-
3
-
-
0003485654
-
-
Philadelphia
-
Margaret F. Byington, Homestead: The Households of a Mill Town (Philadelphia, 1910), 75-77; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, How American Buying Habits Change (Washington, D.C., 1959), 112-124; National Industrial Conference Board, Inc., The Cost of Living in the United States (New York, 1925), 72-74, 94-95; Robert Coit Chapin, The Standard of Living Among Workwomen's Families in New York City (New York, 1909), 154-62; Richard Osborn Cummings, The American and His Food: A History of Food Habits in the United States (Chicago, 1940), 247-49.
-
(1910)
Homestead: The Households of a Mill Town
, pp. 75-77
-
-
Byington, M.F.1
-
4
-
-
0040657093
-
-
Washington, D.C.
-
Margaret F. Byington, Homestead: The Households of a Mill Town (Philadelphia, 1910), 75-77; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, How American Buying Habits Change (Washington, D.C., 1959), 112-124; National Industrial Conference Board, Inc., The Cost of Living in the United States (New York, 1925), 72-74, 94-95; Robert Coit Chapin, The Standard of Living Among Workwomen's Families in New York City (New York, 1909), 154-62; Richard Osborn Cummings, The American and His Food: A History of Food Habits in the United States (Chicago, 1940), 247-49.
-
(1959)
How American Buying Habits Change
, pp. 112-124
-
-
-
5
-
-
0039471678
-
-
New York
-
Margaret F. Byington, Homestead: The Households of a Mill Town (Philadelphia, 1910), 75-77; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, How American Buying Habits Change (Washington, D.C., 1959), 112-124; National Industrial Conference Board, Inc., The Cost of Living in the United States (New York, 1925), 72-74, 94-95; Robert Coit Chapin, The Standard of Living Among Workwomen's Families in New York City (New York, 1909), 154-62; Richard Osborn Cummings, The American and His Food: A History of Food Habits in the United States (Chicago, 1940), 247-49.
-
(1925)
The Cost of Living in the United States
, pp. 72-74
-
-
-
6
-
-
0004073407
-
-
New York
-
Margaret F. Byington, Homestead: The Households of a Mill Town (Philadelphia, 1910), 75-77; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, How American Buying Habits Change (Washington, D.C., 1959), 112-124; National Industrial Conference Board, Inc., The Cost of Living in the United States (New York, 1925), 72-74, 94-95; Robert Coit Chapin, The Standard of Living Among Workwomen's Families in New York City (New York, 1909), 154-62; Richard Osborn Cummings, The American and His Food: A History of Food Habits in the United States (Chicago, 1940), 247-49.
-
(1909)
The Standard of Living among Workwomen's Families in New York City
, pp. 154-162
-
-
Chapin, R.C.1
-
7
-
-
0003550525
-
-
Chicago
-
Margaret F. Byington, Homestead: The Households of a Mill Town (Philadelphia, 1910), 75-77; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, How American Buying Habits Change (Washington, D.C., 1959), 112-124; National Industrial Conference Board, Inc., The Cost of Living in the United States (New York, 1925), 72-74, 94-95; Robert Coit Chapin, The Standard of Living Among Workwomen's Families in New York City (New York, 1909), 154-62; Richard Osborn Cummings, The American and His Food: A History of Food Habits in the United States (Chicago, 1940), 247-49.
-
(1940)
The American and His Food: A History of Food Habits in the United States
, pp. 247-249
-
-
Cummings, R.O.1
-
8
-
-
0003550525
-
-
On flour consumption in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, see Cummings, The American and His Food, 236-37.
-
The American and His Food
, pp. 236-237
-
-
Cummings1
-
10
-
-
0003752115
-
-
New York
-
Richard S. Tedlow, New and Improved: The Story of Mass Marketing in America (New York, 1990); Susan Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Mass Market (New York, 1989); Roland Marchand, Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940 (Berkeley, Calif., 1985); Jackson Lears, Fables of Abundance: A Cultural History of Advertising in America (New York, 1994); Glenn Porter and Harold C. Livesay, Merchants and Manufarturers: Studies in the Changing Structure of Nineteenth-Century Marketing (Baltimore, 1971).
-
(1990)
New and Improved: The Story of Mass Marketing in America
-
-
Tedlow, R.S.1
-
11
-
-
0004159937
-
-
New York
-
Richard S. Tedlow, New and Improved: The Story of Mass Marketing in America (New York, 1990); Susan Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Mass Market (New York, 1989); Roland Marchand, Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940 (Berkeley, Calif., 1985); Jackson Lears, Fables of Abundance: A Cultural History of Advertising in America (New York, 1994); Glenn Porter and Harold C. Livesay, Merchants and Manufarturers: Studies in the Changing Structure of Nineteenth-Century Marketing (Baltimore, 1971).
-
(1989)
Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Mass Market
-
-
Strasser, S.1
-
12
-
-
0003412587
-
-
Berkeley, Calif.
-
Richard S. Tedlow, New and Improved: The Story of Mass Marketing in America (New York, 1990); Susan Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Mass Market (New York, 1989); Roland Marchand, Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940 (Berkeley, Calif., 1985); Jackson Lears, Fables of Abundance: A Cultural History of Advertising in America (New York, 1994); Glenn Porter and Harold C. Livesay, Merchants and Manufarturers: Studies in the Changing Structure of Nineteenth-Century Marketing (Baltimore, 1971).
-
(1985)
Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940
-
-
Marchand, R.1
-
13
-
-
0003457588
-
-
New York
-
Richard S. Tedlow, New and Improved: The Story of Mass Marketing in America (New York, 1990); Susan Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Mass Market (New York, 1989); Roland Marchand, Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940 (Berkeley, Calif., 1985); Jackson Lears, Fables of Abundance: A Cultural History of Advertising in America (New York, 1994); Glenn Porter and Harold C. Livesay, Merchants and Manufarturers: Studies in the Changing Structure of Nineteenth-Century Marketing (Baltimore, 1971).
-
(1994)
Fables of Abundance: A Cultural History of Advertising in America
-
-
Lears, J.1
-
14
-
-
0009896874
-
-
Baltimore
-
Richard S. Tedlow, New and Improved: The Story of Mass Marketing in America (New York, 1990); Susan Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Mass Market (New York, 1989); Roland Marchand, Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920-1940 (Berkeley, Calif., 1985); Jackson Lears, Fables of Abundance: A Cultural History of Advertising in America (New York, 1994); Glenn Porter and Harold C. Livesay, Merchants and Manufarturers: Studies in the Changing Structure of Nineteenth-Century Marketing (Baltimore, 1971).
-
(1971)
Merchants and Manufarturers: Studies in the Changing Structure of Nineteenth-century Marketing
-
-
Porter, G.1
Livesay, H.C.2
-
15
-
-
0040607716
-
-
Cambridge, Mass.
-
In 1877, food advertising accounted for one percent of the revenues of the nation's biggest advertising firm. N.W. Ayer; in 1901, 15 percent of N.W. Ayer's revenues came from the food industry, the largest of any category. Ralph Hower, The History of an Advertising Agency (Cambridge, Mass., 1939), 634-42.
-
(1939)
The History of an Advertising Agency
, pp. 634-642
-
-
Hower, R.1
-
17
-
-
0040657081
-
-
note
-
For most of his life, John Henry Heinz used his middle, rather than his first, name, Like his oldest son, he was known as Henry Heinz. To distinguish the two, I refer to the elder Heinz as John Henry.
-
-
-
-
18
-
-
0004189543
-
-
New York
-
When the British novelist Charles Dickens visited Pittsburgh in 1842, he noted that it "is like Birmingham in England, at least its townspeople say so.... It certainly has a great quantity of smoke hanging over it, and is famous for its iron works." Charles Dickens, American Notes (New York, 1996), 203. See also "Pittsburgh," The Atlantic Monthly 21:123 (Jan. 1868): 17-36 and "Pittsburgh," Harper's Weekly 15:738 (18 Feb. 1871): 147.
-
(1996)
American Notes
, pp. 203
-
-
Dickens, C.1
-
19
-
-
0342553104
-
Pittsburgh
-
Jan.
-
When the British novelist Charles Dickens visited Pittsburgh in 1842, he noted that it "is like Birmingham in England, at least its townspeople say so.... It certainly has a great quantity of smoke hanging over it, and is famous for its iron works." Charles Dickens, American Notes (New York, 1996), 203. See also "Pittsburgh," The Atlantic Monthly 21:123 (Jan. 1868): 17-36 and "Pittsburgh," Harper's Weekly 15:738 (18 Feb. 1871): 147.
-
(1868)
The Atlantic Monthly
, vol.21
, Issue.123
, pp. 17-36
-
-
-
20
-
-
0038879007
-
Pittsburgh
-
18 Feb.
-
When the British novelist Charles Dickens visited Pittsburgh in 1842, he noted that it "is like Birmingham in England, at least its townspeople say so.... It certainly has a great quantity of smoke hanging over it, and is famous for its iron works." Charles Dickens, American Notes (New York, 1996), 203. See also "Pittsburgh," The Atlantic Monthly 21:123 (Jan. 1868): 17-36 and "Pittsburgh," Harper's Weekly 15:738 (18 Feb. 1871): 147.
-
(1871)
Harper's Weekly
, vol.15
, Issue.738
, pp. 147
-
-
-
21
-
-
0038879002
-
The city grows
-
ed. Stefan Lorant Garden City, N.J.
-
Oscar Handlin. "The City Grows," in Pittsburgh: The Story of an American City, ed. Stefan Lorant (Garden City, N.J., 1964), 87, 101. By 1880, the city was home to more than 250,000 people (J. Cutler Andrews. "The Civil War and its Aftermath," in Lorant, Pittsburgh, 161).
-
(1964)
Pittsburgh: The Story of an American City
, pp. 87
-
-
Handlin, O.1
-
22
-
-
0040063472
-
The civil war and its aftermath
-
Lorant
-
Oscar Handlin. "The City Grows," in Pittsburgh: The Story of an American City, ed. Stefan Lorant (Garden City, N.J., 1964), 87, 101. By 1880, the city was home to more than 250,000 people (J. Cutler Andrews. "The Civil War and its Aftermath," in Lorant, Pittsburgh, 161).
-
Pittsburgh
, pp. 161
-
-
Andrews, J.C.1
-
24
-
-
0040657075
-
The city grows
-
Lorant
-
Quoted in Handlin, "The City Grows," in Lorant, Pittsburgh, 92. On the political history of Pittsburgh, see Michael Fitzgibbon Holt, Forging a Majority: The Formation of the Republican Party in Pittsburgh 1848-1860 (New Haven, Conn., 1969).
-
Pittsburgh
, pp. 92
-
-
Handlin1
-
25
-
-
0011538379
-
-
New Haven, Conn.
-
Quoted in Handlin, "The City Grows," in Lorant, Pittsburgh, 92. On the political history of Pittsburgh, see Michael Fitzgibbon Holt, Forging a Majority: The Formation of the Republican Party in Pittsburgh 1848-1860 (New Haven, Conn., 1969).
-
(1969)
Forging a Majority: The Formation of the Republican Party in Pittsburgh 1848-1860
-
-
Holt, M.F.1
-
26
-
-
0038879003
-
Pittsburgh
-
"Pittsburgh," Atlantic Monthly, 20. See also John N. Ingham, "Reaching for Respectability: The Pittsburgh Industrial Elite at the Turn of the Century," in Collecting in the Gilded Age: Art Patronage in Pittsburgh, 1890-1910, ed. Gabriel P. Weisberg, DeCourcy E. McIntosh, and Alison McQueen (Hanover, N.H., 1997), 3-8.
-
Atlantic Monthly
, pp. 20
-
-
-
27
-
-
0039471596
-
Reaching for respectability: The Pittsburgh industrial elite at the turn of the century
-
ed. Gabriel P. Weisberg, DeCourcy E. McIntosh, and Alison McQueen Hanover, N.H.
-
"Pittsburgh," Atlantic Monthly, 20. See also John N. Ingham, "Reaching for Respectability: The Pittsburgh Industrial Elite at the Turn of the Century," in Collecting in the Gilded Age: Art Patronage in Pittsburgh, 1890-1910, ed. Gabriel P. Weisberg, DeCourcy E. McIntosh, and Alison McQueen (Hanover, N.H., 1997), 3-8.
-
(1997)
Collecting in the Gilded Age: Art Patronage in Pittsburgh, 1890-1910
, pp. 3-8
-
-
Ingham, J.N.1
-
28
-
-
0038879000
-
-
Boston
-
As an adult, Henry Heinz described his father as "a giant in strength and endurance" and very indulgent toward his children (quoted in Robert C. Alberts, The Good Provider: H.J. Heinz and His 57 Varieties [Boston, 1973], 3). But the entrepreneur always ascribed his professional success wholly to his mother ("Last Will and Testament of Henry Heinz," MSS 57, H.J. Heinz Company Collection [hereafter MSS 57], Library and Archives Division, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Pa. [hereafter HSWP]. See also Hugh Cork, "His Fifty-Eighth Variety," Organized Work and Workers [Feb. 1911], 55-56; E. D. McCafferty, Henry J. Heinz: A Biography [New York, 1923], 19).
-
(1973)
The Good Provider: H.J. Heinz and His 57 Varieties
, pp. 3
-
-
Alberts, R.C.1
-
29
-
-
0038878934
-
-
MSS 57, H.J. Heinz Company Collection [hereafter MSS 57], Library and Archives Division, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Pa. [hereafter HSWP]
-
As an adult, Henry Heinz described his father as "a giant in strength and endurance" and very indulgent toward his children (quoted in Robert C. Alberts, The Good Provider: H.J. Heinz and His 57 Varieties [Boston, 1973], 3). But the entrepreneur always ascribed his professional success wholly to his mother ("Last Will and Testament of Henry Heinz," MSS 57, H.J. Heinz Company Collection [hereafter MSS 57], Library and Archives Division, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Pa. [hereafter HSWP]. See also Hugh Cork, "His Fifty-Eighth Variety," Organized Work and Workers [Feb. 1911], 55-56; E. D. McCafferty, Henry J. Heinz: A Biography [New York, 1923], 19).
-
Last Will and Testament of Henry Heinz
-
-
-
30
-
-
0039471659
-
His fifty-eighth variety
-
Feb.
-
As an adult, Henry Heinz described his father as "a giant in strength and endurance" and very indulgent toward his children (quoted in Robert C. Alberts, The Good Provider: H.J. Heinz and His 57 Varieties [Boston, 1973], 3). But the entrepreneur always ascribed his professional success wholly to his mother ("Last Will and Testament of Henry Heinz," MSS 57, H.J. Heinz Company Collection [hereafter MSS 57], Library and Archives Division, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Pa. [hereafter HSWP]. See also Hugh Cork, "His Fifty-Eighth Variety," Organized Work and Workers [Feb. 1911], 55-56; E. D. McCafferty, Henry J. Heinz: A Biography [New York, 1923], 19).
-
(1911)
Organized Work and Workers
, pp. 55-56
-
-
Cork, H.1
-
31
-
-
0039471661
-
-
New York
-
As an adult, Henry Heinz described his father as "a giant in strength and endurance" and very indulgent toward his children (quoted in Robert C. Alberts, The Good Provider: H.J. Heinz and His 57 Varieties [Boston, 1973], 3). But the entrepreneur always ascribed his professional success wholly to his mother ("Last Will and Testament of Henry Heinz," MSS 57, H.J. Heinz Company Collection [hereafter MSS 57], Library and Archives Division, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Pa. [hereafter HSWP]. See also Hugh Cork, "His Fifty-Eighth Variety," Organized Work and Workers [Feb. 1911], 55-56; E. D. McCafferty, Henry J. Heinz: A Biography [New York, 1923], 19).
-
(1923)
Henry J. Heinz: A Biography
, pp. 19
-
-
McCafferty, E.D.1
-
32
-
-
0039471666
-
-
My mother, Henry Heinz wrote in middle age, "could handle me because she knew how to inspire me; because she knew what to say, when and how" (quoted in McCafferty, Henry J. Heinz, 30).
-
Henry J. Heinz
, pp. 30
-
-
McCafferty1
-
33
-
-
0040657073
-
-
We don't know exactly when Henry began his formal education. Alberts implies the young man went to school before age twelve (The Good Provider, 4-5), and Eleanor Foa Dienstag notes that by his twelfth birthday, Henry was walking a mile and a half each way to school in a neighboring village (In Good Company: 125 Years at the Heinz Table, 1869-1994 [New York, 1994], 22).
-
The Good Provider
, pp. 4-5
-
-
Alberts1
-
34
-
-
0040657014
-
-
New York
-
We don't know exactly when Henry began his formal education. Alberts implies the young man went to school before age twelve (The Good Provider, 4-5), and Eleanor Foa Dienstag notes that by his twelfth birthday, Henry was walking a mile and a half each way to school in a neighboring village (In Good Company: 125 Years at the Heinz Table, 1869-1994 [New York, 1994], 22).
-
(1994)
In Good Company: 125 Years at the Heinz Table, 1869-1994
, pp. 22
-
-
Dienstag, E.F.1
-
35
-
-
0003542639
-
-
New York
-
On nineteenth-century housework, see Ruth Schwartz Cowan, More Work for Mother: The Ironies of Household Technology from the Open Hearth to the Microwave (New York, 1983) and Susan Strasser, Never Done: A History of American Housework (New York, 1982). On the status of specific domestic tasks, see Cowan. More Work for Mother, 31. On late twentieth-century time constraints and domestic responsibilities, see Arlie Russell Hochschild, The Time Bind: When Work Becomes Home & Home Becomes Work (New York, 1997,) and Juliet Schor. The Ownworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure (New York, 1991).
-
(1983)
More Work for Mother: The Ironies of Household Technology from the Open Hearth to the Microwave
-
-
Cowan, R.S.1
-
36
-
-
0003560883
-
-
New York
-
On nineteenth-century housework, see Ruth Schwartz Cowan, More Work for Mother: The Ironies of Household Technology from the Open Hearth to the Microwave (New York, 1983) and Susan Strasser, Never Done: A History of American Housework (New York, 1982). On the status of specific domestic tasks, see Cowan. More Work for Mother, 31. On late twentieth-century time constraints and domestic responsibilities, see Arlie Russell Hochschild, The Time Bind: When Work Becomes Home & Home Becomes Work (New York, 1997,) and Juliet Schor. The Ownworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure (New York, 1991).
-
(1982)
Never Done: A History of American Housework
-
-
Strasser, S.1
-
37
-
-
0003542639
-
-
On nineteenth-century housework, see Ruth Schwartz Cowan, More Work for Mother: The Ironies of Household Technology from the Open Hearth to the Microwave (New York, 1983) and Susan Strasser, Never Done: A History of American Housework (New York, 1982). On the status of specific domestic tasks, see Cowan. More Work for Mother, 31. On late twentieth-century time constraints and domestic responsibilities, see Arlie Russell Hochschild, The Time Bind: When Work Becomes Home & Home Becomes Work (New York, 1997,) and Juliet Schor. The Ownworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure (New York, 1991).
-
More Work for Mother
, pp. 31
-
-
Cowan1
-
38
-
-
0004121756
-
-
New York
-
On nineteenth-century housework, see Ruth Schwartz Cowan, More Work for Mother: The Ironies of Household Technology from the Open Hearth to the Microwave (New York, 1983) and Susan Strasser, Never Done: A History of American Housework (New York, 1982). On the status of specific domestic tasks, see Cowan. More Work for Mother, 31. On late twentieth-century time constraints and domestic responsibilities, see Arlie Russell Hochschild, The Time Hind: When Work Becomes Home & Home Becomes Work (New York, 1997,) and Juliet Schor. The Ownworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure (New York, 1991).
-
(1997)
The Time Bind: When Work Becomes Home & Home Becomes Work
-
-
Hochschild, A.R.1
-
39
-
-
0004048465
-
-
New York
-
On nineteenth-century housework, see Ruth Schwartz Cowan, More Work for Mother: The Ironies of Household Technology from the Open Hearth to the Microwave (New York, 1983) and Susan Strasser, Never Done: A History of American Housework (New York, 1982). On the status of specific domestic tasks, see Cowan. More Work for Mother, 31. On late twentieth-century time constraints and domestic responsibilities, see Arlie Russell Hochschild, The Time Hind: When Work Becomes Home & Home Becomes Work (New York, 1997,) and Juliet Schor. The Ownworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure (New York, 1991).
-
(1991)
The Ownworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure
-
-
Schor, J.1
-
41
-
-
0013683674
-
-
On Heinz's immigrant origins and their relationship to his business, see Gabaccia. We Are What We Eat, 156-58.
-
We Are What We Eat
, pp. 156-158
-
-
Gabaccia1
-
42
-
-
0038878998
-
-
Alberts MSS 37, box 3, folder 6, HSWP
-
"Manufacturers of Pennsylvania," (1875), 383, Alberts MSS 37, box 3, folder 6, HSWP.
-
(1875)
Manufacturers of Pennsylvania
, pp. 383
-
-
-
43
-
-
0038878932
-
-
Boston
-
On food safety and adulteration in the late nineteenth century, see George T. Angell, Autobiographical Sketches and Personal Recollections (Boston, 1884), 59-62; Edgar W. Martin, The Standard of Living in 1860: American Consumption Levels on the Eve of the Civil War (Chicago, 1942), 244-45; C. O. Bates, "Pure Food laws," Iowa Academy of Science Proceedings 8 (1900), 209; Department of Agriculture, Division of Chemistry, Bulletin 13, Foods and Food Adulterants (Washington, D.C., 1887-1903). For secondary sources, see James Harvey Young, Pure Food: Securing the Federal Food and Drugs Art of 1906 (Princeton, N.J., 1989), 3-65; Earl Chapin May, The Canning Clan: A Pageant of Pioneering Americans (New York, 1937), 318-28; and Cummings, The American and His Food, 91-104.
-
(1884)
Autobiographical Sketches and Personal Recollections
, pp. 59-62
-
-
Angell, G.T.1
-
44
-
-
0012153978
-
-
Chicago
-
On food safety and adulteration in the late nineteenth century, see George T. Angell, Autobiographical Sketches and Personal Recollections (Boston, 1884), 59-62; Edgar W. Martin, The Standard of Living in 1860: American Consumption Levels on the Eve of the Civil War (Chicago, 1942), 244-45; C. O. Bates, "Pure Food laws," Iowa Academy of Science Proceedings 8 (1900), 209; Department of Agriculture, Division of Chemistry, Bulletin 13, Foods and Food Adulterants (Washington, D.C., 1887-1903). For secondary sources, see James Harvey Young, Pure Food: Securing the Federal Food and Drugs Art of 1906 (Princeton, N.J., 1989), 3-65; Earl Chapin May, The Canning Clan: A Pageant of Pioneering Americans (New York, 1937), 318-28; and Cummings, The American and His Food, 91-104.
-
(1942)
The Standard of Living in 1860: American Consumption Levels on the Eve of the Civil War
, pp. 244-245
-
-
Martin, E.W.1
-
45
-
-
0038878933
-
Pure food laws
-
On food safety and adulteration in the late nineteenth century, see George T. Angell, Autobiographical Sketches and Personal Recollections (Boston, 1884), 59-62; Edgar W. Martin, The Standard of Living in 1860: American Consumption Levels on the Eve of the Civil War (Chicago, 1942), 244-45; C. O. Bates, "Pure Food laws," Iowa Academy of Science Proceedings 8 (1900), 209; Department of Agriculture, Division of Chemistry, Bulletin 13, Foods and Food Adulterants (Washington, D.C., 1887-1903). For secondary sources, see James Harvey Young, Pure Food: Securing the Federal Food and Drugs Art of 1906 (Princeton, N.J., 1989), 3-65; Earl Chapin May, The Canning Clan: A Pageant of Pioneering Americans (New York, 1937), 318-28; and Cummings, The American and His Food, 91-104.
-
(1900)
Iowa Academy of Science Proceedings
, vol.8
, pp. 209
-
-
Bates, C.O.1
-
46
-
-
0040657069
-
-
Washington, D.C.
