Difference between revisions of "American Can Company"
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| primary_business = Can Maker | | primary_business = Can Maker | ||
| primary_town = New Jersey | | primary_town = New Jersey | ||
− | | primary_dates = | + | | primary_dates = 1901-? |
+ | | predecessors = [[Great Western Can Company]] | ||
}} | }} | ||
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| San Francisco || 1916- || [http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Kentucky%20and%2020th,San%20Francisco Kentucky and 20th] || | | San Francisco || 1916- || [http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Kentucky%20and%2020th,San%20Francisco Kentucky and 20th] || | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | San Jose || | + | | San Jose ||1919-|| [http://maps.google.com/maps?q=198%20Martha%20at%205th,San%20Jose 198 Martha at 5th] || |
|- | |- | ||
| San Jose || 1984 || [http://maps.google.com/maps?q=1598%20South%20First%20Street,San%20Jose 1598 South First Street] || | | San Jose || 1984 || [http://maps.google.com/maps?q=1598%20South%20First%20Street,San%20Jose 1598 South First Street] || |
Revision as of 00:46, 8 August 2013
Business |
Can Maker |
---|---|
Main Location |
New Jersey |
Active |
1901-? |
Predecessors |
Great Western Can Company |
San Jose plant details from History of Santa Clara, 1922
Locations
Location | Years | Address | Details |
---|---|---|---|
Maywood, IL | -~1970 | ||
Monterey | 1937-1954 | Ocean View at Dewey | |
San Francisco | 1901 | ||
San Francisco | 1916- | Kentucky and 20th | |
San Jose | 1919- | 198 Martha at 5th | |
San Jose | 1984 | 1598 South First Street | |
Seattle | 1934 | Railroad Avenue at piers. | |
Stockton | 1963 | McKinley Avenue | Fire in 1963. |
Photos
American Can Co., San Francisco University of Washington Libraries
American Can Company, San Jose University of Washington
Details
"The American Can Company, a branch of the great New Jersey Company, has a plant on Martha Street, which takes in an entire block. This company is now employing 450 men and women. Foreseeing difficulty in obtaining the amount of help they needed should other industries locate in San Jose and give regular employment throughout the year, and also anticipating the continued growth of the canning industry in this section of the state, the company early in 1919 completed plans for enlarging its business."
"These plans have been developed so far that warehouse facilities to store 32,000,000 cans and track facilities for loading and unloading 50 freight cars at a time are the result. This storage capacity is now being added to the present plant in a warehouse 200 by 600 feet being built adjoining their original plant of 225 by 500 feet, making a plant covering an entire city black bounded by Martha, Keyes and Fifth Streets, with the Southern Pacific railroad on the Fourth Street side."
"In making these additions to its plant the company intends to start year-round work for its employees. None but adult help will be employed and except in case of emergency all night and overtime work will be done away with. With the greatly increased storage capacity there will be enough room to care for the needs of the company's customers with the constant shipment of those concerns operating throughout the greater portion of the year. The plant was located in San Jose in 1912. In 1919 the company's output was over 10,000,000 cans. John S. Reed is the superintendent."
Warehouse added in 1951 according to Lodi News Lodi News
Hm... if the cans were so fragile, why do they need so many tracks? The raw materials shouldn't require so much incoming freight.
See American Can Company listing in 1912 Moody's Manual of Investments for list of plants and original merged companies.
Known as American National Can Company by 1991.
[San Francisco Call August 2, 1901 mentions the can company's shutdown is causing problems.
For Seattle, see http://www.ilwu19.com/history/photo/8742.htm