Producers Warehouse Company

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Summary
Main Location

San Jose
Active

1919-1930
Successors

California Cooperative Canneries

Producers Warehouse Company was a public warehouse associated with California Cooperative Canneries. The company was building a plant in San Jose in 1918 between Jackson, Taylor, 9th, and 10th streets. Vernon Campbell was the general manager in 1918. The company was mentioned in 1918 congressional testimony about the control Armour had over the raisin (and wider canning?) industry. Producers Warehouse was primarily selling to Armour, and Armour reserved the right to buy the cannery if they tried to sell. [1] The case went to the Surpreme Court, alleging that the packer consent decree between Swift, Armour, and the US interfered with California Cooperative Canneries selling to them[2]. In the 1922 Senate hearing over the consent decree, Vernon Campbell's petition mentioned that California Cooperative Canneries had initially been incorporated as Producers Warehouse, but the name had been changed.

A Mercury News article was happy about the initial lawsuit, claiming that California Cooperative Canneries was actually a "blind" for Armour - they wouldn't have been able to buy fruit under their actual name, so they needed the side company to do it.

"Armour interests" sold the company to Tri-Valley Growers in late 1930's.

See also California Fruit News where they remark on the organization - new cooperative, related to California Growers Association of Los Angeles, and "generally accepted reports" say that some of the products will end up canned for Armour's labels.

Tomatoes, fruits, vegetables, cherries.

Locations

Location Years Address Details
San Jose 1918 Jackson and Tenth

References

  1. List of big packing companies handling unrelated lines.
  2. (U.S. v. CALIFORNIA CANNERIES 279 U.S. 553 (1929) UNITED STATES v. CALIFORNIA COOPERATIVE CANNERIES. No. 375. Supreme Court of United States. Argued April 16, 1929. Decided May 20, 1929.)