-
On food safety and adulteration in the late nineteenth century, see George T. Angell, Autobiographical Sketches and Personal Recollections (Boston, 1884), 59-62; Edgar W. Martin, The Standard of Living in 1860: American Consumption Levels on the Eve of the Civil War (Chicago, 1942), 244-45; C. O. Bates, "Pure Food laws," Iowa Academy of Science Proceedings 8 (1900), 209; Department of Agriculture, Division of Chemistry, Bulletin 13, Foods and Food Adulterants (Washington, D.C., 1887-1903). For secondary sources, see James Harvey Young, Pure Food: Securing the Federal Food and Drugs Art of 1906 (Princeton, N.J., 1989), 3-65; Earl Chapin May, The Canning Clan: A Pageant of Pioneering Americans (New York, 1937), 318-28; and Cummings, The American and His Food, 91-104.
-
(1887)
Foods and Food Adulterants
-
-
-
47
-
-
0039471593
-
-
Princeton, N.J.
-
On food safety and adulteration in the late nineteenth century, see George T. Angell, Autobiographical Sketches and Personal Recollections (Boston, 1884), 59-62; Edgar W. Martin, The Standard of Living in 1860: American Consumption Levels on the Eve of the Civil War (Chicago, 1942), 244-45; C. O. Bates, "Pure Food laws," Iowa Academy of Science Proceedings 8 (1900), 209; Department of Agriculture, Division of Chemistry, Bulletin 13, Foods and Food Adulterants (Washington, D.C., 1887-1903). For secondary sources, see James Harvey Young, Pure Food: Securing the Federal Food and Drugs Art of 1906 (Princeton, N.J., 1989), 3-65; Earl Chapin May, The Canning Clan: A Pageant of Pioneering Americans (New York, 1937), 318-28; and Cummings, The American and His Food, 91-104.
-
(1989)
Pure Food: Securing the Federal Food and Drugs Art of 1906
, pp. 3-65
-
-
Young, J.H.1
-
48
-
-
0040657015
-
-
New York
-
On food safety and adulteration in the late nineteenth century, see George T. Angell, Autobiographical Sketches and Personal Recollections (Boston, 1884), 59-62; Edgar W. Martin, The Standard of Living in 1860: American Consumption Levels on the Eve of the Civil War (Chicago, 1942), 244-45; C. O. Bates, "Pure Food laws," Iowa Academy of Science Proceedings 8 (1900), 209; Department of Agriculture, Division of Chemistry, Bulletin 13, Foods and Food Adulterants (Washington, D.C., 1887-1903). For secondary sources, see James Harvey Young, Pure Food: Securing the Federal Food and Drugs Art of 1906 (Princeton, N.J., 1989), 3-65; Earl Chapin May, The Canning Clan: A Pageant of Pioneering Americans (New York, 1937), 318-28; and Cummings, The American and His Food, 91-104.
-
(1937)
The Canning Clan: A Pageant of Pioneering Americans
, pp. 318-328
-
-
May, E.C.1
-
49
-
-
0003550525
-
-
On food safety and adulteration in the late nineteenth century, see George T. Angell, Autobiographical Sketches and Personal Recollections (Boston, 1884), 59-62; Edgar W. Martin, The Standard of Living in 1860: American Consumption Levels on the Eve of the Civil War (Chicago, 1942), 244-45; C. O. Bates, "Pure Food laws," Iowa Academy of Science Proceedings 8 (1900), 209; Department of Agriculture, Division of Chemistry, Bulletin 13, Foods and Food Adulterants (Washington, D.C., 1887-1903). For secondary sources, see James Harvey Young, Pure Food: Securing the Federal Food and Drugs Art of 1906 (Princeton, N.J., 1989), 3-65; Earl Chapin May, The Canning Clan: A Pageant of Pioneering Americans (New York, 1937), 318-28; and Cummings, The American and His Food, 91-104.
-
The American and His Food
, pp. 91-104
-
-
Cummings1
-
52
-
-
84888151743
-
-
Young, Pure Food. On canned foods, see K. P. McElroy and W. D. Bigelow, "Canned Vegetables," in Division of Chemistry, Bulletin 13, Foods and Food Adulterants, part 8 (Washington, D.C., 1893).
-
Pure Food
-
-
Young1
-
53
-
-
0040657016
-
Canned vegetables
-
Division of Chemistry, Bulletin 13, Washington, D.C.
-
Young, Pure Food. On canned foods, see K. P. McElroy and W. D. Bigelow, "Canned Vegetables," in Division of Chemistry, Bulletin 13, Foods and Food Adulterants, part 8 (Washington, D.C., 1893).
-
(1893)
Foods and Food Adulterants
, Issue.PART 8
-
-
McElroy, K.P.1
Bigelow, W.D.2
-
54
-
-
0040657073
-
-
Alberts, The Good Provider, 6. See also "Henry John Heinz," in Story of Old Allegheny City, compiled by the Writers' Program of the Works Project Administration (Pittsburgh, 1941), 153-54, Alberts MSS 37, series II, box 3, folder 7, HSWP. In 1861, the average annual wage for a skilled laborer - carpenter, blacksmith, etc. - was about $375 (Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 165). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President (Washington, D.C., 1997), 304.
-
The Good Provider
, pp. 6
-
-
Alberts1
-
55
-
-
0038878924
-
Henry John Heinz
-
compiled by the Writers' Program of the Works Project Administration Pittsburgh, Alberts MSS 37, series II, box 3, folder 7, HSWP
-
Alberts, The Good Provider, 6. See also "Henry John Heinz," in Story of Old Allegheny City, compiled by the Writers' Program of the Works Project Administration (Pittsburgh, 1941), 153-54, Alberts MSS 37, series II, box 3, folder 7, HSWP. In 1861, the average annual wage for a skilled laborer - carpenter, blacksmith, etc. - was about $375 (Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 165). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President (Washington, D.C., 1997), 304.
-
(1941)
Story of Old Allegheny City
, pp. 153-154
-
-
-
56
-
-
0040657017
-
-
Alberts, The Good Provider, 6. See also "Henry John Heinz," in Story of Old Allegheny City, compiled by the Writers' Program of the Works Project Administration (Pittsburgh, 1941), 153-54, Alberts MSS 37, series II, box 3, folder 7, HSWP. In 1861, the average annual wage for a skilled laborer - carpenter, blacksmith, etc. - was about $375 (Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 165). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President (Washington, D.C., 1997), 304.
-
Historical Statistics of the United States
, vol.1
, pp. 165
-
-
-
57
-
-
0038878899
-
-
Alberts, The Good Provider, 6. See also "Henry John Heinz," in Story of Old Allegheny City, compiled by the Writers' Program of the Works Project Administration (Pittsburgh, 1941), 153-54, Alberts MSS 37, series II, box 3, folder 7, HSWP. In 1861, the average annual wage for a skilled laborer - carpenter, blacksmith, etc. - was about $375 (Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 165). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President (Washington, D.C., 1997), 304.
-
Historical Statistics of the United States
, vol.1
, pp. 211
-
-
-
58
-
-
0003421866
-
-
Washington, D.C.
-
Alberts, The Good Provider, 6. See also "Henry John Heinz," in Story of Old Allegheny City, compiled by the Writers' Program of the Works Project Administration (Pittsburgh, 1941), 153-54, Alberts MSS 37, series II, box 3, folder 7, HSWP. In 1861, the average annual wage for a skilled laborer - carpenter, blacksmith, etc. - was about $375 (Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 165). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President (Washington, D.C., 1997), 304.
-
(1997)
Economic Report of the President
, pp. 304
-
-
-
59
-
-
0003697423
-
-
Evanston, Ill.
-
Harold F. Williamson and Arnold R. Daum, The American Petroleum Industry, Volume 1: The Age of Illumination, 1859-1899 (Evanston, Ill., 1959).
-
(1959)
The American Petroleum Industry, Volume 1: The Age of Illumination, 1859-1899
, vol.1
-
-
Williamson, H.F.1
Daum, A.R.2
-
60
-
-
0004011824
-
-
New York
-
Titusville, one writer observed in 1860, "is now the rendezvous of strangers eager for speculation. They barter prices in claims and shares; buy and sell sites and report the depth, show, or yield of wells, etc. Those who leave today tell others of the well they saw yielding 50 barrels of pure oil a day.... The story sends more back tomorrow.... Never was a hive of bees in time of swarming more astir, or making a greater buzz." Quoted in Daniel Yergin, The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power (New York, 1992), 29.
-
(1992)
The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power
, pp. 29
-
-
Yergin, D.1
-
61
-
-
84882124302
-
-
The region's frantic boom fueled intense land speculation. In early 1865, for example, oil was discovered in Pithole Creek, a village fifteen miles from Titusville. By June of that year, a farm that had been virtually worthless in 1864 sold for $1.3 million. In September, it was resold for $2 million (Yergin, The Prize, 31).
-
The Prize
, pp. 31
-
-
Yergin1
-
63
-
-
84882124302
-
-
Yergin, The Prize, 29. In 1871, Pittsburgh's sixty refineries had a combined total of 36,000 barrels a day. Andrews, "The Civil War and its Aftermath," in Lorant. Pittsburgh, 163.
-
The Prize
, pp. 29
-
-
Yergin1
-
64
-
-
0040063472
-
The Civil War and its aftermath
-
Lorant
-
Yergin, The Prize, 29. In 1871, Pittsburgh's sixty refineries had a combined total of 36,000 barrels a day. Andrews, "The Civil War and its Aftermath," in Lorant. Pittsburgh, 163.
-
Pittsburgh
, pp. 163
-
-
Andrews1
-
65
-
-
0038878928
-
-
note
-
Conversation with Frank Kurtik, Archivist, Heinz Family Office, Pittsburgh, Pa. (hereafter Heinz Family Office), 26 Aug. 1996: Heinz Order Books, 1869-1871, Heinz Family Office; Henry Heinz Notehook, 1868-1869, Heinz Family Office.
-
-
-
-
66
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0038878929
-
-
note
-
Henry Heinz had worked with Noble in 1868, when they had organized a partnership to manufacture bricks in a small town north of Pittsburgh.
-
-
-
-
67
-
-
0040063419
-
-
The Anchor, Dienstag theorizes, was "probably chosen because it was a Christian symbol" that appealed to Heinzs religions inclinations (In Good Company, 24).
-
In Good Company
, pp. 24
-
-
Heinzs1
-
69
-
-
0005254475
-
Population of the 100 largest cities and other urban places in the United States: 1790 to 1990
-
Washington, D.C., tables 8-15
-
Campbell Gibson, "Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places in the United States: 1790 to 1990," Population Division Working Paper No. 27 (Washington, D.C., 1998), tables 8-15.
-
(1998)
Population Division Working Paper No. 27
, vol.27
-
-
Gibson, C.1
-
70
-
-
0040657011
-
-
Heinz, Noble & Co., Heinz Family Office
-
See, for instante, Henry Heinz Notebook of 1875 and 1876, Heinz, Noble & Co., Heinz Family Office.
-
(1876)
Henry Heinz Notebook of 1875 and 1876
-
-
-
72
-
-
0039471595
-
-
MSS 57, box 2, folder 7, HSWP
-
"Outline of the H.J. Heinz Company," I, MSS 57, box 2, folder 7, HSWP. See also "Manufacturers of Pennsylvania." 385.
-
Outline of the H.J. Heinz Company
, pp. 1
-
-
-
73
-
-
0040657012
-
-
"Outline of the H.J. Heinz Company," I, MSS 57, box 2, folder 7, HSWP. See also "Manufacturers of Pennsylvania." 385.
-
Manufacturers of Pennsylvania
, pp. 385
-
-
-
77
-
-
0038878922
-
-
"Outline of the H.J. Heinz Company." 2: May, The Canning Cann, 8-11.
-
The Canning Cann
, pp. 8-11
-
-
May1
-
79
-
-
0038878923
-
-
In 1875, for example, Heinz dealt with pickle manufacturers in Cleveland, Philadelphia, and other cities (Henry Heinz Notebook, 1876-1877). See also "Manufacturers of Pennsylvania," 384.
-
(1877)
Henry Heinz Notebook, 1876-1877
-
-
-
80
-
-
0040657012
-
-
In 1875, for example, Heinz dealt with pickle manufacturers in Cleveland, Philadelphia, and other cities (Henry Heinz Notebook, 1876-1877). See also "Manufacturers of Pennsylvania," 384.
