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Anthony-Thomas Easter Open House, with tours and the Bunny!

The Easter bunny is hopping back to town for a beloved Easter event! Anthony-Thomas Candies is holding its annual Anthony-Thomas Easter Open House at the candy factory on Saturday, March 16, 2024  from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. 

Anthony-Thomas Easter open house

Anthony-Thomas Easter Open House

Along with the free tour , you can expect an appearance by the Easter bunny , Easter eggs for the kids, and samples, along with special discounts at the factory retail store.

There will be one-day only specials which include chocolate covered strawberries, and many more! Get there early – this is a popular event!

Anthony-Thomas Tours

Can’t make it to the Anthony-Thomas Easter event? You can also take a factory tour at Anthony-Thomas throughout the year! 

Tours are available on select Tuesdays and Thursdays, from 9am to 3pm, but they must be scheduled online. Children 12 and under are $1.00 per person. Anyone over the age of 12 is $2.00 per person.

You’ll walk along the glass-enclosed “cat-walk” and watch nine lines that produce 30,000 pounds of chocolate PER SHIFT! The tour guides explain the process from start to finish. The tour finishes in the 2,500 square-foot retail shoppe. Everyone gets a sample!

Anthony thomas candy company tour

Anthony-Thomas Candies 1777 Arlingate Lane Columbus, Ohio  43228 1-877-CANDY-21

Check out our huge list of Easter Egg Hunts and activities !

Huge list of Easter Bunny Pictures, Easter Egg Hunts, and Easter in Columbus

Find more upcoming Easter Egg Hunts in Columbus

See our big list of Easter Egg Hunts, Bunny Visits, and other Easter fun , or see the growing list of options below: 

Anthony-Thomas Chocolate Factory

1777 Arlingate Lane Columbus , OH 43228

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Anthony Thomas Chocolates

Tours at Anthony Thomas Chocolates cost approx. $5/person.

  • Open for tours every Tuesday and Thursday from 10am – 2pm
  • Location: ( Map It ) 1777 Arling Gate Lane in Columbus, Ohio
  • Phone: 877-226-3921
  • Web: click here

Anthony Thomas Chocolates tours in Columbus:  Have you ever fantasized about visiting Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory? Well, in about an hour, you can almost taste it. Visitors can walk along a glass-enclosed suspended catwalk to see candy made at this 152,000-square-foot state-of-the-art candy factory. In one shift, 25,000 pounds of chocolate are produced. Even Augustus Loof would be left satisfied (sorry, no chocolate river here).

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Anthony Thomas Chocolates

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Anthony Thomas Chocolates - All You Need to Know BEFORE You Go (2024)

  • Mon - Fri 9:00 AM - 5:30 PM
  • Sat - Sat 11:00 AM - 5:00 PM
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Columbus, Ohio : Giant Buckeye, Chocolate Factory Tour

Anthony-Thomas chocolate factory gives tours, and sells the World's Largest Buckeye -- made of chocolate and peanut butter -- in its gift shop.

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Largest Buckeye.

The retail area of the Anthony-Thomas chocolate factory has a giant Buckeye for sale, made out of chocolate and peanut butter. From the looks of the case it (or a fresh version of it) is a pretty permanent fixture. According to the tour guide, they make the official OSU buckeyes and periodically donate these as fundraisers, or to serve at University functions. Incidentally, the factory gives a pretty interesting tour. It costs a small amount, but they give you a voucher for the same amount to spend on chocolate, so it's more or less free. Plus, you get a buckeye (normal size) to sample.

Buckeye.

Inside the Anthony Thomas Factory store is the World's Largest Buckeye made of chocolate, along with a bunch of other chocolate goodies. The best part is you can buy the buckeye for $3,500.

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Columbus Classics: Anthony-Thomas celebrates platinum jubilee with sweet deals

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Editor's note: This is the first in a series of stories highlighting iconic central Ohio businesses, Columbus Classics, to be featured in ThisWeek Community News.

