereal Company, Ltd. was registered in London in 1932, as a private company, with the proprietor shown as
Weetabix Limited of Weetabix Mills,
Kettering. All shares in the company were specified to be under the control of the directors, the first of whom were Bennison Osborne, Malcolm Ian Macfarlane, Alfred Richard Upton and Arthur Stanley Scrutton. ==Varieties==