Difference between revisions of "California Canners and Growers"
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| primary_business = Cannery | | primary_business = Cannery | ||
| primary_dates = 1958 - 1984 | | primary_dates = 1958 - 1984 | ||
− | | predecessors = [[Filice and Perelli]], [[Richmond Chase]], [[Thornton Canning]], [[San Jose Canning Company]], [[Glorietta Foods]] | + | | predecessors = [[Filice and Perelli]], [[Richmond-Chase]], [[Thornton Canning]], [[San Jose Canning Company]], [[Glorietta Foods]] |
| successors = [[Tri-Valley Growers]] | | successors = [[Tri-Valley Growers]] | ||
| aliases = Cal Can | | aliases = Cal Can | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | '''California Canners and Growers''' was a large California canner, formed in 1958 | + | '''California Canners and Growers''' was a large California canner, formed in 1958 as a grower-owned co-operative. A group of farmers believed that owning the canneries would give them a guaranteed market for their product in bad years, and cut out the middleman in good years. Starting in 1958, the growers and their financial backers bought several smaller canning companies<ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=o4YzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=hO4HAAAAIBAJ&pg=3736%2C4673671 June 6, 1958 Lodi News-Sentinel]</ref>. The founding companies included |
− | [[Filice and Perelli]], [[Richmond Chase]], [[ | + | [[Filice and Perelli]], [[Richmond-Chase]], and [[San Jose Canning Company]]. [[Thornton Canning]] joined the new company in 1959. "Dale Hollenbeck, president of Thornton Canning Co., said that the sale is in line with the great integration movement currently going on in agriculture, especially in California<ref>Cal-Can Buys Thornton Canning. [http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=R6IzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=kO4HAAAAIBAJ&pg=6022%2C5561116 June 12, 1959 Lodi News-Sentinel]. Thornton rounded out Cal Can's business, adding additional tomato canning capacity.</ref>. |
Subsidiaries were merged into the parent company on June 1, 1963 according <ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2245&dat=19630529&id=UN8zAAAAIBAJ&sjid=RjIHAAAAIBAJ&pg=5691,4886498 May 29, 1963 Lodi News]</ref>. | Subsidiaries were merged into the parent company on June 1, 1963 according <ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2245&dat=19630529&id=UN8zAAAAIBAJ&sjid=RjIHAAAAIBAJ&pg=5691,4886498 May 29, 1963 Lodi News]</ref>. | ||
− | [[Richmond Chase]] would bring Burnel Richmond as VP, Filice and Perreli, Peter M. Filice; Thornton Cannery, Dale G. Hollenbeck, Schuckl, George Coley. San Jose canning would be separate. They canned 500,000 tons of fruits and vegetables each season. The separate business named were removed in April 1964<ref>1964 Modesto Bee]</ref>. | + | [[Richmond-Chase]] would bring Burnel Richmond as VP, Filice and Perreli, Peter M. Filice; Thornton Cannery, Dale G. Hollenbeck, Schuckl, George Coley. San Jose canning would be separate. They canned 500,000 tons of fruits and vegetables each season. The separate business named were removed in April 1964<ref>1964 Modesto Bee.</ref>. |
+ | By 1970, the company was owned by 1,145 farmers in California and Wisconsin<ref>Cyclamate Compensation. From [http://library.cqpress.com/cqalmanac/document.php?id=cqal72-1249108 CQ Almanac 1972].</ref>. | ||
− | Joseph Perelli of Filice and Perelli | + | Joseph Perelli of Filice and Perelli suggested that the company expanded too quickly:<ref>Joseph Perelli, [http://content.cdlib.org/view?docId=hb6n39p139;NAAN=13030&doc.view=frames&chunk.id=div00056&toc.depth=1&toc.id=&brand=calisphere&query=Japanese%20American%20Oral%20History%20Project The Establishment of the Filice and Perelli Company in Richmond]. Oral history.</ref>: |
+ | <blockquote> | ||
+ | We started to negotiate with this group of growers and financial people, I guess, in probably 1957 or so. By June 1, 1958, we completed our negotiations and sold. Practically all the people that were in our organization transferred to California Canners and Growers. | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | There were other companies. Filice and Perrelli, Richmond Chase were the two basic companies that went with them first. Then they also took in Thornton Canning Company, which was located in Thornton, near Stockton. Then they took over San Jose Canning Company. They did that as months went by and they became pretty large. As a matter of fact, I think they grew too fast. It was a big operation, because they had a number of canneries. They had three canneries with the Filice and Perrelli, and two canneries with Richmond Chase, one with Thornton, one with San Jose Canning Company. | ||
+ | </blockquote> | ||
The company did a joint venture with [[Tri-Valley Growers]] in 1964 to share can-making costs<ref>[http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/tri-valley-growers-history/ Tri-Valley Growers History, fundinguniverse.com]</ref>. The joint venture was called [[C.T. Supply]], with its main office in Fremont, CA. The joint venture later changed its name to [[Tri-Valley Container Corporation]]. | The company did a joint venture with [[Tri-Valley Growers]] in 1964 to share can-making costs<ref>[http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/tri-valley-growers-history/ Tri-Valley Growers History, fundinguniverse.com]</ref>. The joint venture was called [[C.T. Supply]], with its main office in Fremont, CA. The joint venture later changed its name to [[Tri-Valley Container Corporation]]. | ||