-
Manufacturers of Pennsylvania
, pp. 384
-
-
-
82
-
-
0040063415
-
-
Heinz Family Office
-
See Heinz's notes on pickle preservation in Henry Heinz, "Recipe Book" (labeled "Records"), 27, Heinz Family Office. He credits his brother John with discovering a process for preserving pickles in vinegar without significantly softening or discoloring the cucumbers: "John [Heinz] by a number of experiments demonstrated beyond a doubt that by first heating the vinegar from 125 to 140 [degrees], heating the vinegar by turning straw into it ..., and allowing it to gradually cool off, it would preserve pickles in a perfect condition...." See also 20-21, 40, 50, 65, 90, 95, 102, 122, 130; Henry Heinz Notebook of 1876-1877; Henry Heinz Notebook of 1868-1869, Heinz Family Office.
-
"Recipe Book" (Labeled "Records")
, pp. 27
-
-
Heinz, H.1
-
83
-
-
0039471590
-
-
See Heinz's notes on pickle preservation in Henry Heinz, "Recipe Book" (labeled "Records"), 27, Heinz Family Office. He credits his brother John with discovering a process for preserving pickles in vinegar without significantly softening or discoloring the cucumbers: "John [Heinz] by a number of experiments demonstrated beyond a doubt that by first heating the vinegar from 125 to 140 [degrees], heating the vinegar by turning straw into it ..., and allowing it to gradually cool off, it would preserve pickles in a perfect condition...." See also 20-21, 40, 50, 65, 90, 95, 102, 122, 130; Henry Heinz Notebook of 1876-1877; Henry Heinz Notebook of 1868-1869, Heinz Family Office.
-
(1877)
Henry Heinz Notebook of 1876-1877
, pp. 20-21
-
-
-
84
-
-
0040657010
-
-
Heinz Family Office
-
See Heinz's notes on pickle preservation in Henry Heinz, "Recipe Book" (labeled "Records"), 27, Heinz Family Office. He credits his brother John with discovering a process for preserving pickles in vinegar without significantly softening or discoloring the cucumbers: "John [Heinz] by a number of experiments demonstrated beyond a doubt that by first heating the vinegar from 125 to 140 [degrees], heating the vinegar by turning straw into it ..., and allowing it to gradually cool off, it would preserve pickles in a perfect condition...." See also 20-21, 40, 50, 65, 90, 95, 102, 122, 130; Henry Heinz Notebook of 1876-1877; Henry Heinz Notebook of 1868-1869, Heinz Family Office.
-
(1869)
Henry Heinz Notebook of 1868-1869
-
-
-
86
-
-
0004130112
-
-
Chandler, The Visible Hand, 473. See also Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism (Cambridge, Mass., 1990), 14-18.
-
The Visible Hand
, pp. 473
-
-
Chandler1
-
87
-
-
0003488577
-
-
Cambridge, Mass.
-
Chandler, The Visible Hand, 473. See also Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism (Cambridge, Mass., 1990), 14-18.
-
(1990)
Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism
, pp. 14-18
-
-
Chandler A.D., Jr.1
-
88
-
-
0004256785
-
-
Chicago
-
The word "brand" is a very old one, dating back to the Middle Ages, when it connoted a burning piece of wood or torch. By the fifteenth century, its meaning had widened to include distinctive marks on goods and more generally, farm animals, to designate origin or ownership. Marks on products also came to indicate specific quality standards and genuineness. In the early modern period, for example, trade guilds like the Goldsmiths Company of London stamped all their goods. But prior to the late nineteenth century, the concept of a brand had primarily defensive connotations when it was applied off the farm. Identifying marks on varions products were used to protect buyers from fraudulent or defective goods. Only a few eighteenth-century manufacturers such as Josiah Wedgwood, used their names or reputations as part of a focused marketing strategy to help interest consumers in their products. On the history of trademarks, see Neil Borden. The Economic Effects of Advertising (Chicago, 1944), 21-24. On Josiah Wedgwood's branding strategy, see Nancy F. Koehn, "Josiah Wedgwood and the First Industrial Revolution," in Creating Modern Capitalism: How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions, ed. Thomas K. McCraw (Cambridge, Mass., 1997), 37-42. See also Cummings. The American and His Food, 104-109.
-
(1944)
The Economic Effects of Advertising
, pp. 21-24
-
-
Borden, N.1
-
89
-
-
0003049894
-
Josiah Wedgwood and the First Industrial Revolution
-
ed. Thomas K. McCraw Cambridge, Mass.
-
The word "brand" is a very old one, dating back to the Middle Ages, when it connoted a burning piece of wood or torch. By the fifteenth century, its meaning had widened to include distinctive marks on goods and more generally, farm animals, to designate origin or ownership. Marks on products also came to indicate specific quality standards and genuineness. In the early modern period, for example, trade guilds like the Goldsmiths Company of London stamped all their goods. But prior to the late nineteenth century, the concept of a brand had primarily defensive connotations when it was applied off the farm. Identifying marks on varions products were used to protect buyers from fraudulent or defective goods. Only a few eighteenth-century manufacturers such as Josiah Wedgwood, used their names or reputations as part of a focused marketing strategy to help interest consumers in their products. On the history of trademarks, see Neil Borden. The Economic Effects of Advertising (Chicago, 1944), 21-24. On Josiah Wedgwood's branding strategy, see Nancy F. Koehn, "Josiah Wedgwood and the First Industrial Revolution," in Creating Modern Capitalism: How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions, ed. Thomas K. McCraw (Cambridge, Mass., 1997), 37-42. See also Cummings. The American and His Food, 104-109.
-
(1997)
Creating Modern Capitalism: How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions
, pp. 37-42
-
-
Koehn, N.F.1
-
90
-
-
0003550525
-
-
The word "brand" is a very old one, dating back to the Middle Ages, when it connoted a burning piece of wood or torch. By the fifteenth century, its meaning had widened to include distinctive marks on goods and more generally, farm animals, to designate origin or ownership. Marks on products also came to indicate specific quality standards and genuineness. In the early modern period, for example, trade guilds like the Goldsmiths Company of London stamped all their goods. But prior to the late nineteenth century, the concept of a brand had primarily defensive connotations when it was applied off the farm. Identifying marks on varions products were used to protect buyers from fraudulent or defective goods. Only a few eighteenth-century manufacturers such as Josiah Wedgwood, used their names or reputations as part of a focused marketing strategy to help interest consumers in their products. On the history of trademarks, see Neil Borden. The Economic Effects of Advertising (Chicago, 1944), 21-24. On Josiah Wedgwood's branding strategy, see Nancy F. Koehn, "Josiah Wedgwood and the First Industrial Revolution," in Creating Modern Capitalism: How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions, ed. Thomas K. McCraw (Cambridge, Mass., 1997), 37-42. See also Cummings. The American and His Food, 104-109.
-
The American and His Food
, pp. 104-109
-
-
Cummings1
-
91
-
-
0010817547
-
-
Tedlow, New and Improved, 14. One of the earliest references to "brand" in its modern business context comes from an 1889 Supreme Court case invoking a trademark dispute. The plaintiff accused the defendant of violating its trademark by using the word "Tycoon." The defendant argued that the word "Tycoon" could not have been lawfully adopted and used as a trade-mark, because it had long been a word in common use as a brand name for various kinds of tea imported from Japan. The court found in favor of the defendants (Corbin v. Gould, no. 131 Supreme Court of the United States. Argued 22 Nov. 1889; decided 3 Feb. 1890). By the first decade of the twentieth century, the term "brand" began to gain academic fluency in connection with the "trust problem." See Jeremiah Jenks, The Trust Problem (New York, 1900), 29; Charles Beardsley, "The Tariff and the Trusts," Quarterly Journal of Economics 15:3 (May 1901), 385; and Gilbert Montague. "The Conservation of Business Opportunity," Journal of Political Economy 20:6 (June 1912), 617.
-
New and Improved
, pp. 14
-
-
Tedlow1
-
92
-
-
0038878921
-
-
(Corbin v. Gould, no. 131 Supreme Court of the United States. Argued 22 Nov. 1889; decided 3 Feb. 1890) New York
-
Tedlow, New and Improved, 14. One of the earliest references to "brand" in its modern business context comes from an 1889 Supreme Court case invoking a trademark dispute. The plaintiff accused the defendant of violating its trademark by using the word "Tycoon." The defendant argued that the word "Tycoon" could not have been lawfully adopted and used as a trade-mark, because it had long been a word in common use as a brand name for various kinds of tea imported from Japan. The court found in favor of the defendants (Corbin v. Gould, no. 131 Supreme Court of the United States. Argued 22 Nov. 1889; decided 3 Feb. 1890). By the first decade of the twentieth century, the term "brand" began to gain academic fluency in connection with the "trust problem." See Jeremiah Jenks, The Trust Problem (New York, 1900), 29; Charles Beardsley, "The Tariff and the Trusts," Quarterly Journal of Economics 15:3 (May 1901), 385; and Gilbert Montague. "The Conservation of Business Opportunity," Journal of Political Economy 20:6 (June 1912), 617.
-
(1900)
The Trust Problem
, pp. 29
-
-
Jenks, J.1
-
93
-
-
84941345176
-
The tariff and the trusts
-
May
-
Tedlow, New and Improved, 14. One of the earliest references to "brand" in its modern business context comes from an 1889 Supreme Court case invoking a trademark dispute. The plaintiff accused the defendant of violating its trademark by using the word "Tycoon." The defendant argued that the word "Tycoon" could not have been lawfully adopted and used as a trade-mark, because it had long been a word in common use as a brand name for various kinds of tea imported from Japan. The court found in favor of the defendants (Corbin v. Gould, no. 131 Supreme Court of the United States. Argued 22 Nov. 1889; decided 3 Feb. 1890). By the first decade of the twentieth century, the term "brand" began to gain academic fluency in connection with the "trust problem." See Jeremiah Jenks, The Trust Problem (New York, 1900), 29; Charles Beardsley, "The Tariff and the Trusts," Quarterly Journal of Economics 15:3 (May 1901), 385; and Gilbert Montague. "The Conservation of Business Opportunity," Journal of Political Economy 20:6 (June 1912), 617.
-
(1901)
Quarterly Journal of Economics
, vol.15
, Issue.3
, pp. 385
-
-
Beardsley, C.1
-
94
-
-
0040063391
-
The conservation of business opportunity
-
June
-
Tedlow, New and Improved, 14. One of the earliest references to "brand" in its modern business context comes from an 1889 Supreme Court case invoking a trademark dispute. The plaintiff accused the defendant of violating its trademark by using the word "Tycoon." The defendant argued that the word "Tycoon" could not have been lawfully adopted and used as a trade-mark, because it had long been a word in common use as a brand name for various kinds of tea imported from Japan. The court found in favor of the defendants (Corbin v. Gould, no. 131 Supreme Court of the United States. Argued 22 Nov. 1889; decided 3 Feb. 1890). By the first decade of the twentieth century, the term "brand" began to gain academic fluency in connection with the "trust problem." See Jeremiah Jenks, The Trust Problem (New York, 1900), 29; Charles Beardsley, "The Tariff and the Trusts," Quarterly Journal of Economics 15:3 (May 1901), 385; and Gilbert Montague. "The Conservation of Business Opportunity," Journal of Political Economy 20:6 (June 1912), 617.
-
(1912)
Journal of Political Economy
, vol.20
, Issue.6
, pp. 617
-
-
Montague, G.1
-
96
-
-
0039471589
-
-
Income figures are for the years 1869 through 1900
-
Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 224. Income figures are for the years 1869 through 1900.
-
Historical Statistics of the United States
, vol.1
, pp. 224
-
-
-
97
-
-
0040063413
-
Pittsburgh
-
On the pace of activity in late nineteenth-century Pittsburgh, see "Pittsburgh," Atlantic Monthly. On Chicago, see Julian Ralph, Our Great West: A Study of the Present Conditions and Future Possibilities of the New Commonwealths and Capitals of the United States (New York, 1893), 1-29. As Ralph observed in the late nineteenth century, "I have spoken of the roar and bustle and energy of Chicago. This is most noticeable in the business part of town, where the greater number of the men are crowded together. It seems as if the men would run over the horses if the drivers were not careful. Everybody is in such a hurry and going at such a pace that if a stranger asks his way, he is apt to have to trot along with his neighbor to gain the information, for the average Chicagoan cannot stop to talk," 2.