Columbus-based Anthony-Thomas Candy Co. , 1777 Arlingate Lane, has been following its mission “to make the world a sweeter place ​–​​ one chocolate at a time” for 70 years.

Joseph Zanetos, company president who represents the family’s third generation, celebrated his 75 th birthday Sept. 25 and said he has no plans to retire.

“They will have to carry me out,” he said. “I love what I’m doing and anticipate continuing. I started as a young child. I never thought of doing anything else.”

He attributes the company’s longevity to the quality of the family’s sweet product.

“It has our name on it, so we’re very conscious of everything that we do and how we make it,” he said. “We use nothing but the best ingredients. We’ve also been blessed with the staff that we’ve had through the years.”

His daughter, Candi Trifelos, who’s vice president, said she also started working for the company as a young girl.

“I worked here in high school, off and on,” she said.

When she came home from college for Christmas her senior year, Trifelos said, her dad said a retirement within the company was forthcoming and if she was interested in working for the company, the job was hers after graduation.

“I did want to do it,” she said. “So the first 27 years (of 31 years), I ran the retail division. I loved it. I was on the road a lot. Marketing and merchandising is my favorite thing.”

Anthony-Thomas' presence in Greater Columbus

Trifelos said the company owns 13 retail stores in central Ohio, including one at the headquarters.

“Our candy can be purchased all over the United States, particularly our Buckeyes,” she said. “A lot of our assortments ship all over from our wholesale division.”

>> Find an Anthony-Thomas location <<

She said one treat the company still makes by hand is the chocolate-covered peanut patties.

But it’s the dark chocolate-covered cherries that are the favorite of Trifelos’ son, Nick, who joined the business as national sales manager almost three years ago.

“That’s my go-to,” he said. “I could have 12 in one sitting.”

Anthony and Thomas Zanetos, the company's cofounders, namesakes

He said the company’s cofounders and namesakes, Anthony and Thomas Zanetos, were his great-great-grandfather and great-grandfather, respectively, on his mother’s side.

That’s makes him the fifth generation working at the family business.

“The success of the company can be attributed to a strong family connection and being able to work well with all the people that are here,” he said. “I think we have, in my opinion, a very delicious product. I think we’ve always done what we felt would be best for the business.”

Nick Trifelos said he likes to say that his relatives were serial entrepreneurs. “They had a restaurant and a couple other small-business ventures,” he said.

“They always had homemade candy. They saw the homemade candy sold better than anything else. So they dropped everything and went strictly with chocolate.”

Nick Trifelos said the company’s community involvement and name recognition have helped the business stay "in the candy game."

Anthony-Thomas: 200 employees, 50,000-60,000 pounds of chocolate daily

“We have right around 200 employees,” he said.

The company averages between 50,000 and 60,000 pounds of chocolate on two shifts daily, according to Nick Trifelos.

He said the top seller is the peanut butter and chocolate Buckeye candies.

“We didn’t invent the Buckeye,” he said. “We like to say we perfected it. They’re a beautiful bite-size piece that we’ve been doing for about 20 years now.”

Behind the Buckeye in popularity is the English toffee.

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Anthony-Thomas 70th-anniversary specials in October

Monthlong specials in October commemorate the company’s 70 th anniversary at all 13 stores and the website , he said.

“Each week will be a different special,” he said. “Four different specials that are roughly a week long celebrate our platinum jubilee, is what we’re calling it. One week, we will do a special on our boxed cherries.”

He said customers will pay 70% of the cost. “You’ll take 30% off certain items each week,” he said.

Nick Trifielos said he hopes to remain employed at the candy company and gain the same respect as his mother and grandfather.

“A lot of people devote their time to building a business so they can retire,” he said. “We’re of the mentality, we don’t believe in retirement. We want to be here. This is what we love. This is our passion.”