− | + | By the early 1980's, the business began to sour for Cal Can. In the late 1960's and early 1970's, the company was stung by consumer concerns over cyclamates used as a less expensive sweetener in canned fruit<ref>Cyclamate Compensation. From [http://library.cqpress.com/cqalmanac/document.php?id=cqal72-1249108 CQ Almanac 1972].</ref>; the federal government ended up passing a law to pay compensation to the canners who suffered losses by the sudden ban on cyclamates in the 1960's. Changing consumer preferences meant that demand dropped. Foreign competition constrained prices. When interest rates spiked in the early 1980's, Cal Can's lack of working capital meant that they were completely reliant on banks to put forward the money needed to pay the growers each season. When Bob Gibson, Cal Can's president, bought some of Libby's plants in 1982, Bank of America decided that supporting the company would require too much risk and held back from funding the canner for the season. Without another source for funding, Cal Can declared bankruptcy in 1983. They sold the Richmond cannery, and closed the [[San Jose Canning Company]] site on Lick Ave<ref>San Jose Mercury News</ref>. | |
− | In | + | In 1984, California Canners and Growers was merged into [[Tri-Valley Growers]]. According to one source, "both companies were in trouble and the banks 'tossed a coin' over which company took over the other. All of Cal Can's local plants were shut down and sold off as scrap". |
− | |||
− | |||
==Locations== | ==Locations== | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | ! Location !! Years !! Address !! Details | + | ! Location !! Plant Number !! Years !! Address !! Details |
|- | |- | ||
− | | | + | | Gilroy || CCG Plant 1 || || Lewis Ave. || Former [[Filice and Perelli]]. |
|- | |- | ||
− | | | + | | Lomira, Wisconsin || || 1969-<ref>California Canning Company Opens "Windy Lomira". [http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1499&dat=19690607&id=2QMqAAAAIBAJ&sjid=KygEAAAAIBAJ&pg=5255,4193773 June 7, 1969 Milwaukee Journal].</ref> || || Canning and distribution. Peas, corn, and beans. |
|- | |- | ||
− | | | + | | Merced || || -1983 || || Former [[Filice and Perelli]]<ref>[http://obits.dignitymemorial.com/dignity-memorial/obituary.aspx?n=Elmer-Nelson&lc=7025&pid=155409854&mid=4951366 Elmer C. Nelson obituary], Jan 5. 2012. Nelson started at Filice and Perelli which became Cal Can.</ref>. Mentioned in Thornton Canning purchase article<ref>Cal-Can Buys Thornton Canning. [http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=R6IzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=kO4HAAAAIBAJ&pg=6022%2C5561116 June 12, 1959 Lodi News-Sentinel].</ref>. Cannery closed in 1983 after Cal Can's bankruptcy and because of a poor peach crop<ref>Merced Cal Can Workers Idled. [http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=8ZozAAAAIBAJ&sjid=nDIHAAAAIBAJ&pg=5016%2C3435165 July 30, 1983 Lodi News-Sentinel].</ref>. |
− | + | |- | |
+ | | Richmond || CCG Plant 5 || 1958-1970 || [http://maps.google.com/maps?q=1200%20Harbor%20Way,Richmond 1200 Harbor Way] || Former [[Filice and Perelli]]. Plant manager and night superintendent transferred to San Jose upon closure. | ||
|- | |- | ||
+ | | San Jose || CCG Plant 2 || 1958-1984 || 1193 Lick Ave.<ref>[http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED075620.pdf List of manufacturing businesses in Santa Clara County], Vocational Education memo, 1972.</ref> || Former [[San Jose Canning Company]]. | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | San Jose || CCG Plant 4 || 1958-1984 || Stockton Ave. || Former [[Richmond-Chase]]. Transportation department and parking on west side of Stockton Ave. | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Stockton || CCG Plant 7 || || || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Sunnyvale || || 1963- || Fair Oaks Ave. || Former [[Schuckl Cannery]]. Purchased in 1963. | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Thornton || || || || Former [[Thornton Canning | Thornton Canning Company]]. | ||
+ | |||
|} | |} | ||
+ | |||
==Photos== | ==Photos== | ||
[http://wx4.org/to/foam/sp/san_jose/depot/tracks/westend.html Photo of CalCan facility north of Diridon Station] | [http://wx4.org/to/foam/sp/san_jose/depot/tracks/westend.html Photo of CalCan facility north of Diridon Station] |
Latest revision as of 17:30, 25 July 2019
Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 126. California Canners and Growers was a large California canner, formed in 1958 as a grower-owned co-operative. A group of farmers believed that owning the canneries would give them a guaranteed market for their product in bad years, and cut out the middleman in good years. Starting in 1958, the growers and their financial backers bought several smaller canning companies[1]. The founding companies included Filice and Perelli, Richmond-Chase, and San Jose Canning Company. Thornton Canning joined the new company in 1959. "Dale Hollenbeck, president of Thornton Canning Co., said that the sale is in line with the great integration movement currently going on in agriculture, especially in California[2]. Subsidiaries were merged into the parent company on June 1, 1963 according [3]. Richmond-Chase would bring Burnel Richmond as VP, Filice and Perreli, Peter M. Filice; Thornton Cannery, Dale G. Hollenbeck, Schuckl, George Coley. San Jose canning would be separate. They canned 500,000 tons of fruits and vegetables each season. The separate business named were removed in April 1964[4]. By 1970, the company was owned by 1,145 farmers in California and Wisconsin[5].