-
Atlantic Monthly
-
-
-
98
-
-
0038878824
-
-
New York
-
On the pace of activity in late nineteenth-century Pittsburgh, see "Pittsburgh," Atlantic Monthly. On Chicago, see Julian Ralph, Our Great West: A Study of the Present Conditions and Future Possibilities of the New Commonwealths and Capitals of the United States (New York, 1893), 1-29. As Ralph observed in the late nineteenth century, "I have spoken of the roar and bustle and energy of Chicago. This is most noticeable in the business part of town, where the greater number of the men are crowded together. It seems as if the men would run over the horses if the drivers were not careful. Everybody is in such a hurry and going at such a pace that if a stranger asks his way, he is apt to have to trot along with his neighbor to gain the information, for the average Chicagoan cannot stop to talk," 2.
-
(1893)
Our Great West: A Study of the Present Conditions and Future Possibilities of the New Commonwealths and Capitals of the United States
, pp. 1-29
-
-
Ralph, J.1
-
101
-
-
0040063399
-
Forty years of progress
-
Heinz Family Office
-
"Forty Years of Progress," The 57, 10:9 (1909), 9, Heinz Family Office.
-
(1909)
The 57
, vol.10
, Issue.9
, pp. 9
-
-
-
102
-
-
0040656906
-
The industry of food
-
ed. Samuel Crowther Boston
-
In 1932, Howard Heinz, one of Henry's sons and then president of the company, commented on the sociological consequences of the rise of food processing. One of the greatest benefits of the food industry, he wrote, "has been what it has done for women. It has released them from the drudgery of the kitchen, increased their leisure, and made it possible for them either to engage in business or to enjoy the social life of the community without seriously interfering with their duties and responsibilities as home makers," (Howard Heinz, "The Industry of Food," in A Basis for Stability, ed. Samuel Crowther [Boston, 1932], 195). For a contrasting view of the effects of mass production on household work, see Cowan, More Work for Mother, 69-101.
-
(1932)
A Basis for Stability
, pp. 195
-
-
Heinz, H.1
-
103
-
-
0003542639
-
-
In 1932, Howard Heinz, one of Henry's sons and then president of the company, commented on the sociological consequences of the rise of food processing. One of the greatest benefits of the food industry, he wrote, "has been what it has done for women. It has released them from the drudgery of the kitchen, increased their leisure, and made it possible for them either to engage in business or to enjoy the social life of the community without seriously interfering with their duties and responsibilities as home makers," (Howard Heinz, "The Industry of Food," in A Basis for Stability, ed. Samuel Crowther [Boston, 1932], 195). For a contrasting view of the effects of mass production on household work, see Cowan, More Work for Mother, 69-101.
-
More Work for Mother
, pp. 69-101
-
-
Cowan1
-
104
-
-
0038878918
-
The entrepreneurs
-
Lorant
-
John Morton Blum, "The Entrepreneurs," in Lorant, Pittsburgh, 234; Alberts, The Good Provider, 12.
-
Pittsburgh
, pp. 234
-
-
Blum, J.M.1
-
105
-
-
0040657073
-
-
John Morton Blum, "The Entrepreneurs," in Lorant, Pittsburgh, 234; Alberts, The Good Provider, 12.
-
The Good Provider
, pp. 12
-
-
Alberts1
-
106
-
-
0039471482
-
-
19 Aug. Alberts MSS 37, box 4, folder 2, HSWP
-
"The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz," ed. Robert C. Alberts, 19 Aug. 1875, 10, Alberts MSS 37, box 4, folder 2, HSWP.
-
(1875)
The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz
, pp. 10
-
-
Alberts, R.C.1
-
108
-
-
0040656912
-
-
24 Apr. 1 May 1875, 4; 5 May 1875, 4-5; 6 May 1875, 5
-
"The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz," 24 Apr. 1875, 3; 1 May 1875, 4; 5 May 1875, 4-5; 6 May 1875, 5.
-
(1875)
The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz
, pp. 3
-
-
-
124
-
-
0039471493
-
-
8 Oct.
-
"The Personal Diary of H.J. Heinz for the year 1875," 2 Oct. 1875, 69; "The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz," 8 Oct. 1875, 12.
-
(1875)
The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz
, pp. 12
-
-
-
126
-
-
0039471586
-
-
note
-
Heinz, Noble & Company was charged with hiding inventory and other goods for the purposes of defrauding creditors. In early 1876, the firm was acquitted of the charges.
-
-
-
-
127
-
-
0040657073
-
-
Twelve other firms filed bankruptcy petitions in Allegheny County that week. In the bankruptcy documents. Heinz, Noble & Company's assets were listed as $110,000. Its liabilities totaled $160,000 (or about $1.25 million and $1.90 million respectively in 1997 dollars) (Alberts, The Good Provider, 22). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
The Good Provider
, pp. 22
-
-
Alberts1
-
128
-
-
0038878899
-
-
Twelve other firms filed bankruptcy petitions in Allegheny County that week. In the bankruptcy documents. Heinz, Noble & Company's assets were listed as $110,000. Its liabilities totaled $160,000 (or about $1.25 million and $1.90 million respectively in 1997 dollars) (Alberts, The Good Provider, 22). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Historical Statistics of the United States
, vol.1
, pp. 211
-
-
-
129
-
-
0003421869
-
-
Twelve other firms filed bankruptcy petitions in Allegheny County that week. In the bankruptcy documents. Heinz, Noble & Company's assets were listed as $110,000. Its liabilities totaled $160,000 (or about $1.25 million and $1.90 million respectively in 1997 dollars) (Alberts, The Good Provider, 22). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Economic Report of the President
, pp. 304
-
-
-
130
-
-
0038878919
-
-
note
-
"People will censure us." Heinz wrote on 7 Jan. 1876, "no matter how or what we do, and we get no credit for anything good we have done, but censure for everything that they don't like." See also entries for 15 Dec., 17 Dec., 23 Dec., 25 Dec., 27 Dec., 27 Dec., 28 Dec., 30 Dec. 1875; 7 Jan., 12 Jan., 13 Jan., 15 Jan., 28 Jan. 1876. The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz.
-
-
-
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134
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0038878838
-
-
note
-
According to the agreement, John and Frederick Heinz each had a one-sixth interest in the company; as did Henry and John's mother. Anna Schmitt Heinz, Henry Heinz was prohibited from participating in any partnership. His wife, Sallie Young Heinz, assumed the remaining 50 percent interest in the company.
-
-
-
-
141
-
-
0002288096
-
Marketing myopia
-
On the relationship between industrial growth, managerial imagination, and customer satisfaction, see Theodore Levitt, "Marketing Myopia," Harvard Business Review 38:4 (1960):45-56.
-
(1960)
Harvard Business Review
, vol.38
, Issue.4
, pp. 45-56
-
-
Levitt, T.1
-
142
-
-
0026195225
-
-
Ibid., 46. With reference to current business performance. Gary Hamel and C. K. Prahalad have argued that an organizational ability to imagine new markets and create core competencies to serve these markets is a critical factor of competitive success ("Corporate Imagination and Expeditionary Marketing," Harvard Business Review 69:4 [July-Aug., 1991]: 81-92).
-
Harvard Business Review
, pp. 46
-
-
-
143
-
-
0026195225
-
Corporate imagination and expeditionary marketing
-
July-Aug.
-
Ibid., 46. With reference to current business performance. Gary Hamel and C. K. Prahalad have argued that an organizational ability to imagine new markets and create core competencies to serve these markets is a critical factor of competitive success ("Corporate Imagination and Expeditionary Marketing," Harvard Business Review 69:4 [July-Aug., 1991]: 81-92).
-
(1991)
Harvard Business Review
, vol.69
, Issue.4
, pp. 81-92
-
-
Hamel, G.1
Prahalad, C.K.2
-
147
-
-
0040063405
-
-
MSS 57, box 2, folder 14, HSWP
-
"H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company," 1, MSS 57, box 2, folder 14, HSWP. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company
, pp. 1
-
-
-
148
-
-
0038878899
-
-
"H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company," 1, MSS 57, box 2, folder 14, HSWP. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Historical Statistics of the United States
, vol.1
, pp. 211
-
-
-
149
-
-
0003421869
-
-
"H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company," 1, MSS 57, box 2, folder 14, HSWP. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Economic Report of the President
, pp. 304
-
-
-
151
-
-
0038878906
-
-
In 1880, company sales exceeded $197,000 on which F. & J. Heinz earned income of $31,000. ("H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company," 1; "The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz," 28 May 1880, 79).
-
H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company
, pp. 1
-
-
-
152
-
-
0040657004
-
-
28 May 1880
-
In 1880, company sales exceeded $197,000 on which F. & J. Heinz earned income of $31,000. ("H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company," 1; "The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz," 28 May 1880, 79).
-
The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz
, pp. 79
-
-
-
153
-
-
0040657003
-
-
"Outline of the H.J. Heinz Company," 4. Andrew Smith, who has written on the history of commercial ketchup, dates Heinz's introduction of the product to the later years of Heinz, Noble & Company. Andrew F. Smith, Pure Ketchup: A History of America's National Condiment (Columbia, S.C., 1996), 42.
-
Outline of the H.J. Heinz Company
, pp. 4
-
-
-
154
-
-
0040063305
-
-
Columbia, S.C.
-
"Outline of the H.J. Heinz Company," 4. Andrew Smith, who has written on the history of commercial ketchup, dates Heinz's introduction of the product to the later years of Heinz, Noble & Company. Andrew F. Smith, Pure Ketchup: A History of America's National Condiment (Columbia, S.C., 1996), 42.
-
(1996)
Pure Ketchup: A History of America's National Condiment
, pp. 42
-
-
Smith, A.F.1
-
156
-
-
0040656925
-
-
By the midpoint of the war, the Federal government and the Confederacy combined had over 400,000 men in the field, creating a huge, incessant demand for food that would remain edible over several weeks. May, The Canning Clan, 23-24.
-
The Canning Clan
, pp. 23-24
-
-
May1
-
158
-
-
0039471578
-
-
In the late nineteenth century California also became a center of ketchup production (Ibid., 36).
-
Pure Ketchup
, pp. 36
-
-
-
163
-
-
0039471579
-
-
"H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company," 1. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers. Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company
, pp. 1
-
-
-
164
-
-
0038878899
-
-
"H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company," 1. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers. Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Historical Statistics of the United States
, vol.1
, pp. 211
-
-
-
165
-
-
0003421869
-
-
"H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company," 1. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers. Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Economic Report of the President
, pp. 304
-
-
-
169
-
-
0038878899
-
-
H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company," 1. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce. Historical Statistics of United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Historical Statistics of United States
, vol.1
, pp. 211
-
-
-
170
-
-
0003421869
-
-
H.J. Heinz Company Sales: Consolidated and by Company," 1. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce. Historical Statistics of United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Economic Report of the President
, pp. 304
-
-
-
171
-
-
0040063321
-
Our branch houses: The Heinz system of distribution direct to the trade and how it is handled
-
Heinz Family Office
-
"It is part of the Company's policy," a Heinz newsletter noted in 1909, "to regard no article as completely sold until it has been consumed." "Our Branch Houses: The Heinz System of Distribution Direct to the Trade and How it is Handled," The 57, 10:9 (1909): 18, Heinz Family Office.
-
(1909)
The 57
, vol.10
, Issue.9
, pp. 18
-
-
-
172
-
-
0040063316
-
-
25 Aug.
-
"The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz," 25 Aug. 1876, 29. On the significance of fairs and trade shows in late nineteenth-century marketing, see Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed, 180-84.
-
(1876)
The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz
, pp. 29
-
-
-
173
-
-
0039203918
-
-
"The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz," 25 Aug. 1876, 29. On the significance of fairs and trade shows in late nineteenth-century marketing, see Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed, 180-84.
-
Satisfaction Guaranteed
, pp. 180-184
-
-
Strasser1
-
175
-
-
0039203918
-
-
At the 1901 Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, for example, the company had three exhibits: one serving food, one displaying employee photographs, and one displaying the goods Heinz produced for the American and British armies (Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed 180-81).