Customers, employees who are sweet on Anthony-Thomas

Kelly Rice-Funk, an Anthony-Thomas customer who recently wished Zanetos a happy birthday on the company’s Facebook page , wrote, “I love Anthony Thomas so much! Every time I am in one of the stores, I am treated so well, everyone is so helpful and kind. All of your products taste amazing and are of the highest quality. I really appreciate a company that holds such high standards for their employees and products.”

Ny Erng, who has worked for Anthony-Thomas production for 29 years, said she loves her job, her boss and chocolate.

“I like everything,” added Monica Pel, a 36-year employee. “I love to work here.”

Candi Trifelos said she loves the employees. “They’re an extension of our family,” she said.

Half-hour tours at the chocolate factory are available by registering online at anthony-thomas.com/tours.html .

“We have a third-floor glassed-in catwalk that we built specifically for tours,” Nick Trifelos said.

“You get a free sample at the end and a coupon. The tour starts in our retail store, goes upstairs, overlooks a bird's-eye view of our production lines. You learn about the history of our company, where chocolate comes from and you get to see it with your own eyes. It’s a great experience for all ages.”

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Factory Tours

Celebrating american imagination and industry, 19 tours in ohio.

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WiM Ohio | Anthony Thomas Tour

Anthony Thomas Chocolates

* Registration open until 3/18/24 at 4:00 PM (EST)

Event Details

Join wim ohio for an, anthony thomas tour.

Ever wonder how chocolate is made? In about an hour, tour groups can experience candy making from start to finish in Anthony Thomas' 154,000 square-foot, state-of-the-art candy factory. Walk along a comfortable, glass-enclosed suspended "Cat-Walk" and observe nine lines producing 30,000 pounds of chocolates per shift. Experienced tour guides explain each process step-by-step from the kitchens to the final packaging. The tour finishes in their beautiful 2,500 square-foot retail shoppe. Best of all, everyone will leave with a free sample!!

Please Note:

  • Arrive 15-30 minutes early to network and sign-in, tour will begin at 10:00 a.m.

We can't wait to see you there!

For more information:.

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Anthony-Thomas Candy Co. marks 70 years

Product diversification, facility growth helps family-owned business thrive through challenges..

Nick, Candi and Joe

At-a-Glance

Headquarters: Columbus, Ohio

Facility: 152,000 sq. ft.

Employees: 200

Retail stores: 13

Leadership: Joe Zanetos, president; Candi Trifelos, vice president, Nick Trifelos, national sales, and marketing manager

Products made: Boxed chocolates, buckeyes, English toffee, caramels, cherry cordials, meltaway mints, buttercreams

Editor’s note: Longtime Candy Industry contributor Carla Zanetos Scully is related to Anthony-Thomas ownership.

Diversification has been key to success for Anthony-Thomas Candy Co. over the last 70 years.

The family-owned boxed chocolates business in Columbus, Ohio, started as a wholesaler, later moving into retail, fundraising, co-manufacturing, and eventually ecommerce. 

Though the company could be more specialized, third-generation owner and president Joe Zanetos says diversification is what has made the business thrive through the trials of the last seven decades.

“It’s helped when one facet was down and another was up,” Zanetos says.

Case in point, when COVID-19 hit in early 2020 and schools closed, the company’s fundraising business suffered, but co-manufacturing and retail – specifically ecommerce –increased.

“We had shorter (retail) hours, less people working and made more money,” Zanetos says, noting as grocery sales picked up so did the co-manufacturing business. “That’s the benefit to being so diversified. When one’s down, another makes up the difference.”

The Zanetos family has been making confections since Anthony Zanetos immigrated to the United States in 1916.

The Greek immigrant learned how to make candy when he moved to Columbus, Ohio, and he opened a series of confectioneries starting in 1926, including the Farmer’s Co-op Dairy in 1932. None of the businesses gained steam until his son, Tom Zanetos, returned from serving in World War II. 

Though he thought he would go back to the meat business after the war, Tom Zanetos, as a service member in the candy business, secured a 30,000-lb. annual allotment of sugar. That was a perfect fit for Anthony, who always wanted to have a father-son business.

