H.G. Prince
Business |
Cannery |
---|---|
Main Location |
Oakland |
Active |
1868-1930 |
Predecessors |
San Leandro Canning Company |
Successors |
California Packing Corporation |
H. G. Prince was a jelly maker and later canner in the San Francisco Bay Area. Henry G. Prince had learned the trade working for Crosse and Blackwell[1]. The company started in San Francisco as a jelly maker in 1868, moving to Fruitvale after the Great San Francisco Earthquake in 1906[2]. The company later expanded with a canner in San Leandro. Their San Leandro plant had formerly been the San Leandro Canning Company, and was bought in May 1922[3]
Henry Prince died around 1922[4].
Prince was sold to California Packing Corporation between 1925 and 1930; product canned in their plants continued to have the H. G. Prince name on the labels through at least the 1940's[5].
H. G. Prince was an early user of trucks rather than the railroad to bring the crops to the cannery[6]. The cannery found that sending fruit by rail from meant stopping picking by 2:30 to get the crop to the railhead. With the trucks, crews could be picking til almost 5:00.
Locations
Location | Years | Address | Details |
---|---|---|---|
Fruitvale | 1921 | ||
San Leandro | 1922 |
Photos
Photos of employees from Oakland Museum.
References
- ↑ Panorama of employees caption, Oakland Museum.
- ↑ H. G. Prince. OaklandWiki.
- ↑ May 1922 Western Canner and Packer
- ↑ Obituary: Henry G. Prince, western Canner and Packer. The obituary lists his company as the successor to the Cole-Portwood Canning Company.
- ↑ My father remembers that the Del Monte San Leandro was still canning some grades of fruit with H.G. Prince labels in the 1940's when he held summer jobs there
- ↑ June 1921 Canning Age