Difference between revisions of "George N. Herbert Packing Company"
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Herbert also began buying land. | Herbert also began buying land. | ||
"George N. Herbert has purchased 110 acres of the Thomas Fisher estate, a short distance south of Coyote, for between $70,000 and $75,000. Mr. Herbert stated that he purchased the property owing to the great richness of the soil, which he considers the best prune land in the valley. His 25 years' experience in the packing business has taught him that the largest and highest quality prunes are raised in the territory running from Edenvale to several miles south of Coyote. He stated also that the biggest production of prunes comes from this section.”<ref> | "George N. Herbert has purchased 110 acres of the Thomas Fisher estate, a short distance south of Coyote, for between $70,000 and $75,000. Mr. Herbert stated that he purchased the property owing to the great richness of the soil, which he considers the best prune land in the valley. His 25 years' experience in the packing business has taught him that the largest and highest quality prunes are raised in the territory running from Edenvale to several miles south of Coyote. He stated also that the biggest production of prunes comes from this section.”<ref> | ||
− | October 7, 1916 Pacific Rural Press.</ref>. Herbert sold the land in 1920 Douglas Sim for $150,000. The land included 100 acres of prunes and ten acres of apricots<ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=yR8yAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MeQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4204%2C4742304 San Jose Evening News, April 22, 1920]</ref>. Headline showed it as largest sale of the year. | + | October 7, 1916 Pacific Rural Press.</ref>. Herbert sold the land in 1920 Douglas Sim for $150,000. The land included 100 acres of prunes and ten acres of apricots<ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=yR8yAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MeQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4204%2C4742304 San Jose Evening News, April 22, 1920]</ref>. Headline showed it as largest sale of the year. A separate parcel at Coyote was apparently sold to D. Campisi and Carlo Aiello in February, 1920<ref>25 Years Ago Today: [http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=SiwiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=PqQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5650%2C4757669 February 28, 1945 San Jose Evening News]. "Charles A. Pugh, local real estate dealer, yesterday announced the sale to D. Campisi and Carlo Aiello of the George N. Herbert ranch at Coyote for $147,000."</ref>. |
==Locations== | ==Locations== |
Latest revision as of 06:01, 15 February 2015
Business |
Dried Fruit Packer,Cannery |
---|---|
Main Location |
San Jose |
Active |
1890-1918 |
Brands |
Herbert's Extra[1], Buymore |
Successors |
California Prune and Apricot Growers, Herbert Packing Company. |
George N. Herbert Packing Company was a dried fruit packer in San Jose from the early 1890’s through 1918. The principal for the company was George N. Herbert, a veteran San Jose fruit man. Herbert was the son of a California immigrant; his brother, J.H. Herbert was also in the fruit industry. Herbert sold his packing house to the California Prune and Apricot Growers in 1918. Within a year, Herbert started the Herbert Packing Company cannery, purchasing the Smith-Frank Canning Company. The company was hiring at Third and Keyes during the 1919 season[2]. Herbert Packing disappeared by the late 1920's.
Dried Fruit Packing House on Lincoln Ave.
George N. Herbert Packing Company started in a small packing house on Meridian Road in San Jose in 1890[3]. In 1898, Herbert built a one-story packing house at Lincoln and Moorpark Avenues[4]. That packing house burned on June 30, 1901 - losing 450 tons of prunes, and buildings covering an acre. The fire also set the adjacent narrow gauge tracks on fire. 250 tons were owned by the California Cured Fruit Association, rest belonged to Herbert except for 20 tons owned by Seglemen Brothers of New York, awaiting shipping instructions." The fire completely destroyed the "immense dryer and packing house on Lincoln Ave."; the immense piles of prunes glowed like a volcano”[5][6]. Herbert rebuilt his plant in 40 days as a three-story packing house in the middle of the Lincoln block. The plant was expanded in 1915, resulting in a building 166 feet long, 82 feet wide, and three stories high with concrete vaults for steaming fruit and sorting machinery on the second floor[7].