Tom Zanetos and his father founded Anthony’s Confectionery where the co-op used to be, serving ice cream and candies and offering a soda fountain. Then, in 1947, the duo opened the Crystal Fountain, where they served sandwiches, ice cream and candies. The candy business grew so fast they decided to concentrate on making candy full time, using their first names to form the Anthony-Thomas Candy Co. in 1952.

chocolate and peanut butter buckeyes

The first decade was hard, and the father-son team had to borrow money from family and friends to expand the business. First, they moved to a 1,000-sq.-ft. building at 1022 W. Broad St., near downtown Columbus. Even after three expansions, their 7,500-sq.-ft. building became overcrowded. In 1969, they moved down the street into a 20,000-sq.-ft. plant at 1160 W. Broad St., and over the years, they expanded three more times, until the company outgrew its then 60,000-sq.-ft. facility in the early 1990s.

In 1993, Anthony-Thomas broke ground on its current site at 1777 Arlingate Lane, located on the 270 outer belt. Production began in the new 152,000-sq.-ft. manufacturing plant in 1995.

Through the years, three of Tom Zanetos’ sons – Joe, Greg and Tim – joined the company, each running a portion of the business. Joe Zanetos’ daughter, Candi Trifelos, and son-in-law, Steve Scully, joined later and became vice presidents after Greg and Tim retired in 2019. With the premature death of Scully in 2020, the company has introduced the fifth generation, with Candi Trifelos’ son, Nick Trifelos, heading up the sales and marketing divisions.

Brand building and buckeyes

Anthony-Thomas began making and selling chocolates to other businesses when it incorporated in 1952. The company opened its first store and expanded into fundraising in those early years. By the 1990s, the business began taking co-manufacturing orders from big-name brands, using the client’s own ingredients and formulas. Along the way, the company opened more retail stores. 

However, over the last 10 years, the company has focused on getting the Anthony-Thomas name out there.

“We’re trying to get our brand more widely distributed, hopefully on a national basis,” Zanetos says.

buckeyes

Currently, the Anthony-Thomas brand is sold in about 30 states, through gift shops, card stores, candy stores and grocery markets. Chocolate-peanut butter buckeyes, resembling Ohio’s famous nut, have become the company’s bread and butter. English Toffee, caramels, cherries, meltaway mints and butter creams are also popular.

“We’re really pushing the Anthony-Thomas product,” Zanetos adds. “We aren’t turning down any Anthony-Thomas business. It comes first.”

That means the company’s co-manufacturing contracts are second in line to the Anthony-Thomas brand, which was not always the case. In fact, buckeyes sales have increased this year at least 25 to 30 percent, Zanetos notes. 

“It’s year-round, not just during OSU football,” he says, referring to The Ohio State University football team, which uses the buckeye as its symbol. 

Traditionally, buckeyes – the candy, not the team – are handmade peanut butter balls dipped in chocolate with an uncovered top to resemble the nut. Anthony-Thomas manufactures them on a house-built machine that has four stages for each part of the piece: first, a peanut butter cap is poured, then the chocolate shell, followed by the peanut butter center, and then the chocolate bottom.

Zanetos says Anthony-Thomas plans to introduce a three-piece buckeye pack in convenience stores before the football season resumes next year.

The company also designed and built in-house an automated moulding line, which fills moulded bunnies, Santas and other items with its computerized chocolate depositor, which can detect the correct amount of chocolate to pour in each mould. The company also developed its own polycarbonate plastic moulds using magnets embedded in the plastic to hold the moulds together.

Perseverance through challenges

COVID was not the first time the company faced challenges. Anthony-Thomas used to make candy for several airlines that gave chocolates to fliers. After the 9/11 attacks, and airlines re-opened for business, those airlines cut costs by discontinuing the chocolate favors. Anthony-Thomas never regained that business.

president of Anthony-Thomas Candy Co.

During the 2008-09 recession, when Americans watched their wallets after the housing crisis, Anthony-Thomas lost all its co-manufacturing business. Large candy companies that had Anthony-Thomas make their products were also losing their own business, so they brought the manufacturing back into their fold. 

