Berger and Carter

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Summary
Business

Manufacturer
Active

1903 - 1923

Berger and Carter was an industrial conglomerate. The company, with a presence in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Portland, produced iron and steel, machine tools, and food preserving machinery.

The company made various sizes of mechanical dehydrators from two ton to 50 ton[1]; by 1921, this part of the business was known as Berger, Fleming and Brown. The company also made a wide line of canning machinery including slicers, pie foundries, and agitating cookers[2]. By 1921, the company had closed the Hayward plant and was having its machinery made by other companies [3].

The company was founded in 1903 as Berger-Carter as jobbers and dealers in iron, steel, and machinery. The company was incorporated in 1907. [4]. It also had an export department selling to South America, Asia, and South Africa. The steel business resold plate, sheet, bar, and boiler tubes. The machinery and supply side resold machine tools. The canning machinery department both made its own machines and resold equipment from east coast manufacturers. In 1919, the company listed earnings of $77,000.

The 1919 company sales conference brought 175 of the firm's sales force to San Francisco in December 1919[5]

In 1919, Otto A. Berger was chairman of the board, W. W. Fleming was president and general manager, and E. W. Brown was vice-president and treasurer. Anderson Barngrover bought the canning machinery business in January, 1923[6]; Berger and Carter stated the sale would allow them to focus on their iron and steel business.

By 1930, Otto Berger listed his occupation as "Agent: Iron and Steel Lines".

Locations

Location Years Address Details
Hayward before 1921 El Dorado Ave. at Amador St.[7] Across from Hunts Cannery.
San Francisco 1920 365 Market Street San Francisco -1923 16 California Street
San Francisco 1922 400 Mission Street[8]

Berger and Carter's manufacturing plant for canning equipment was in Hayward, California, across the railroad tracks from the Hunt Brothers cannery. The machine shop and assembly building on Amador St. was served by a siding from the Southern Pacific Railroad. By 1921, the plant had been shut down, with the company instead getting its own canning machine designs built by other companies[9].

References

  1. Efficiency In Dehydration hearing, January 1921 Monthly Bulletin of the California Department of Agriculture. Mr. Cornell, Berger and Carter: "The dehydrator branch of Berger and Carter Company will be known as Berger, Fleming, and Brown. They will build evaporators under the King patent." Mr. King (Berger and Carter): "We will build the evaporators in a central factory and ship the parts to be assembled at the orchard. Plants will vary from 2-ton units to 50-ton units. We try to simulate the effect of the sun's heat in drying; in other words, to dry from the center outward."
  2. Canning Peaches in the Santa Clara Valley: August 1921 Canning Age. Lists the machinery and makers for the equipment in the Hyde Cannery.
  3. Berger and Carter Company: 1921 Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities.
  4. Berger and Carter Company: 1921 Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities.
  5. Annual Salesmen's Convention of the Berger and Carter Company: January 1920 Western Canner and Packer.
  6. Anderson-Barngrover Manufacturing Company Acquires Berger & Carter Company Interests in Canning Machinery and Supplies: January 1923 Western Canner and Packer
  7. March 1923 Hayward California Sanborn map. Map shows Luthy Company, a battery manufacturer at the site. The May 7, 1921 Argonuaut magazine notes that the plant was formerly a Berger and Carter plant.
  8. Berger and Carter Company Issues Notable Catalog for Spanish Speaking Countries: July 1922 Western Canner and Packer.
  9. Berger and Carter Company: 1921 Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities.