Difference between revisions of "California Cooperative Canneries"

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[[File:California-cooperative-canneries_from_pacific_service_magazine_1926.jpg|240px|thumb|right|California Cooperative Canneries, San Jose, 1926.<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/pacificservicema1627paci/pacificservicema1627paci#page/n348/mode/1up Pacific Service Magazine, October 1926].</ref>]]
 
[[File:California-cooperative-canneries_from_pacific_service_magazine_1926.jpg|240px|thumb|right|California Cooperative Canneries, San Jose, 1926.<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/pacificservicema1627paci/pacificservicema1627paci#page/n348/mode/1up Pacific Service Magazine, October 1926].</ref>]]
'''California Cooperative Canneries''' was an Armour-affiliated cannery, founded in 1919 as part of the meat packing company's attempt to expand once again into fruits and vegetables.  Although nominally independent, California Cooperative Canneries had a ten year contract to sell its full production to Armour.  Armour argued that the setup would give farmers more flexibility and profits, but others saw it as an attempt by the meat-packers to dominate another area of food production.  
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'''California Cooperative Canneries''' was an Armour-affiliated cannery, founded in 1919 as part of the meat packing company's attempt to expand once again into fruits and vegetables.  Although nominally independent, California Cooperative Canneries had a ten year contract to sell its full production to Armour<ref>In [https://books.google.com/books?id=WgQ9AAAAYAAJ&lpg=PA613&ots=T5Rur7pd-9&dq=%22santa%20clara%20valley%20growers%20association%22&pg=PA29#v=snippet&q=promoter&f=false Packers' Consent Decree: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, United States Senate, Sixty-Seventh Congress, Second Session, Pursuant to Senate Resolution 211, to Investigate Matters Concerning the Consent Decree Entered in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in the Case of the United States of America, Plaintiff, V. Swift & Co. Et Al., Defendants.] U. S. Senate,  March 23 and April 21, 1922.  Contract appears in the hearing transcript</ref>.  Armour argued that the setup would give farmers more flexibility and profits, but others saw it as an attempt by the meat-packers to dominate another area of food production.
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Armour's contract with California Cooperative Canneries had effect between May 1919 and January 1929.  It declared that the cannery would sell all canned fruit required by Armour, and sell at the current [[California Packing Corporation]]'s prices unless such a price would be less than the cost of production.  The cannery could sell any fruit beyond Armour's needs as of January 1, and could also sell any canned fruit that Armour did not use.  Armour also held a mortgage on one of California Cooperative Cannery's buildings, initially $250,000 but reduced to $200,000 by 1922.
  
 
The movement sparked an epic anti-trust battle between the US Government and Armour and Swift, leading to a consent decree against the meat-packers; Armour relinquished the company soon after.  There are signs that the canneries were to be sold to [[Bisceglia Brothers]], with the new company continuing to sell to Armour<ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=cB8yAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MeQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1296%2C265046 January 7, 1920 Evening News]</ref>  [[Bisceglia Brothers]] will continue contracts with Armour.  By 1924, the "independent" canneries were
 
The movement sparked an epic anti-trust battle between the US Government and Armour and Swift, leading to a consent decree against the meat-packers; Armour relinquished the company soon after.  There are signs that the canneries were to be sold to [[Bisceglia Brothers]], with the new company continuing to sell to Armour<ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=cB8yAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MeQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1296%2C265046 January 7, 1920 Evening News]</ref>  [[Bisceglia Brothers]] will continue contracts with Armour.  By 1924, the "independent" canneries were

Revision as of 20:14, 7 July 2015

Summary
Business

Cannery
Brands

X Ray, Suncarest, Dew Taste, Calamade, Cock o' the Walk.
Aliases

Santa Clara Valley Growers Association
Successors

Tri-Valley Packing
California Cooperative Canneries, San Jose, 1926.[1]

California Cooperative Canneries was an Armour-affiliated cannery, founded in 1919 as part of the meat packing company's attempt to expand once again into fruits and vegetables. Although nominally independent, California Cooperative Canneries had a ten year contract to sell its full production to Armour[2]. Armour argued that the setup would give farmers more flexibility and profits, but others saw it as an attempt by the meat-packers to dominate another area of food production.

Armour's contract with California Cooperative Canneries had effect between May 1919 and January 1929. It declared that the cannery would sell all canned fruit required by Armour, and sell at the current California Packing Corporation's prices unless such a price would be less than the cost of production. The cannery could sell any fruit beyond Armour's needs as of January 1, and could also sell any canned fruit that Armour did not use. Armour also held a mortgage on one of California Cooperative Cannery's buildings, initially $250,000 but reduced to $200,000 by 1922.

The movement sparked an epic anti-trust battle between the US Government and Armour and Swift, leading to a consent decree against the meat-packers; Armour relinquished the company soon after. There are signs that the canneries were to be sold to Bisceglia Brothers, with the new company continuing to sell to Armour[3] Bisceglia Brothers will continue contracts with Armour. By 1924, the "independent" canneries were deeply in debt to packers. The consent decree was suspended from 1925 to 1929; the Supreme Court ruled anti-trust action was appropriate[4]. Eventually, they were allowed to keep the business[5]. Even then, the canneries only survived a few more years, being sold to Tri-Valley Packing in 1932.

In 1920, the president was S. E. Johnson, with Albert Jaentze as secretary[6]. The company's manager was Vernon Campbell in 1921; he shows up in many press quotes during the early founding of the company. Floyd Bohnett, an enthusiastic member in 1922[7], also appeared in the press.

A 1922 Canners Directory shows sites in San Jose and Modesto, with offices in Cunard Building in San Francisco[8]. San Jose's plant was one of the biggest canneries in the county in 1922; a 1922 history noted "There are forty canning factories in the county. One of these, the Co-operative plant, is the largest in the world. In 1921 it absorbed 30,000 tons of fruit and employed nearly 1,000 people. In the busy season of that year the combined county payroll reached over two million dollars."

Locations

Location Years Address Details
Hemet North Harvard Ave., north of Devonshire[9]. Buildings apparently still exist.
Modesto 1922
San Francisco 1922 Cunard Building
San Jose 1920, 1922 Tenth and Taylor
Tulare 1920
Visalia 1920

References