Herbert did contract packing for the California Prune and Apricot Growers in 1917 in the organization’s first year[8]. Herbert supposedly sold a million pounds of the crop without informing the association and holding on to the $100,000 in payment, leading to a lawsuit, a demand for a $320,000 bond, and a louder demand for the immediate return of 1.9 million pounds of prunes and 178,000 pounds of apricots which belonged to Sunsweet. "...Mr Herbert gave copies of the shipping sheets to the inspectors, so as to permit the fruit to be checked out of the packing plant, but sent only a few selected sheets thereof to the sales department so that the officers of the corporation would be unable to find out that he was liable to the corporation for the purchase of the fruit."[9]. Sunsweet grabbed the twenty-two carloads of packed fruit and 200 tons of prunes the next week[10]. Because of the trouble with Herbert and similar issues with other packers, Sunsweet changed their operating style from contracting with packing houses to leasing or purchasing them outright. Sunsweet purchased the Herbert packing house in June 1918[11][12]. The building became Sunsweet’s Plant #6.
Herbert also began buying land. "George N. Herbert has purchased 110 acres of the Thomas Fisher estate, a short distance south of Coyote, for between $70,000 and $75,000. Mr. Herbert stated that he purchased the property owing to the great richness of the soil, which he considers the best prune land in the valley. His 25 years' experience in the packing business has taught him that the largest and highest quality prunes are raised in the territory running from Edenvale to several miles south of Coyote. He stated also that the biggest production of prunes comes from this section.”[13]. Herbert sold the land in 1920 Douglas Sim for $150,000. The land included 100 acres of prunes and ten acres of apricots[14]. Headline showed it as largest sale of the year. A separate parcel at Coyote was apparently sold to D. Campisi and Carlo Aiello in February, 1920[15].
Locations
Location | Years | Address | Details |
---|---|---|---|
Coyote | 1916-1920 | Former Thomas Fisher estate orchards. | |
San Jose | 1896-1902 | Lincoln Avenue corner of Moorpark |
Dried Fruit packing house, San Francisco Call 1900 list of dropoff locations for California Cured Fruit Association. |
San Jose | 1902-1918 | Lincoln Avenue near Sansevain |
References
- ↑ Label
- ↑ Wanted: Women to Work In Fruit: September 19, 1919 San Jose Evening News. Billed as Herbert Packing Company, Third and Keyes.
- ↑ Improvements Made in Herbert Packing House: August 20, 1915 San Jose Mercury Herald
- ↑ George N. Herbert: History of Coast Counties.
- ↑ Packing House Burned: Destruction of Herbert Co.’s Plant Causes $50,000 Loss: July 1, 1901 San Jose Evening News
- ↑ Flames Destroy Tons of Prunes: July 1, 1901 San Francisco Call. "Nearly $50,000 worth of materials and supplies for this season's business had just been purchased, all of which was lost.
- ↑ Improvements Made in Herbert Packing House: August 20, 1915 San Jose Mercury Herald
- ↑ List of Sunsweet collection stations: July 21, 1917 San Jose Evening News.
- ↑ Packers Fear More Suits for Contract Breach Following Herbert Litigation: November 27, 1917 San Jose Mercury Herald
- ↑ Quantity of Prunes Seized at Local Packing House by the Growers' Association: December 5, 1917 San Jose Mercury Herald
- ↑ Growers To Buy Up Nine Local Packers: April 10, 1918 San Jose Mercury Herald
- ↑ Prune Association Buys First Plant: June 6, 1918 San Jose Evening News. Purchase price was $60,000. "The association will soon take over the Holmes Pplant, and will probably sell it to the Greco company to use as a cannery, as the association does not need it, but according to the agreement with the packers, has to take it over."
- ↑ October 7, 1916 Pacific Rural Press.
- ↑ San Jose Evening News, April 22, 1920
- ↑ 25 Years Ago Today: February 28, 1945 San Jose Evening News. "Charles A. Pugh, local real estate dealer, yesterday announced the sale to D. Campisi and Carlo Aiello of the George N. Herbert ranch at Coyote for $147,000."