more at
http://food.quickfound.net
'
News of happenings within the
Beatrice Foods Company around the world.
-
Meadow Gold:
Milkman to
Far East
-
Great Buddha at
Kamakura
-
Bloomfield Industries Products: Keys to the
Kitchen
-
Report from
Belgium: Lacsoons' Dairy Progressing Rapidly
-
Beatrice Foods' "
Underground City" on underground caves near
Kansas City:
Inland Underground Facilities,
Inc. aka Inland
Cold Storage
- Employee restaurant called "Caveteria."'
Public domain film from the
Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/
3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beatrice_Foods
Beatrice Foods Company was a major
American food processing company.[1] In
1987, its smaller international food operations were sold to
Reginald Lewis, a corporate attorney, creating
TLC Beatrice International, after which the majority of its domestic (
U.S.) brands and assets were acquired by
Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts (
KKR), with the bulk of its holdings sold off. By the early
1990s, the remaining operations were ultimately acquired by
ConAgra Foods...
History
The
Beatrice Creamery
Company was founded in 1894 by
George Everett Haskell and
William W. Bosworth, by leasing the factory of a bankrupt firm of the same name located in
Beatrice, Nebraska. At the time, they purchased butter, milk, and eggs from local farmers and graded them for resale. They promptly began separating the butter themselves at their plant, making their own butter on site and packaging and distributing it under their own label. They devised special protective packages and distributed them to grocery stores and restaurants in their own wagons and through appointed jobbers. To overcome the shortage of cream, the partners established skimming stations to which farmers delivered their milk to have the cream, used to make butter, separated from the milk. This led to the introduction of their unique credit program of providing farmers with hand cream-separators so they could separate the milk on the farm and retain the skim milk for animal feeding. This enabled farmers to pay for the separators from the proceeds of their sales of cream.
The program worked so well, the company sold more than 50,
000 separators in
Nebraska from
1895 to
1905. On March 1, 1905, the company was incorporated as the Beatrice Creamery Company of
Iowa, with capital of $3,000,000. By the start of the
20th century, they were shipping dairy products across the
United States, and by 1910, they operated nine creameries and three ice cream plants across the
Great Plains.
The company moved to
Chicago in 1913, at the time the center of the American food processing industry. By the
1930s, it was a major dairy company, producing some 30 million
US gallons (
110,000,000 l) of milk and
10 million US gallons (38,000,000 l) of ice cream annually... Beatrice's 'Meadow Gold' brand was a household name in much of
America by the beginning of
World War II. In 1946, it changed its name to Beatrice Foods and doubled its sales between
1945 and
1955 as the post-war baby boom created vastly greater demand for milk products.
From the late
1950s until the early
1970s, the company expanded into
Canada and purchased a number of other food firms, leveraging its distribution network to profit from a more diverse array of food and consumer products. It came to be the owner of brands such as
Avis Rent A Car, Playtex, Shedd's, Tropicana,
John Sexton & Co,
Good & Plenty, and many others.
Annual sales in
1984 were roughly $12 billion. During both the
Winter and Summer Olympics that year, the corporation flooded the TV airwaves with advertisements letting the public know that many brands with which they were familiar were actually part of Beatrice Foods. These ads used the tagline (with a jingle) "We're Beatrice. You've known us all along
."... However, the campaign was soon found to alienate consumers, calling attention to the fact that many of their favorite brands were in fact part of a far-reaching multinational corporation,
and the campaign was pulled off the air by autumn...
In
1986, Beatrice became the target of leveraged buyout specialists
Kohlberg Kravis Roberts. They ultimately took over the firm for
US$8.7 billion — at the time the largest leveraged buyout in history — and over the next four years sold it off, division by division... In
1990, the last of Beatrice's assets were sold to ConAgra Foods. Most of Beatrice's brand names still exist, but under various other owners, as trademarks and product lines were sold separately to the highest bidder...
- published: 30 Mar 2015
- views: 329