-
Satisfaction Guaranteed
, pp. 180-181
-
-
Strasser1
-
176
-
-
0039471563
-
-
10-15 July
-
Souvenirs and other similar promotions represented substantial expenditures for the business. In 1892, for example, Heinz contracted for $10,000 in advertising matter (about $192,900 in 1997 dollars). This was more, he noted, "than ever before in my life" (The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz, 10-15 July 1892). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
(1892)
The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz
-
-
-
177
-
-
0038878899
-
-
Souvenirs and other similar promotions represented substantial expenditures for the business. In 1892, for example, Heinz contracted for $10,000 in advertising matter (about $192,900 in 1997 dollars). This was more, he noted, "than ever before in my life" (The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz, 10-15 July 1892). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Historical Statistics of the United States
, vol.1
, pp. 211
-
-
-
178
-
-
0003421869
-
-
Souvenirs and other similar promotions represented substantial expenditures for the business. In 1892, for example, Heinz contracted for $10,000 in advertising matter (about $192,900 in 1997 dollars). This was more, he noted, "than ever before in my life" (The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz, 10-15 July 1892). Price deflators are from Department of Commerce, Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Economic Report of the President
, pp. 304
-
-
-
179
-
-
0039471565
-
-
In 1904, for example, almost 100,000 retailers attended the three-week long Cleveland Retail Grocers Association Food Show. According to the company newsletter, The 57, six employees staffed the company exhibit. Heinz "salesmen of the Cleveland Branch were on hand every night and made many friends among the visiting grocers. At the conclusion of the exhibition, all of the goods used in the Heinz Exhibit were sold intact to H. Klaustermeyer Co., whose store is one of the finest in the city of Cleveland." "Ohio Food Shows and Festivals," The 57 7:8 (1904); 7, H. J. Heinz Company, Pittsburgh, Pa. (hereafter H.J. Heinz Company). On food industry trade shows more generally, see Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed, 183-84.
-
The 57
-
-
-
180
-
-
0038878844
-
Ohio food shows and festivals
-
In 1904, for example, almost 100,000 retailers attended the three-week long Cleveland Retail Grocers Association Food Show. According to the company newsletter, The 57, six employees staffed the company exhibit. Heinz "salesmen of the Cleveland Branch were on hand every night and made many friends among the visiting grocers. At the conclusion of the exhibition, all of the goods used in the Heinz Exhibit were sold intact to H. Klaustermeyer Co., whose store is one of the finest in the city of Cleveland." "Ohio Food Shows and Festivals," The 57 7:8 (1904); 7, H. J. Heinz Company, Pittsburgh, Pa. (hereafter H.J. Heinz Company). On food industry trade shows more generally, see Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed, 183-84.
-
(1904)
The 57
, vol.7
, Issue.8
, pp. 7
-
-
-
181
-
-
0039203918
-
-
In 1904, for example, almost 100,000 retailers attended the three-week long Cleveland Retail Grocers Association Food Show. According to the company newsletter, The 57, six employees staffed the company exhibit. Heinz "salesmen of the Cleveland Branch were on hand every night and made many friends among the visiting grocers. At the conclusion of the exhibition, all of the goods used in the Heinz Exhibit were sold intact to H. Klaustermeyer Co., whose store is one of the finest in the city of Cleveland." "Ohio Food Shows and Festivals," The 57 7:8 (1904); 7, H. J. Heinz Company, Pittsburgh, Pa. (hereafter H.J. Heinz Company). On food industry trade shows more generally, see Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed, 183-84.
-
Satisfaction Guaranteed
, pp. 183-184
-
-
Strasser1
-
182
-
-
0011526067
-
-
Chicago
-
On the Columbian Exposition, see R. Reid Badger, The Great American Fair: The World's Columbian Exposition & American Culture (Chicago, 1979) and Robert W. Rydell, All the World's a Fair: Visions of Empire at American International Expositions, 1876-1916 (Chicago, 1984). See also William Cronon, Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (New York, 1991), 341-42 and Donald L. Miller, City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America (New York, 1996), 488-505. Some of the best primary sources are guidebooks to the Exposition, including: The Best Things to be seen at the World's Fair (Chicago, 1893), The Artistic Guide to Chicago and the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893), and A Week at the Fair: Illustrating the Exhibits and Wonders of the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893).
-
(1979)
The Great American Fair: The World's Columbian Exposition & American Culture
-
-
Reid Badger, R.1
-
183
-
-
0004003152
-
-
Chicago
-
On the Columbian Exposition, see R. Reid Badger, The Great American Fair: The World's Columbian Exposition & American Culture (Chicago, 1979) and Robert W. Rydell, All the World's a Fair: Visions of Empire at American International Expositions, 1876-1916 (Chicago, 1984). See also William Cronon, Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (New York, 1991), 341-42 and Donald L. Miller, City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America (New York, 1996), 488-505. Some of the best primary sources are guidebooks to the Exposition, including: The Best Things to be seen at the World's Fair (Chicago, 1893), The Artistic Guide to Chicago and the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893), and A Week at the Fair: Illustrating the Exhibits and Wonders of the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893).
-
(1984)
All the World's a Fair: Visions of Empire at American International Expositions, 1876-1916
-
-
Rydell, R.W.1
-
184
-
-
85040899632
-
-
New York
-
On the Columbian Exposition, see R. Reid Badger, The Great American Fair: The World's Columbian Exposition & American Culture (Chicago, 1979) and Robert W. Rydell, All the World's a Fair: Visions of Empire at American International Expositions, 1876-1916 (Chicago, 1984). See also William Cronon, Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (New York, 1991), 341-42 and Donald L. Miller, City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America (New York, 1996), 488-505. Some of the best primary sources are guidebooks to the Exposition, including: The Best Things to be seen at the World's Fair (Chicago, 1893), The Artistic Guide to Chicago and the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893), and A Week at the Fair: Illustrating the Exhibits and Wonders of the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893).
-
(1991)
Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West
, pp. 341-342
-
-
Cronon, W.1
-
185
-
-
0039137369
-
-
New York
-
On the Columbian Exposition, see R. Reid Badger, The Great American Fair: The World's Columbian Exposition & American Culture (Chicago, 1979) and Robert W. Rydell, All the World's a Fair: Visions of Empire at American International Expositions, 1876-1916 (Chicago, 1984). See also William Cronon, Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (New York, 1991), 341-42 and Donald L. Miller, City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America (New York, 1996), 488-505. Some of the best primary sources are guidebooks to the Exposition, including: The Best Things to be seen at the World's Fair (Chicago, 1893), The Artistic Guide to Chicago and the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893), and A Week at the Fair: Illustrating the Exhibits and Wonders of the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893).
-
(1996)
City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America
, pp. 488-505
-
-
Miller, D.L.1
-
186
-
-
0040063384
-
-
Chicago
-
On the Columbian Exposition, see R. Reid Badger, The Great American Fair: The World's Columbian Exposition & American Culture (Chicago, 1979) and Robert W. Rydell, All the World's a Fair: Visions of Empire at American International Expositions, 1876-1916 (Chicago, 1984). See also William Cronon, Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (New York, 1991), 341-42 and Donald L. Miller, City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America (New York, 1996), 488-505. Some of the best primary sources are guidebooks to the Exposition, including: The Best Things to be seen at the World's Fair (Chicago, 1893), The Artistic Guide to Chicago and the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893), and A Week at the Fair: Illustrating the Exhibits and Wonders of the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893).
-
(1893)
The Best Things to Be Seen at the World's Fair
-
-
-
187
-
-
0039471507
-
-
Chicago
-
On the Columbian Exposition, see R. Reid Badger, The Great American Fair: The World's Columbian Exposition & American Culture (Chicago, 1979) and Robert W. Rydell, All the World's a Fair: Visions of Empire at American International Expositions, 1876-1916 (Chicago, 1984). See also William Cronon, Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (New York, 1991), 341-42 and Donald L. Miller, City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America (New York, 1996), 488-505. Some of the best primary sources are guidebooks to the Exposition, including: The Best Things to be seen at the World's Fair (Chicago, 1893), The Artistic Guide to Chicago and the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893), and A Week at the Fair: Illustrating the Exhibits and Wonders of the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893).
-
(1893)
The Artistic Guide to Chicago and the World's Columbian Exposition
-
-
-
188
-
-
79954254962
-
-
Chicago
-
On the Columbian Exposition, see R. Reid Badger, The Great American Fair: The World's Columbian Exposition & American Culture (Chicago, 1979) and Robert W. Rydell, All the World's a Fair: Visions of Empire at American International Expositions, 1876-1916 (Chicago, 1984). See also William Cronon, Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (New York, 1991), 341-42 and Donald L. Miller, City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America (New York, 1996), 488-505. Some of the best primary sources are guidebooks to the Exposition, including: The Best Things to be seen at the World's Fair (Chicago, 1893), The Artistic Guide to Chicago and the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893), and A Week at the Fair: Illustrating the Exhibits and Wonders of the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893).
-
(1893)
A Week at the Fair: Illustrating the Exhibits and Wonders of the World's Columbian Exposition
-
-
-
190
-
-
84941889764
-
-
Historian Susan Strasser estimates that U.S. consumer products companies each spent as much as $30,000 (about $553,000 in 1997 dollars) on their individual displays at the Columbian Exposition (Satisfaction Guaranteed, 181). Given the relative size of the Heinz pavilion, it's reasonable to conclude the Pittsburgh company devoted substantially more than this sum to its marketing efforts at the world's fair. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Satisfaction Guaranteed
, pp. 181
-
-
-
191
-
-
0038878899
-
-
Historian Susan Strasser estimates that U.S. consumer products companies each spent as much as $30,000 (about $553,000 in 1997 dollars) on their individual displays at the Columbian Exposition (Satisfaction Guaranteed, 181). Given the relative size of the Heinz pavilion, it's reasonable to conclude the Pittsburgh company devoted substantially more than this sum to its marketing efforts at the world's fair. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Historical Statistics of the United States
, vol.1
, pp. 211
-
-
-
192
-
-
0003421869
-
-
Historian Susan Strasser estimates that U.S. consumer products companies each spent as much as $30,000 (about $553,000 in 1997 dollars) on their individual displays at the Columbian Exposition (Satisfaction Guaranteed, 181). Given the relative size of the Heinz pavilion, it's reasonable to conclude the Pittsburgh company devoted substantially more than this sum to its marketing efforts at the world's fair. Price deflators are from Department of Commerce Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 211 and Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, 304.
-
Economic Report of the President
, pp. 304
-
-
-
194
-
-
0041703795
-
-
14 Nov.
-
As the New York Times reported two weeks after the Columbian Exposition closed, "It has just been discovered that the gallery floor of the Agricultural Building has sagged where the pickle display of H.J. Heinz stood, owing to the vast crowd which constantly thronged their goods." 14 Nov. 1893.
-
(1893)
New York Times
-
-
-
196
-
-
0038878843
-
-
note
-
Henry Heinz prohibited company billboards in and around Pittsburgh.
-
-
-
-
197
-
-
0040656928
-
-
Quoted in Blum, "The Entrepreneurs," 235. See also "Birth of Trade Mark Described in Article, Number 57 Turns Up in Many Weird Ways," The 57 News, 9 Mar. 1920, 1, 3, H.J. Heinz Company.
-
The Entrepreneurs
, pp. 235
-
-
Blum1
-
198
-
-
0039471497
-
Birth of trade mark described in article, number 57 turns up in many weird ways
-
9 Mar. H.J. Heinz Company
-
Quoted in Blum, "The Entrepreneurs," 235. See also "Birth of Trade Mark Described in Article, Number 57 Turns Up in Many Weird Ways," The 57 News, 9 Mar. 1920, 1, 3, H.J. Heinz Company.
-
(1920)
The 57 News
, pp. 1
-
-
-
201
-
-
0039471480
-
Heinz electric sign, New York
-
May Heinz, Family Office
-
Madison Square, a company newsletter noted, "is a beautiful park covering several acres of ground in the center of the great metropolis, and the sign can be seen for quite a distance up Fifth Avenue and Broadway." "Heinz Electric Sign, New York," Pickles 5:3 (May 1901), 1-2. Heinz, Family Office.
-
(1901)
Pickles
, vol.5
, Issue.3
, pp. 1-2
-
-
-
202
-
-
0040656930
-
-
note
-
In 1901, the sign was dismantled to make way for the Flatiron Building, which still stands at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and 23rd Street.
-
-
-
-
205
-
-
0039471489
-
-
Ibid., 133. During a hurricane in 1944, the "5" on the "57" sign fell into the sea, and the company's management decided to abandon the pier as a business endeavor.
-
The Good Provider
, pp. 133
-
-
-
206
-
-
0038878823
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Visitors at the 'home of the 57' in 1903
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Feb. H.J. Heinz Company
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"Visitors at the 'Home of the 57' in 1903." The 57 7:9 (Feb. 1904): 1. H.J. Heinz Company.
