Monday, May 25, 2020
Mmm Mmm Good The History of Campbells Soup
In 1869, fruit merchant Joseph Campbell and icebox manufacturer Abraham Anderson started the Anderson Campbell Preserve Company in Camden, New Jersey. By 1877, the partners realized each had different visions for the company. Joseph Campbell bought Andersonââ¬â¢s share and expanded the business to include ketchup, salad dressing, mustard, and other sauces. Ready-to-serve Beefsteak Tomato Soup became a Campbellââ¬â¢s best seller. Birth of the Campbells Soup Company In 1894, Joseph Campbell retired and Arthur Dorrance took over as company president. Three years later, soup history was made when Arthur Dorranceà hired his nephew John Dorrance. John held a chemistry degree from MIT and a Ph.D. from the University of Gottengen in Germany. He turned down more prestigious and better-paying teaching positions to work for his uncle. His Campbells salary was only $7.50 per week and he had to bring in his own lab equipment. However, John Dorrance soon made the Campbells Soup Company very famous. Chemist Arthur Dorrance Finds a Way to Shrink Soup Soups were inexpensive to make but very expensive to ship. Dorrance realized that if he could remove some of soups heaviest ingredientââ¬âwaterââ¬âhe could create a formula for condensed soup and slash the price of soup from $.30 to $.10 per can. By 1922, soup was such an integral part of the companys presence in America, that Campbellââ¬â¢s formally accepted Soup into its name. The Mother of Campbell Kids The Campbell Kids have been selling Campbells Soup since 1904, when Grace Wiederseim Drayton, an illustrator and writer, added some sketches of children to her husbandââ¬â¢s advertising layout for a Campbells condensed soup. The Campbell advertising agents loved the child appeal and choose Mrs. Wiederseimââ¬â¢s sketches as trademarks. In the beginning, Campbell Kids were drawn as ordinary boys and girls, later, Campbell Kids took on the personas of policemen, sailors, soldiers, and other professions. Grace Wiederseim Drayton will always be the mother of Campbell Kids. She drew for the company advertising for nearly twenty years. Draytonââ¬â¢s designs were so popular that doll makers wanted to capitalize on their popularity. Campbells gave the E. I. Horsemen Company the license to market dolls with the Campbell label on their sleeves. Horseman even secured two U.S. design patents for the dollsââ¬â¢ clothes. Today, Campbellââ¬â¢s Soup Company, with its famous red and white label, remains a staple in the kitchen as well as American culture.
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