Difference between revisions of "Madison and Bonner"
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[http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=79717972 Bonner obituary] [[Category:San Francisco]] | [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=79717972 Bonner obituary] [[Category:San Francisco]] | ||
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[[Category:Sunnyvale]] | [[Category:Sunnyvale]] | ||
[[Category:Dried Fruit Packer]] | [[Category:Dried Fruit Packer]] |
Revision as of 21:43, 28 February 2014
Business |
Dried Fruit Packing |
---|---|
Main Location |
San Francisco |
Active |
1903-1911 |
Successors |
Bonner Packing |
Madison and Bonner was a California-based dried fruit packer founded by James Madison and Charles G. Bonner. The company was started in Fresno in 1890<ref> October 6, 1985 Los Angeles Times. Madison and Bonner had packing houses in the Santa Clara Valley (Sunnyvale) and San Joaquin Valley (Fresno area). The company only lasted to 1911 when the two principals decided to dissolve the company. Bonner took over the Fresno raisin plants, changed the signs to "Bonner Packing" and started billing the company in the trade magazine as "successors to Madison and Bonner." The distant Sunnyvale plant went to J. K. Armsby, a large San Francisco-based packer.
The Sunnyvale plant is the biggest reminder of Madison and Bonner in the Santa Clara Valley because of their dried fruit receiving station built in Sunnyvale in 1904. The packing house, at 185 Evelyn on the site of a former winery, became part of Del Monte in 1916. In 1926, when Del Monte's Plant 51 opened in San Jose, the local packing houses like the one on Evelyn were no longer needed. Del Monte left it vacant for a few years, then reopened it in 1930 as the home of their corporate seed research lab. Del Monte only left the building in 1986. The building managed to survive, moving across Murphy Street to its current location where it is billed as the Del Monte building
Bonner Packing survived in the Central Valley for quite a while, and was billed as the largest privately-owned raisin packer in the world.
Locations
Location | Years | Address | Details |
---|---|---|---|
San Francisco | 1908, 1909, 1910, 1911 | 112 Market Street |
Santa Marina Building |
Sunnyvale | 1904, 1911, 1916 | 185 Evelyn Avenue |
Became "California Packing Corporation's":/view?industry=california_packing_corporation Sunnyvale receiving station. |
Photos
Packing House and railroad tracks, 1940's.
Details
More on Madison and Bonner in an article at vasonabranch.blogspot.com.
Successor: Bonner Packing (Fresno plant), J. K. Armsby (Sunnyvale plant)
Dried fruit processors in Sunnyvale. Built dried fruit receiving station in 1904 on site of former winery at 185 Evelyn in Sunnyvale. Became part of Del Monte in 1916, plant closed in 1926 because of opening of larger plant in San Jose (Plant 51). Building used as storage 1926-1930, then became Del Monte's corporate seed department in 1930.
See Sunnyvale planning document for photo of plant at original location. Building moved to Murphy Street and currently used as meeting space and retail.
Also see building's own web site for more photos.
Madison and Bonner must have had a presence in the Central Valley; an article in the 12 Oct 1901 San Francisco Call remarks on a lawsuit over ownership of 6,000 tons of raisins from Fresno County where M&amp;amp;B owned a share.
Madison and Bonner broke up the company in 1911 / Bonner purchased Madison's interest in the company and the Sunnyvale plant went to J. K. Armsby according to May 20, 1911 California Fruit News San Francisco Handbook of Manufacturing 1910: plants in Sunnyvale, Reedley, Locans, Forcey, Fresno County.
Principals were James Madison and Charles G. Bonner in 1908 according to 1908 San Francisco city directory. Offices were at Santa Marina Building, 112 Market Street, San Francisco.
Bonner Packing in Fresno advertised as successors to Madison and Bonner" in "July 1913 Fruit Grower News Specialized in raisins. Bonner Packing later bought the Rosenberg raisin business after World War II.
September 15, 1906 Pacific Rural Press mentions that Madison and Bonner just finished enlarging the packing house in Sunnyvale and installing new machinery.