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(1904)
The 57
, vol.7
, Issue.9
, pp. 1
-
-
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207
-
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0040656927
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A gigantic pickle concern
-
H. J. Heinz Company
-
The company's manufacturing facilities, Henry Heinz noted, "are open every working day in the year for the inspection of the public. This has gained for us additional confidence because it offers people an opportunity of finding out for themselves the true quality of our products, and the cleanliness that is observed in their manufacture," "A Gigantic Pickle Concern," Pickles 4:5 (1900): 3, H. J. Heinz Company. See also Edward Earle Purinton, "The Plant that Made the Pickle Famous," The Independent 101:3705 (17 Jan. 1920): 93-95, 116-17.
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(1900)
Pickles
, vol.4
, Issue.5
, pp. 3
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-
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208
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0040656935
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The plant that made the pickle famous
-
17 Jan.
-
The company's manufacturing facilities, Henry Heinz noted, "are open every working day in the year for the inspection of the public. This has gained for us additional confidence because it offers people an opportunity of finding out for themselves the true quality of our products, and the cleanliness that is observed in their manufacture," "A Gigantic Pickle Concern," Pickles 4:5 (1900): 3, H. J. Heinz Company. See also Edward Earle Purinton, "The Plant that Made the Pickle Famous," The Independent 101:3705 (17 Jan. 1920): 93-95, 116-17.
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(1920)
The Independent
, vol.101
, Issue.3705
, pp. 93-95
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-
Purinton, E.E.1
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211
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0001848840
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Why satisfied customers defect
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Nov./Dec.
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Thomas O. Jones and W. Earl Sasser, "Why Satisfied Customers Defect," Harvard Business Review 73:6 (Nov./Dec. 1995): 88-99.
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(1995)
Harvard Business Review
, vol.73
, Issue.6
, pp. 88-99
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Jones, T.O.1
Earl Sasser, W.2
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214
-
-
0040063387
-
-
2 Mar. 1878, 7 Mar.
-
See, for example, The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz, 2 Mar. 1878, 7 Mar. 1878. The word "salesmanship," as historian Timothy Spears has written, did not enter common usage until late in the nineteenth century. An earlier term, "fastening," was used to describe the face-to-face interaction between "drummers," wholesale agents hired to drum up custom, and provincial merchants who traveled to urban centers on purchasing trips. An 1832 commercial publication described the sales process: "Drumming in a mercantile sense consists in fastening upon every man, whether stranger or otherwise, who labors under suspicion of having come to the city to purchase goods for the country market: and the object thereof is ... to obtain as great a share as possible of the wholesale business." Asa Greene, "Mercantile Drumming," Constellation (5 May 1832), quoted in Timothy B. Spears, 100 Years on the Road: The Traveling Salesman in American Culture (New Haven, Conn., 1995), 29-30. See also Walter A. Friedman, "The Peddler's Progress: Salesmanship, Science, and Magic, 1880 to 1940," (Ph.D. diss., Columbia University, 1996), and Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed, 58-88.
-
(1878)
The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz
-
-
-
215
-
-
0040063385
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Mercantile drumming
-
5 May
-
See, for example, The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz, 2 Mar. 1878, 7 Mar. 1878. The word "salesmanship," as historian Timothy Spears has written, did not enter common usage until late in the nineteenth century. An earlier term, "fastening," was used to describe the face-to-face interaction between "drummers," wholesale agents hired to drum up custom, and provincial merchants who traveled to urban centers on purchasing trips. An 1832 commercial publication described the sales process: "Drumming in a mercantile sense consists in fastening upon every man, whether stranger or otherwise, who labors under suspicion of having come to the city to purchase goods for the country market: and the object thereof is ... to obtain as great a share as possible of the wholesale business." Asa Greene, "Mercantile Drumming," Constellation (5 May 1832), quoted in Timothy B. Spears, 100 Years on the Road: The Traveling Salesman in American Culture (New Haven, Conn., 1995), 29-30. See also Walter A. Friedman, "The Peddler's Progress: Salesmanship, Science, and Magic, 1880 to 1940," (Ph.D. diss., Columbia University, 1996), and Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed, 58-88.
-
(1832)
Constellation
-
-
Greene, A.1
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216
-
-
0012322920
-
-
New Haven, Conn.
-
See, for example, The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz, 2 Mar. 1878, 7 Mar. 1878. The word "salesmanship," as historian Timothy Spears has written, did not enter common usage until late in the nineteenth century. An earlier term, "fastening," was used to describe the face-to-face interaction between "drummers," wholesale agents hired to drum up custom, and provincial merchants who traveled to urban centers on purchasing trips. An 1832 commercial publication described the sales process: "Drumming in a mercantile sense consists in fastening upon every man, whether stranger or otherwise, who labors under suspicion of having come to the city to purchase goods for the country market: and the object thereof is ... to obtain as great a share as possible of the wholesale business." Asa Greene, "Mercantile Drumming," Constellation (5 May 1832), quoted in Timothy B. Spears, 100 Years on the Road: The Traveling Salesman in American Culture (New Haven, Conn., 1995), 29-30. See also Walter A. Friedman, "The Peddler's Progress: Salesmanship, Science, and Magic, 1880 to 1940," (Ph.D. diss., Columbia University, 1996), and Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed, 58-88.
-
(1995)
100 Years on the Road: The Traveling Salesman in American Culture
, pp. 29-30
-
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Spears, T.B.1
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217
-
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0039471506
-
-
Ph.D. diss., Columbia University
-
See, for example, The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz, 2 Mar. 1878, 7 Mar. 1878. The word "salesmanship," as historian Timothy Spears has written, did not enter common usage until late in the nineteenth century. An earlier term, "fastening," was used to describe the face-to-face interaction between "drummers," wholesale agents hired to drum up custom, and provincial merchants who traveled to urban centers on purchasing trips. An 1832 commercial publication described the sales process: "Drumming in a mercantile sense consists in fastening upon every man, whether stranger or otherwise, who labors under suspicion of having come to the city to purchase goods for the country market: and the object thereof is ... to obtain as great a share as possible of the wholesale business." Asa Greene, "Mercantile Drumming," Constellation (5 May 1832), quoted in Timothy B. Spears, 100 Years on the Road: The Traveling Salesman in American Culture (New Haven, Conn., 1995), 29-30. See also Walter A. Friedman, "The Peddler's Progress: Salesmanship, Science, and Magic, 1880 to 1940," (Ph.D. diss., Columbia University, 1996), and Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed, 58-88.
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(1996)
The Peddler's Progress: Salesmanship, Science, and Magic, 1880 to 1940
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Friedman, W.A.1
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218
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0039203918
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See, for example, The Personal Diaries of Henry J. Heinz, 2 Mar. 1878, 7 Mar. 1878. The word "salesmanship," as historian Timothy Spears has written, did not enter common usage until late in the nineteenth century. An earlier term, "fastening," was used to describe the face-to-face interaction between "drummers," wholesale agents hired to drum up custom, and provincial merchants who traveled to urban centers on purchasing trips. An 1832 commercial publication described the sales process: "Drumming in a mercantile sense consists in fastening upon every man, whether stranger or otherwise, who labors under suspicion of having come to the city to purchase goods for the country market: and the object thereof is ... to obtain as great a share as possible of the wholesale business." Asa Greene, "Mercantile Drumming," Constellation (5 May 1832), quoted in Timothy B. Spears, 100 Years on the Road: The Traveling Salesman in American Culture (New Haven, Conn., 1995), 29-30. See also Walter A. Friedman, "The Peddler's Progress: Salesmanship, Science, and Magic, 1880 to 1940," (Ph.D. diss., Columbia University, 1996), and Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed, 58-88.
-
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, pp. 58-88
-
-
Strasser1
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220
-
-
0040656932
-
-
21 June
-
The Licensed Victualler and Catering Trades' Journal, 21 June 1899, 645. Establishing and maintaining such a distribution network was significantly more expensive than working with existing wholesalers. In the late nineteenth-century. Heinz's selling costs exceeded 33 percent of gross revenues. John Connor, Richard Rogers, Bruce Marion, and Willard Mueller. Tne Food Manufacturing Industries: Structure, Strategies, Performance, and Policies (Lexington, Mass., 1985), 47.
-
(1899)
The Licensed Victualler and Catering Trades' Journal
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221
-
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0003604870
-
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Lexington, Mass.
-
The Licensed Victualler and Catering Trades' Journal, 21 June 1899, 645. Establishing and maintaining such a distribution network was significantly more expensive than working with existing wholesalers. In the late nineteenth-century. Heinz's selling costs exceeded 33 percent of gross revenues. John Connor, Richard Rogers, Bruce Marion, and Willard Mueller. Tne Food Manufacturing Industries: Structure, Strategies, Performance, and Policies (Lexington, Mass., 1985), 47.
-
(1985)
Tne Food Manufacturing Industries: Structure, Strategies, Performance, and Policies
, pp. 47
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Connor, J.1
Rogers, R.2
Marion, B.3
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222
-
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0040656936
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H. J. Heinz Company
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Pickles 4:2 (1900): 2, H. J. Heinz Company.
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(1900)
Pickles
, vol.4
, Issue.2
, pp. 2
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223
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H.J. Heinz Company
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The 57 8:6 (1904), 9, H.J. Heinz Company. See also "Two Essential Points for a Successful Salesman," Pickles 2:7 (1898), H.J. Heinz Company.
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(1904)
The 57
, vol.8
, Issue.6
, pp. 9
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224
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0040063318
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Two essential points for a successful salesman
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H.J. Heinz Company
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The 57 8:6 (1904), 9, H.J. Heinz Company. See also "Two Essential Points for a Successful Salesman," Pickles 2:7 (1898), H.J. Heinz Company.
-
(1898)
Pickles
, vol.2
, Issue.7
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-
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225
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0038878820
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Getting close to the buyer
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H. J. Heinz Company
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"Getting Close to the Buyer," Pickles 5:12 (1902), I, H. J. Heinz Company.
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(1902)
Pickles
, vol.5
, Issue.12
, pp. 1
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226
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0039203918
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Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed. 194-200: Chandler, The Visible Hand, 290-99: and Thomas Horst, At Home Abroad: A Study of the Domestic and Foreign Operations of the American Food Processing Industry (Cambridge, Mass., 1974), 17.
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Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed. 194-200: Chandler, The Visible Hand, 290-99: and Thomas Horst, At Home Abroad: A Study of the Domestic and Foreign Operations of the American Food Processing Industry (Cambridge, Mass., 1974), 17.
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The Visible Hand
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228
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Cambridge, Mass.
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Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed. 194-200: Chandler, The Visible Hand, 290-99: and Thomas Horst, At Home Abroad: A Study of the Domestic and Foreign Operations of the American Food Processing Industry (Cambridge, Mass., 1974), 17.
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Horst, T.1
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0040063382
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(Pittsburgh, Pa., n.d.), MSS 57, HSWP
-
"There are grocers in every territory," noted an early twentieth-century company Heinx sales manual, "who are progressive up-to-date merchandisers and who are able to sell a large volume of Heinx products. These key stores are deserving of your special attention, and at every opportunity you should plan an outstanding Heinz sale which will not only increase the volume during the period of the sale but will help to make the dealer and the clerks more interested in the Heinx line and his customers better acquainted with the 57 Varieties," 57 Sales Manual (Pittsburgh, Pa., n.d.), 84, MSS 57, HSWP.
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57 Sales Manual
, pp. 84
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230
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0040656931
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The salesman as advertiser
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May H. J. Heinz Company
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"The Salesman as Advertiser," Pickles 2:4 (May 1898): 4-5, H. J. Heinz Company.
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(1898)
Pickles
, vol.2
, Issue.4
, pp. 4-5
-
-
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231
-
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0032260498
-
-
MSS 57, box 4, folder 10, HSWP
-
Company publications, such as "Superior Store Displays," outlined specific merchandising techniques and were intended to help strengthen relationships between Heinx sales representatives and grocers. As the eark twentieth-century booklet explained, "The devices listed herein are the inventions of a corps of experts employed by the Company who devise ways and means of a practical nature for display purposes. They are intended to stimulate interest in interior store displays, which are recognized as the last link in the chain of advertising - the final reminder - necessary to influence the sale." "Superior Store Displays." 1, MSS 57, box 4, folder 10, HSWP. On sales management at the turn of the century, see Walter A. Friedman, "The Science of Selling: Managers, Salesmen, Scientists, and Prospects, 1880 to 1920" (unpublished paper presented to the Business History Seminar, Harvard Business School, 1997), "The Peddler's Progress," and "John H. Patterson and the Sales Strategy of the National Cash Register Company, 1884 to 1922," Business History Review 72:4 (Winter 1998): 552-584.