“Co-manufacturing really died during that period,” Zanetos says. 

But as the economy turned around, so did business. Today, securing business isn’t the issue, but staffing and supply chain are concerns, Zanetos notes, as well as lead times and increased prices across the board. 

“We are having trouble getting everything,” Zanetos says. “We lost over a million dollars in buckeye business because we couldn’t get dextrose (last January). We lost a tremendous amount of business because we couldn’t get film (wrappers) in the fall of 2021. Film sat on a ship outside California, and we couldn’t get it.” 

Now, obtaining plastic bags is a concern, since fundraising organizations like to use them to carry chocolate bars. The bars are sold in 180-bar cases, with six bags of 30 each.

COVID changed business forever

Like other companies, Anthony-Thomas struggled in 2020. At the beginning of the pandemic, the company “had to cut staff and tighten their belts” due to the reduced business. The company’s 13 retail stores cut hours, and some stores temporarily closed because of staffing.

But the company was lucky to be open at all, as the state of Ohio shut down all retail operations in the first months of the pandemic unless the retailer was selling a necessity, such as food. Fortunately for Anthony-Thomas, candy is still considered food. Other retailers forced to shut down never reopened. 

As Anthony-Thomas stores remained open, its factory continued production, but staffing became an issue, as some employees became afraid to work. With protocols such as wearing masks, using hand sanitizer, maintaining social distance in their shops, installing plexiglass at the register, and offering curbside pickup, Anthony-Thomas salvaged some 2020 Easter sales.

There was a silver lining during this period. Although the company had an ecommerce business before the pandemic, COVID pushed it to the next level. 

chocolate Easter bunnies

“Ecommerce went way up and stayed up,” Zanetos says. “But we didn’t make up for everything we lost.”

New business ventures

Anthony-Thomas had begun doing business with Amazon vendor Mixt Solutions before the pandemic, but since, the Amazon business has picked up 10-fold, Zanetos says. The vendor has an exclusive deal to sell Anthony-Thomas chocolates, and it has promoted the brand across its distribution. 

Vice President Candi Trifelos says Mixt Solutions has been an asset in driving online sales. 

“They can do it a lot better than we can,” she says, noting they track sales and ensure unauthorized vendors are not trying to sell Anthony-Thomas products online.

“Last year our cherry cordials were the No. 1 selling cherries on Amazon in the country,” Zanetos says.

It is not just Amazon. Anthony-Thomas’ direct ecommerce business continues to grow as the brand spreads across the country. 

“We’re doing a lot more direct ecommerce right through us, which is cheaper than going through (a third party),” Zanetos says.

Selling online has other advantages, Candi Trifelos adds. 

“We sell as much product as a retail shop without the rent, utilities, maintenance and staffing,” she says. 

Anthony-Thomas increased its digital marketing efforts when Nick Trifelos joined the company. He launched Anthony-Thomas’ social media ads in 2018, two years before he graduated from Butler University. Since starting full-time in 2020 as national sales and marketing manager, he became instrumental in updating the company website, which has led to 330 percent growth of website traffic.

anthony thomas tours

In fact, the company is running almost exclusively digital ads, moving away from traditional forms of advertising. Candi Trifelos says consumers fast-forward through television ads and do not read the newspaper. “The younger generation doesn’t listen to radio,” she says, adding the company still likes to tie their ads with the OSU games.

“We like community-based things where you get value added,” she says, pointing to Anthony Thomas’ sponsorship of community programs like “Top 20 Women in Business” and “Rising Youth.”

Anthony-Thomas also began using DoorDash two years ago. 

“We’ve seen a lot of success with that,” Nick Trifelos says. “Door Dash has introduced us to another set of buyers.”

Anthony-Thomas also connects with the Columbus community through public tours, which have resumed after the pandemic. The manufacturing plant, which also houses its offices, warehouse and flagship retail store, was expanded another 2,000 sq. ft. in 2016 to accommodate bus tours. The addition has several restrooms and a conference room that accommodates 65 comfortably.

