Stokely Van Camp
Revision as of 05:46, 9 November 2020 by Robert Bowdidge (talk | contribs)
Business |
Cannery |
---|---|
Predecessors |
Tamal Packing, George N. Herbert Packing Company |
Stokely Van Camp was an east coast based canner. Van Camp moved into the California market by opened operations in California in 1922 starting negotiations to buy three canneries. They purchased four plants: the Tamal Packing plant in San Francisco, George N. Herbert Packing Company canneries in Gridley and San Jose, and an olive cannery in Oroville[1].
The company had a plant on Campbell Ave. in San Jose (near Santa Clara border) with a private refrigerated warehouse.
Stokely Van Camp eventually merged into Tri-Valley Growers.
Locations
Location | Years | Address | Details |
---|---|---|---|
Gridley | 1922 | Former George N. Herbert Packing Company | |
Lodi | None | Formerly Foster and Woods cannery, then Pacific Coast Producers. | |
Oakland | 1937 | 5625 East 14th Street[2] | |
Oakland | 1937 | 5901 East 14th Street[3]. | As Stokely Brothers. |
San Francisco | 1922 | 2200 Folsom St. | Former Tamal Packing warehouse. |
San Jose | 1962, 1970s | 1180 Campbell Avenue[4] |
References
- ↑ March 1922 Western Canner and Packer
- ↑ United States Senate, Membership list of the Northwest Canners and Freezers organization. In Unemployment Insurance Amendements of 1966, Hearings before the Committee on Fnance, United States Senate, Eighty-Ninth Congress, second session on H.R. 15119: An Act to Extend and Improve the Federal-State Unemployment Compensation Program.
- ↑ Fruit Buyers, Packers and Shippers: 1937 Oakland City Directory. As "Stokely Bros."
- ↑ U.S. Department of Agriculture, Directory of Refrigerated Warehouses in the United States. 1970.