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Superior Store Displays
, pp. 1
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232
-
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0032260498
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-
unpublished paper presented to the Business History Seminar, Harvard Business School
-
Company publications, such as "Superior Store Displays," outlined specific merchandising techniques and were intended to help strengthen relationships between Heinx sales representatives and grocers. As the eark twentieth-century booklet explained, "The devices listed herein are the inventions of a corps of experts employed by the Company who devise ways and means of a practical nature for display purposes. They are intended to stimulate interest in interior store displays, which are recognized as the last link in the chain of advertising - the final reminder - necessary to influence the sale." "Superior Store Displays." 1, MSS 57, box 4, folder 10, HSWP. On sales management at the turn of the century, see Walter A. Friedman, "The Science of Selling: Managers, Salesmen, Scientists, and Prospects, 1880 to 1920" (unpublished paper presented to the Business History Seminar, Harvard Business School, 1997), "The Peddler's Progress," and "John H. Patterson and the Sales Strategy of the National Cash Register Company, 1884 to 1922," Business History Review 72:4 (Winter 1998): 552-584.
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"The peddler's progress," and "John H. Patterson and the sales strategy of the National Cash Register Company, 1884 to 1922,"
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Winter
-
Company publications, such as "Superior Store Displays," outlined specific merchandising techniques and were intended to help strengthen relationships between Heinx sales representatives and grocers. As the eark twentieth-century booklet explained, "The devices listed herein are the inventions of a corps of experts employed by the Company who devise ways and means of a practical nature for display purposes. They are intended to stimulate interest in interior store displays, which are recognized as the last link in the chain of advertising - the final reminder - necessary to influence the sale." "Superior Store Displays." 1, MSS 57, box 4, folder 10, HSWP. On sales management at the turn of the century, see Walter A. Friedman, "The Science of Selling: Managers, Salesmen, Scientists, and Prospects, 1880 to 1920" (unpublished paper presented to the Business History Seminar, Harvard Business School, 1997), "The Peddler's Progress," and "John H. Patterson and the Sales Strategy of the National Cash Register Company, 1884 to 1922," Business History Review 72:4 (Winter 1998): 552-584.
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236
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From day to day: How the convention opened and how it progressed
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"From Day to Day: How the Convention Opened and How it Progressed," Pickles 5:10 (1902), 7, H.J. Heinz Company.
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(1902)
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, vol.5
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237
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Our annual conventions
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(1898)
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20 Mar. 1 May
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See, for example, Henry Heinz's straggle with the Noble brothers in early 1876 to control the failed company's trademark ("The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz," 20 Mar. 1876, 1 May 1878, 26, 44).
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(1876)
The Private Diary of H.J. Heinz
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On the relationship between brand equity and product extension, see David A. Aaker, "Should You Take Your Brand to Where the Action Is?" Harvard Business Review 75:5 (Sept./Oct. 1997): 135-143; David A. Aaker, Building Strong Brands (New York, 1996), 269-302; Peter Farquhar, "Managing Brand Equity," Journal of Advertising Research, 30:4 (Aug./ Sept. 1990): 7-12; Peter Farquhar, Julia Han, and Yuji Ijiri, "Strategies for Leveraging Master Brands," Marketing Research 4:3 (Sept. 1992); 33-43; Stephen King, "Brand Building in the 1990s," Journal of Consumer Marketing 8:4 (Fall 1991): 43-52; John M. Murphy, Brand Strategy (New York, 1990), 110-14; Alan Webber, "What Great Brands Do," Fast Company 10 (Aug./Sept. 1997): 96-103.
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On the relationship between brand equity and product extension, see David A. Aaker, "Should You Take Your Brand to Where the Action Is?" Harvard Business Review 75:5 (Sept./Oct. 1997): 135-143; David A. Aaker, Building Strong Brands (New York, 1996), 269-302; Peter Farquhar, "Managing Brand Equity," Journal of Advertising Research, 30:4 (Aug./ Sept. 1990): 7-12; Peter Farquhar, Julia Han, and Yuji Ijiri, "Strategies for Leveraging Master Brands," Marketing Research 4:3 (Sept. 1992); 33-43; Stephen King, "Brand Building in the 1990s," Journal of Consumer Marketing 8:4 (Fall 1991): 43-52; John M. Murphy, Brand Strategy (New York, 1990), 110-14; Alan Webber, "What Great Brands Do," Fast Company 10 (Aug./Sept. 1997): 96-103.
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On the relationship between brand equity and product extension, see David A. Aaker, "Should You Take Your Brand to Where the Action Is?" Harvard Business Review 75:5 (Sept./Oct. 1997): 135-143; David A. Aaker, Building Strong Brands (New York, 1996), 269-302; Peter Farquhar, "Managing Brand Equity," Journal of Advertising Research, 30:4 (Aug./ Sept. 1990): 7-12; Peter Farquhar, Julia Han, and Yuji Ijiri, "Strategies for Leveraging Master Brands," Marketing Research 4:3 (Sept. 1992); 33-43; Stephen King, "Brand Building in the 1990s," Journal of Consumer Marketing 8:4 (Fall 1991): 43-52; John M. Murphy, Brand Strategy (New York, 1990), 110-14; Alan Webber, "What Great Brands Do," Fast Company 10 (Aug./Sept. 1997): 96-103.
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On the relationship between brand equity and product extension, see David A. Aaker, "Should You Take Your Brand to Where the Action Is?" Harvard Business Review 75:5 (Sept./Oct. 1997): 135-143; David A. Aaker, Building Strong Brands (New York, 1996), 269-302; Peter Farquhar, "Managing Brand Equity," Journal of Advertising Research, 30:4 (Aug./ Sept. 1990): 7-12; Peter Farquhar, Julia Han, and Yuji Ijiri, "Strategies for Leveraging Master Brands," Marketing Research 4:3 (Sept. 1992); 33-43; Stephen King, "Brand Building in the 1990s," Journal of Consumer Marketing 8:4 (Fall 1991): 43-52; John M. Murphy, Brand Strategy (New York, 1990), 110-14; Alan Webber, "What Great Brands Do," Fast Company 10 (Aug./Sept. 1997): 96-103.
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On the relationship between brand equity and product extension, see David A. Aaker, "Should You Take Your Brand to Where the Action Is?" Harvard Business Review 75:5 (Sept./Oct. 1997): 135-143; David A. Aaker, Building Strong Brands (New York, 1996), 269-302; Peter Farquhar, "Managing Brand Equity," Journal of Advertising Research, 30:4 (Aug./ Sept. 1990): 7-12; Peter Farquhar, Julia Han, and Yuji Ijiri, "Strategies for Leveraging Master Brands," Marketing Research 4:3 (Sept. 1992); 33-43; Stephen King, "Brand Building in the 1990s," Journal of Consumer Marketing 8:4 (Fall 1991): 43-52; John M. Murphy, Brand Strategy (New York, 1990), 110-14; Alan Webber, "What Great Brands Do," Fast Company 10 (Aug./Sept. 1997): 96-103.
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On the relationship between brand equity and product extension, see David A. Aaker, "Should You Take Your Brand to Where the Action Is?" Harvard Business Review 75:5 (Sept./Oct. 1997): 135-143; David A. Aaker, Building Strong Brands (New York, 1996), 269-302; Peter Farquhar, "Managing Brand Equity," Journal of Advertising Research, 30:4 (Aug./ Sept. 1990): 7-12; Peter Farquhar, Julia Han, and Yuji Ijiri, "Strategies for Leveraging Master Brands," Marketing Research 4:3 (Sept. 1992); 33-43; Stephen King, "Brand Building in the 1990s," Journal of Consumer Marketing 8:4 (Fall 1991): 43-52; John M. Murphy, Brand Strategy (New York, 1990), 110-14; Alan Webber, "What Great Brands Do," Fast Company 10 (Aug./Sept. 1997): 96-103.
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Fruit jellies were an exception. Competition from the Campbell Soup Company, combined with housewives' preference for making their own preserves, depressed sales in the late nineteenth century (Stephen Potter, The Magic Number: The Story of '57' [London, 1959], 49-50).
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May, The Canning Clan, 2. See also Laurence A. Johnson, Over the Counter and on the Shelf: Country Storekeeping in America, 1620-1920 (Rutland, Vt., 1961), 84-92 and Edward F. Keuchel, "Master of the Art of Canning: Baltimore, 1860-1900," Maryland Historical Magazine 67:4 (1972); 352-55.
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May, The Canning Clan, 2. See also Laurence A. Johnson, Over the Counter and on the Shelf: Country Storekeeping in America, 1620-1920 (Rutland, Vt., 1961), 84-92 and Edward F. Keuchel, "Master of the Art of Canning: Baltimore, 1860-1900," Maryland Historical Magazine 67:4 (1972); 352-55.
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May, The Canning Clan, 2. See also Laurence A. Johnson, Over the Counter and on the Shelf: Country Storekeeping in America, 1620-1920 (Rutland, Vt., 1961), 84-92 and Edward F. Keuchel, "Master of the Art of Canning: Baltimore, 1860-1900," Maryland Historical Magazine 67:4 (1972); 352-55.
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0039471490
-
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note
-
The hole-in-cap can was used mainly for liquids. They were inserted through a small hole in the top of the can, which was soldered shut after filling.
-
-
-
-
260
-
-
0040656917
-
-
The Licensed Victualler & Catering Trades' Journal, 645. Heinz also worked with company farmers on the development of improved seed hybrids. "Pittsburgh - A Great City," American Monthly Review of Reviews 31:1 (Jan. 1905): 65.
-
The Licensed Victualler & Catering Trades' Journal
, pp. 645
-
-
-
261
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0040656902
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Pittsburgh - A great city
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Jan.
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The Licensed Victualler & Catering Trades' Journal, 645. Heinz also worked with company farmers on the development of improved seed hybrids. "Pittsburgh - A Great City," American Monthly Review of Reviews 31:1 (Jan. 1905): 65.
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(1905)
American Monthly Review of Reviews
, vol.31
, Issue.1
, pp. 65
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-
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262
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0039471488
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"Pittsburgh - A Great City," 65. Many of these employees were seasonal, hired to work during the peak periods of planting and harvesting.
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Pittsburgh - A Great City
, pp. 65
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-
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267
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0040063306
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note
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As a result of this 1886 meeting, Heinz became a household word in the United Kingdom. Heinz baked beans on toast remains a staple in the English diet today, and many modern British consumers assume Heinz is a British brand.
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-
-
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268
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0039471481
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Our European progress
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H.J. Heinz Company
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"Our European Progress," The 57 7:6 (1903); 2. H.J. Heinz Company.
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(1903)
The 57
, vol.7
, Issue.6
, pp. 2
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-
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269
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0040656907
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Pittsburgh, Pa., Heinz Family Office
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H.J. Heinz Company: Producers, Manufacturers, and Distributors of Pure Food Products (Pittsburgh, Pa., 1910), 22. Heinz Family Office.
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(1910)
H.J. Heinz Company: Producers, Manufacturers, and Distributors of Pure Food Products
, pp. 22
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-
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270
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0040656908
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MSS 57, box 3, folder 1, HSWP
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"H.J. Heinz Company Sales." MSS 57, box 3, folder 1, 1915F, HSWP.
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(1915)
H.J. Heinz Company Sales
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-
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272
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0038878828
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McCafferty, Henry J. Heinz, 106. The company changed its name from F. & J. Heinz to H.J. Heinz in 1888.
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Henry J. Heinz
, pp. 106
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McCafferty1
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273
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0002202750
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Garden City, N.J.
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See, for example, George Burton Hotchkiss and Richard B. Franken, The Leadership of Advertised Brand: A Study of 100 Representative Commodities Showing the Name and Brands that are Most Familiar to the Public (Garden City, N.J., 1923), 113.
-
(1923)
The Leadership of Advertised Brand: A Study of 100 Representative Commodities Showing the Name and Brands That Are Most Familiar to the Public
, pp. 113
-
-
Hotchkiss, G.B.1
Franken, R.B.2
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