Anthony-Thomas offered public tours before it moved in 1995 to its Arlingate Lane location, on the west side of Columbus.   Before COVID, the plant averaged 30,000 tours a year, according to Zanetos, and that number is slowly climbing to pre-pandemic levels. 

Visitors walk on a 380-ft. suspended catwalk, from which they can see production in process. The tour includes views into the 8,000-sq.-ft. kitchen, which houses four ball beaters, a Firex caramel cooker, six Savage fire mixers and two Hobart mixers, as well as a Stephan vacuum mixer, caramel cutters, a cream depositor and five water-cooled slab tables for making toffee, brittle, caramel corn, and fudge. 

Caramel is poured

In another area of the tour, visitors can see enrobing of caramels and pretzels and shell-moulding of pieces such as cherry cordials and truffles. Visitors can also see employees packing gift boxes and stock boxes, as well as candy bars being wrapped by G.D. or Sapal wrappers. Anthony-Thomas also has Nuovofima foil wrapper that wraps cherries at a rate of 300 pieces per minute, and two high-speed Ilapak flow wrappers that wrap 400 pieces per minute.

Seasonally, the company hosts a public open house, and about 5,000 visitors see moulding of Easter bunnies, filled eggs being decorated and Easter baskets being assembled. During the Valentine’s Day season, visitors can view heart boxes being packed. The tours end in the 4,000-sq.-ft. retail store, where visitors can choose from over 80 varieties of chocolate-covered confections, fudge, mints, and nuts.

In an area not open to the public, two melting rooms house seven melters that hold 300,000 pounds of chocolate. There is also an Aasted Mikroverk 1200 roller depositor, which makes 3,000 pounds of chocolate morsels an hour, as well as an oil nut roasting operation and a mould washing room. 

Nick Trifelos, who used to give tours himself, says they help business. The family hopes the tours connect the younger generation with the Anthony-Thomas name, and that those kids ask to return with their parents.

truffles and boxed chocolates

“The tours create that emotional connection,” says Nick Trifelos. Often people will say to him, “I remember when my class came through and getting that sample.”

Future of Anthony-Thomas

So where does Anthony-Thomas go from here? Zanetos says that is something to ponder. 

“Our business is growing in every direction,” he says. “Where do we want the emphasis to be? We are being bombarded with so many enquiries. I think the Anthony-Thomas brand is starting to make some inroads. We have more people wanting us to do business. We’re putting a lot of emphasis on growing our own brand, as well as continuing our fundraising and co-manufacturing.”

Zanetos, who just turned 75, notes he may not be around in 20 years (though his dad worked until he was 93), but he is not planning to retire anytime soon. In fact, he often tells his family he will continue to work until “they have to carry me out feet first.”

In the meantime, he, along with the rest of the family, is always open to the idea of doing new business. 

“We’re continuing to grow,” Zanetos says. “The family continues to operate it, and they want (the business) to grow.”

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The wonders of Moscow metro

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Moscow Metro

The Moscow Metro Tour is included in most guided tours’ itineraries. Opened in 1935, under Stalin’s regime, the metro was not only meant to solve transport problems, but also was hailed as “a people’s palace”. Every station you will see during your Moscow metro tour looks like a palace room. There are bright paintings, mosaics, stained glass, bronze statues… Our Moscow metro tour includes the most impressive stations best architects and designers worked at - Ploshchad Revolutsii, Mayakovskaya, Komsomolskaya, Kievskaya, Novoslobodskaya and some others.

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The guide will not only help you navigate the metro, but will also provide you with fascinating background tales for the images you see and a history of each station.

And there some stories to be told during the Moscow metro tour! The deepest station - Park Pobedy - is 84 metres under the ground with the world longest escalator of 140 meters. Parts of the so-called Metro-2, a secret strategic system of underground tunnels, was used for its construction.