Joseph Perelli of Filice and Perelli suggested that the company expanded too quickly:[6]:
We started to negotiate with this group of growers and financial people, I guess, in probably 1957 or so. By June 1, 1958, we completed our negotiations and sold. Practically all the people that were in our organization transferred to California Canners and Growers.
There were other companies. Filice and Perrelli, Richmond Chase were the two basic companies that went with them first. Then they also took in Thornton Canning Company, which was located in Thornton, near Stockton. Then they took over San Jose Canning Company. They did that as months went by and they became pretty large. As a matter of fact, I think they grew too fast. It was a big operation, because they had a number of canneries. They had three canneries with the Filice and Perrelli, and two canneries with Richmond Chase, one with Thornton, one with San Jose Canning Company.
The company did a joint venture with Tri-Valley Growers in 1964 to share can-making costs[7]. The joint venture was called C.T. Supply, with its main office in Fremont, CA. The joint venture later changed its name to Tri-Valley Container Corporation.
By the early 1980's, the business began to sour for Cal Can. In the late 1960's and early 1970's, the company was stung by consumer concerns over cyclamates used as a less expensive sweetener in canned fruit[8]; the federal government ended up passing a law to pay compensation to the canners who suffered losses by the sudden ban on cyclamates in the 1960's. Changing consumer preferences meant that demand dropped. Foreign competition constrained prices. When interest rates spiked in the early 1980's, Cal Can's lack of working capital meant that they were completely reliant on banks to put forward the money needed to pay the growers each season. When Bob Gibson, Cal Can's president, bought some of Libby's plants in 1982, Bank of America decided that supporting the company would require too much risk and held back from funding the canner for the season. Without another source for funding, Cal Can declared bankruptcy in 1983. They sold the Richmond cannery, and closed the San Jose Canning Company site on Lick Ave[9].
In 1984, California Canners and Growers was merged into Tri-Valley Growers. According to one source, "both companies were in trouble and the banks 'tossed a coin' over which company took over the other. All of Cal Can's local plants were shut down and sold off as scrap".
Locations
Location | Plant Number | Years | Address | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gilroy | CCG Plant 1 | Lewis Ave. | Former Filice and Perelli. | |
Lomira, Wisconsin | 1969-[10] | Canning and distribution. Peas, corn, and beans. | ||
Merced | -1983 | Former Filice and Perelli[11]. Mentioned in Thornton Canning purchase article[12]. Cannery closed in 1983 after Cal Can's bankruptcy and because of a poor peach crop[13]. | ||
Richmond | CCG Plant 5 | 1958-1970 | 1200 Harbor Way | Former Filice and Perelli. Plant manager and night superintendent transferred to San Jose upon closure. |
San Jose | CCG Plant 2 | 1958-1984 | 1193 Lick Ave.[14] | Former San Jose Canning Company. |
San Jose | CCG Plant 4 | 1958-1984 | Stockton Ave. | Former Richmond-Chase. Transportation department and parking on west side of Stockton Ave. |
Stockton | CCG Plant 7 | |||
Sunnyvale | 1963- | Fair Oaks Ave. | Former Schuckl Cannery. Purchased in 1963. | |
Thornton | Former Thornton Canning Company. |
Photos
Photo of CalCan facility north of Diridon Station
References
- ↑ June 6, 1958 Lodi News-Sentinel
- ↑ Cal-Can Buys Thornton Canning. June 12, 1959 Lodi News-Sentinel. Thornton rounded out Cal Can's business, adding additional tomato canning capacity.
- ↑ May 29, 1963 Lodi News
- ↑ 1964 Modesto Bee.
- ↑ Cyclamate Compensation. From CQ Almanac 1972.
- ↑ Joseph Perelli, The Establishment of the Filice and Perelli Company in Richmond. Oral history.
- ↑ Tri-Valley Growers History, fundinguniverse.com
- ↑ Cyclamate Compensation. From CQ Almanac 1972.
- ↑ San Jose Mercury News
- ↑ California Canning Company Opens "Windy Lomira". June 7, 1969 Milwaukee Journal.
- ↑ Elmer C. Nelson obituary, Jan 5. 2012. Nelson started at Filice and Perelli which became Cal Can.
- ↑ Cal-Can Buys Thornton Canning. June 12, 1959 Lodi News-Sentinel.
- ↑ Merced Cal Can Workers Idled. July 30, 1983 Lodi News-Sentinel.
- ↑ List of manufacturing businesses in Santa Clara County, Vocational Education memo, 1972.