Guggenhime and Company
Business |
Dried Fruit Packer |
---|---|
Main Location |
San Francisco |
Active |
1893-1946 |
Brands |
Pansy, Rosedale, Daphne, Carnation Pink, Heliotrope |
Successors |
Hunt Brothers Packing Company |
Guggenhime and Company was a large independent dried fruit packer in California, founded in 1897 by David J. Guggenhime[1]. Guggenhime had packing houses in the Santa Clara Valley, San Joaquin Valley, Sacramento Valley, and Southern California. Guggenhime packed "dried fruit, raisins, nuts, [and] honey"[2], packing under flower brand names: Pansy, Rosedale, Daphne, Carnation Pink, and Heliotrope[3] David's brother, Berthold Guggenhime was vice president before 1918, but after David's death in 1921 ran the company. Berthold Guggenhime was the company president in 1921, with Bert Katz, vice-president, Lester Lacher, second vice-president, Silas Harris, secretary, and Martin Lemeke, treasurer[4].
Guggenhime planned a merger with several other dried fruit processors in Castle Brothers, Rosenberg Brothers, and Phoenix Packing in 1905, but the deal collapsed under accusations that [Rosenberg Brothers]] used the merger as a ruse to gather competitive information[5]. Guggenhime was also a founding member of the Dried Fruit Association of California in 1907, with D. J. Guggenhime representing the company.
Guggenhime was bought by Hunt Brands in April 1946[6], and left the dried fruit business in September 1949.
Guggenhime and Company in San Jose
Guggenhime had two packing houses, side by side, off of Julian Street in San Jose at least during the mid-1930's. John C. Gordon took multiple pictures of the three-story wood and brick plants. More details are available from contemporary lawsuits. A 1936 lawsuit over death in elevator hints at the internal arrangement of the packing house. John J. Whelan, the superintendent, died when crushed between floors; his widow sued the insurance company because his life insurance policy paid double for deaths associated with elevators[7]. A 1943 advertisement solicited men for the "long" dried fruit packing season[8].
Locations
Location | Plant # | Years | Address | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|
College City | 1909 | |||
Colusa | 1909 | |||
Fresno | Plant 4, 8 | 1909, 1930s[9] | Santa Fe Avenue | |
Hanford | 1909 | |||
Rucker | 1909 | |||
San Francisco | 1902 | 118 Davis St.[10]. | ||
San Francisco | 1909 | Filbert and Sansome St. | ||
San Francisco | 1912, 1921 | 100 California Street | ||
San Jose | Plant 16, 17 | 1927, 1935 | 261 Julian Street | Julian and Pleasant Street |
Santa Ana | 1909 | ??? | ||
Selma | 1909 |
Photos
Plant 4 and 8, Fresno. Pop Laval Foundation.
Guggenhime and Company Dried Fruit Packing Plant 16 John C. Gordon Collection / San Jose Library
Guggenhime and Company Dried Fruit Packing Plant 17 John C. Gordon Collection / San Jose Library
References
- ↑ David J. Guggenhime Passes Away: May 18, 1918 California Fruit News.
- ↑ 1916 California Fruit News advertisement.
- ↑ Advertisement: May 27, 1911 California Fruit News
- ↑ New Officers of Guggenhime & Co: June 1921 Western Canner and Packer
- ↑ October 6, 1905 San Francisco Call.
- ↑ Guggenhime Plant Sold: news article Jun 17 1946, San Jose News "Guggenhime Plant Sold: Reports of court injunctions and other measures to halt the sale of Guggenhime & Co to Hunt Foods Inc. had not materialized today when the deed transfering the San Jose real estate was on file with County Recorder Charles A. Payne. The notice of intended sale of all the Guggenhime fruit-processing enterprises had been published a few weeks ago."
- ↑ Fitzpatrick v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. 15 Cal.App.2d 155
- ↑ "Guggenhime needs men for essential industry / dried fruit packing / long season: October 12, 1943 San Jose Evening News
- ↑ Sign on EBay suggests that company was established in 1897, and the Fresno plant was built in 1916.
- ↑ 1902 San Francisco City Directory. D. J. Guggenhime and I. Fleishman were the principals. David J. Guggenhime lived at 1101 Geary St.