During the Second World War the metro itself became a strategic asset: it was turned into the city's biggest bomb-shelter and one of the stations even became a library. 217 children were born here in 1941-1942! The metro is the most effective means of transport in the capital.

There are almost 200 stations 196 at the moment and trains run every 90 seconds! The guide of your Moscow metro tour can explain to you how to buy tickets and find your way if you plan to get around by yourself.

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Anthony Thomas Factory Tour FA 23 (55+)

anthony thomas tours

anthony thomas tours

IMAGES

  1. Get your chocolate on! Tour the Anthony Thomas Chocolate Factory in

    anthony thomas tours

  2. The Most Mouthwatering Food Factory Tours In Ohio

    anthony thomas tours

  3. Anthony-Thomas Chocolate Factory Tour

    anthony thomas tours

  4. Central Ohio Staycation Destination: Anthony Thomas Factory Tour

    anthony thomas tours

  5. Tour The Anthony-Thomas Candy Company In Ohio

    anthony thomas tours

  6. Anthony-Thomas Easter Open House, with tours and the Bunny!

    anthony thomas tours

VIDEO

  1. Thomas Tours Travellers vs Ox 'N Dem Dolphins

  2. Anthony Thomas first win at Gulfstream Congratulations

  3. Thomas Tours Travellers vs Skins 6ers

COMMENTS

  1. Factory Tours

    Learn how chocolate is made and see the production process at Anthony-Thomas Chocolates, a state-of-the-art candy factory. Schedule a tour online or by phone and get a free sample of their gourmet chocolates.

  2. factory tours, tours

    In about an hour, tour groups can experience candy making from start to finish in our 154,000 square-foot, state-of-the-art candy factory. Sign up for a tour today! Booking: TMD Booking Attribute: ... Factory Tour. Brand: Anthony-Thomas Chocolates; Product Code: 7734; Availability: 100000; $0.00; Qty Book Now. 0 reviews / Write a review.

  3. Anthony-Thomas Easter Open House, with tours and the Bunny!

    The tour guides explain the process from start to finish. The tour finishes in the 2,500 square-foot retail shoppe. Everyone gets a sample! Anthony-Thomas Candies. 1777 Arlingate Lane. Columbus, Ohio 43228. 1-877-CANDY-21. Check out our huge list of Easter Egg Hunts and activities!

  4. Anthony-Thomas Candy Company

    Learn how candy is made from start to finish at this family-owned business. See the production process, the copper kettles, the silver pipes and the retail shoppe.

  5. Factory Tours

    Walk-In tours are every Tuesday and Thursday from 9 am to 3 pm. During June, July and August, we extend Walk-In tours to Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 9 am to 3 pm. Motor Coaches and groups of 10 or more can be scheduled Monday - Friday from 9 am to 3 pm. ... Columbus, OH 43228 614-274-8405 [email protected]. Skip to ...

  6. Anthony-Thomas Chocolates

    Anthony-Thomas Chocolates is a family-owned business that produces gourmet chocolates, OSU Buckeye candies and more. The web page does not offer any information about tours or visitation to their facility.

  7. Anthony Thomas Chocolates Tours

    Experience a Willy Wonka-like adventure at this candy factory that produces 25,000 pounds of chocolate per shift. Tours are available every Tuesday and Thursday from 10am to 2pm for $5/person.

  8. Anthony Thomas Chocolates

    About. Established in 1952, Anthony-Thomas Candy Company is one of the largest family-owned and operated candy companies in the Midwest. The company oversees a professional staff of more than 200 employees and produces an average of over 50,000 pounds of chocolates every day. Anthony-Thomas Candy Company maintains nearly 15 local retail outlets ...

  9. Columbus, OH

    Visit the factory that makes the World's Largest Buckeye and other chocolate treats in Columbus, Ohio. Learn about the history and process of making buckeyes and get a free sample on the tour.

