Difference between revisions of "Campbell Packing Corporation"
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| primary_town = Campbell | | primary_town = Campbell | ||
| predecessors=[[George E. Hyde & Company]] | | predecessors=[[George E. Hyde & Company]] | ||
+ | | primary_dates=1933-1937 | ||
}} | }} | ||
+ | The '''Campbell Packing Corporation''' was a short-lived canner operating in the former [[George E. Hyde & Company]] cannery in the early 1930's. The Campbell Packing Corporation was run by W.A. Bundy | ||
+ | <ref>Hyde Packing Plant to Open: [http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ohciAAAAIBAJ&sjid=J6QFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4286,1670722&dq=hyde-packing&hl=en April 22, 1933 San Jose Evening News</ref>, | ||
+ | a former [[Haslett Warehouse Company]] employee. | ||
+ | The company packed apricots, pears and peaches in 1933, and pears and nectarines in 1934. Their 1934 season packed 10,000 cases of nectarines<ref>August 22, 1934 Campbell Interurban Press.</ref>.The company appears to have disappeared by 1937, with their warehouse used to store off-grade prunes<ref>Three Warehouses Opened to Store Off-Grade Prunes: [http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1977&dat=19371020&id=OmoiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=hasFAAAAIBAJ&pg=3822,2205574 October 20, 1937 San Jose Evening News]</ref>. | ||
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+ | Campbell Packing initially leased the plant in the 1933 season<ref>Hyde Packing Plant to Open: [http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ohciAAAAIBAJ&sjid=J6QFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4286,1670722&dq=hyde-packing&hl=en April 22, 1933]</ref>, and certainly produced fruit that season. (The FDA entered a judgement against the company in 1934 for selling canned apricots with insufficient sugar to meet standards<ref>22943. Misbranding of canned apricots. U. S. v. 52 Cases of Canned Apricots. Decree of condemnation and forfeiture. [http://archive.nlm.nih.gov/fdanj/bitstream/123456789/66349/3/300000680.txt FDA Decision, August 8, 1934]</ref>. The apricots were packed for and labeled for the Washington Grocery Company of Bellingham Washington, and had been shipped in the 1933 season.) The company was in the process of buying the cannery in 1934<ref>[Packing Plant Fixtures Sold: [http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1977&dat=19340428&id=OUoiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=G6QFAAAAIBAJ&pg=3452,2495151 April 26, 1934 San Jose Evening News]. Article notes plant has been idle since 1926.</ref> | ||
+ | Campbell Packing built a new receiving warehouse in 1934, using materials from Campbell businesses, with a certain amount of crankiness for the materials they did not buy in town<ref>May 16, 1934 Campbell Interurban Press</ref>. The company experimented with pear cutting machines in the 1934 season, but ended up returning to manual labor by women<ref>August 8, 1934 Campbell Interurban Press</ref>. | ||
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+ | The FDA entered a [http://archive.nlm.nih.gov/fdanj/bitstream/123456789/66349/3/300000680.txt judgement] against the company in 1934 for selling canned apricots with insufficient sugar to meet standards. The apricots were packed for and labeled for the Washington Grocery Company of Bellingham Washington, and had been shipped in the 1933 season. | ||
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[[Category:Campbell]] | [[Category:Campbell]] | ||
[[Category:Cannery]] | [[Category:Cannery]] |
Latest revision as of 16:20, 31 October 2013
Business |
Cannery |
---|---|
Main Location |
Campbell |
Active |
1933-1937 |
Predecessors |
George E. Hyde & Company |
The Campbell Packing Corporation was a short-lived canner operating in the former George E. Hyde & Company cannery in the early 1930's. The Campbell Packing Corporation was run by W.A. Bundy [1], a former Haslett Warehouse Company employee. The company packed apricots, pears and peaches in 1933, and pears and nectarines in 1934. Their 1934 season packed 10,000 cases of nectarines[2].The company appears to have disappeared by 1937, with their warehouse used to store off-grade prunes[3].
Campbell Packing initially leased the plant in the 1933 season[4], and certainly produced fruit that season. (The FDA entered a judgement against the company in 1934 for selling canned apricots with insufficient sugar to meet standards[5]. The apricots were packed for and labeled for the Washington Grocery Company of Bellingham Washington, and had been shipped in the 1933 season.) The company was in the process of buying the cannery in 1934[6] Campbell Packing built a new receiving warehouse in 1934, using materials from Campbell businesses, with a certain amount of crankiness for the materials they did not buy in town[7]. The company experimented with pear cutting machines in the 1934 season, but ended up returning to manual labor by women[8].
The FDA entered a judgement against the company in 1934 for selling canned apricots with insufficient sugar to meet standards. The apricots were packed for and labeled for the Washington Grocery Company of Bellingham Washington, and had been shipped in the 1933 season.
Locations
Location | Years | Address | Details |
---|---|---|---|
Campbell | 1933-1937? | Central Ave. | In former Hyde Cannery. |
References
- ↑ Hyde Packing Plant to Open: [http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ohciAAAAIBAJ&sjid=J6QFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4286,1670722&dq=hyde-packing&hl=en April 22, 1933 San Jose Evening News
- ↑ August 22, 1934 Campbell Interurban Press.
- ↑ Three Warehouses Opened to Store Off-Grade Prunes: October 20, 1937 San Jose Evening News
- ↑ Hyde Packing Plant to Open: April 22, 1933
- ↑ 22943. Misbranding of canned apricots. U. S. v. 52 Cases of Canned Apricots. Decree of condemnation and forfeiture. FDA Decision, August 8, 1934
- ↑ [Packing Plant Fixtures Sold: April 26, 1934 San Jose Evening News. Article notes plant has been idle since 1926.
- ↑ May 16, 1934 Campbell Interurban Press
- ↑ August 8, 1934 Campbell Interurban Press