  10. The Yummy Factory Tour of Anthony Thomas

    The company was founded by a Greek immigrant, Anthony Zanetos, and his son Thomas, in 1952. Their restaurant, the Crystal Fountain, was running smoothly, but its candy was selling like gangbusters and the pair opened the Anothy-Thomas Candy Company. Today, it sits in a 125,000-square-foot factory that produces three million buckeyes a year ...

  11. Columbus-based Anthony-Thomas Candy Co. celebrates 70 years

    Columbus-based Anthony-Thomas Candy Co., 1777 Arlingate Lane, has been following its mission "to make the world a sweeter place - one chocolate at a time" for 70 years. Joseph Zanetos ...

  12. Factory Tours USA

    Four generations of Zanetos candy makers have contributed to the company's success. Today, Anthony-Thomas makes millions of pounds of candy every year. Each piece is made fresh daily, always in the best of taste. In about an hour, tour groups can experience candy making from start to finish in our 152,000 square-foot, state-of-the-art candy ...

  13. Anthony-Thomas Chocolate Factory Tour

    First Easter open house free tour at Anthony-Thomas in two years!#HowItsMade #Chocolate

  14. WiM Ohio

    10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. ET. Location: Anthony Thomas Chocolates. 1777 Arlingate Ln. Suite E. Columbus, OH 43228. Ever wonder how chocolate is made? In about an hour, tour groups can experience candy making from start to finish in Anthony Thomas' 154,000 square-foot, state-of-the-art candy factory. Walk along a comfortable, glass-enclosed ...

  15. Anthony-Thomas Candy Co. marks 70 years

    Anthony-Thomas offered public tours before it moved in 1995 to its Arlingate Lane location, on the west side of Columbus. Before COVID, the plant averaged 30,000 tours a year, according to Zanetos, and that number is slowly climbing to pre-pandemic levels.

  16. Bexley Recreation & Parks Department: Anthony Thomas Factory Tour

    In about an hour, tour groups can experience candy making from start to finish in our 152,000 square-foot, state-of-the-art candy factory. Opened in May 1995, it is conveniently located off I-270 at 1777 Arlingate Lane in Columbus, Ohio. ... Anthony Thomas Factory Tour : 55y - 99y N/A Tu 01/30/2024 09:30 AM - 11:30 AM Bexley Senior Center - 420 ...

  17. The wonders of Moscow metro

    Tour cost: 1000 RUB per person (metro fare is not included) Request form. Your name * Your family name * E-mail * Phone number * Number of travellers: Other special request * required field . Top Moscow and Russia tours. Customized tours. Golden Ring tours. St Petersburg tours. Day trips out of Moscow. Moscow in 1 day.

  18. Moscow metro tour

    Moscow Metro. The Moscow Metro Tour is included in most guided tours' itineraries. Opened in 1935, under Stalin's regime, the metro was not only meant to solve transport problems, but also was hailed as "a people's palace". Every station you will see during your Moscow metro tour looks like a palace room. There are bright paintings ...

  19. Bexley Recreation & Parks Department: Anthony Thomas Factory Tour FA 23

    Anthony Thomas Factory Tour FA 23 (55+) ... In about an hour, tour groups can experience candy making from start to finish in our 152,000 square-foot, state-of-the-art candy factory. Opened in May 1995, it is conveniently located off I-270 at 1777 Arlingate Lane in Columbus, Ohio. Walk along our comfortable, glass-enclosed suspended "Cat-Walk ...

  20. 628DirtRooster

    Welcome to the 628DirtRooster website where you can find video links to Randy McCaffrey's (AKA DirtRooster) YouTube videos, community support and other resources for the Hobby Beekeepers and the official 628DirtRooster online store where you can find 628DirtRooster hats and shirts, local Mississippi honey and whole lot more!

  21. Private Moscow Metro Half Day Tour 2022

    The Moscow Metro is one of the oldest in the world, as well as one of the most beautiful. As a visitor, it can be tricky to know which stations are must-sees, but this guided tour ensures that you see the best. Also, because it's a private tour, you don't need to feel self-conscious of being in a large tour group getting in commuters' way.