Campbell Soup Company
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| Campbell Soup Company | |
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| Type | Public (NYSE: CPB) |
| Founded | 1869 |
| Headquarters | Camden, New Jersey, USA |
| Key people | Douglas R. Conant, CEO |
| Industry | Food - Major Diversified |
| Products | Campbell's Erasco Godiva Pepperidge Farm Arnott's Pace V8 Liebig Royco |
| Revenue | |
| Operating income | |
| Net income | |
| Employees | 24,000 (2006) |
| Website | www.campbellsoupcompany.com |
Campbell Soup Company (NYSE: CPB) (also known as Campbell's) is a well-known American producer of canned soups and related products. Campbell's products are sold in 120 countries around the world. It is headquartered in Camden, New Jersey. The company reportedly produces almost 2.5 billion cans of soup per year.[citation needed]
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The ubiquitous red-and-white icon became fodder for Andy Warhol, the 1960s pop counter-culture artist, in his famous series of iconoclastic Campbell's Soup Can images from 1962 to 1968, many of which are on display at the Andy Warhol Museum.
To celebrate this, in 2004, the company released a series of four limited edition cans, with different labels than the regular red and white.[citation needed] The new ones were in silkscreen colors, the top half being one shade and bottom another.[citation needed] Orange and pink were one combination, and shades of blue another.[citation needed] This marked one of the few times thus far in the company's 100+ year history that the labels have deviated from their standard look.[citation needed]
The cans appeared on the east coast and slowly made their way as far west as Ohio via Giant Eagle supermarkets.[citation needed]
Campbell's was founded in 1869 by Joseph A. Campbell, a fruit merchant, and Abraham Anderson, an icebox manufacturer.[citation needed] The company was originally called the "Joseph A. Campbell Preserve Company" and produced canned tomatoes, vegetables, jellies, soups, condiments, and minced meats.
By 1896, Anderson left the partnership, leaving Campbell to reorganize and form a new company, Joseph Campbell & Co. In 1897, a nephew of one of the new Campbell partners, Dr. John T. Dorrance, began working for the company at a wage of $7.50 a week.[citation needed] Dorrance, a gifted chemist with degrees from MIT and Göttingen University, Germany, developed a commercially viable method for condensing soup by halving the quantity of its heaviest ingredient: water.[citation needed]
Soup was not a popular staple in the American diet at the turn of the century, but it was in Europe.[citation needed] However, Dorrance's condensed soups quickly became successful among the public for their convenience and their price, 10 cents a can.[citation needed] The product competed at the Paris Exposition in 1900 and was awarded a gold medal, an image of which still appears on the label.
In 1898, Herberton Williams, a Campbell's executive, convinced the company to adopt a red and white color scheme, because he was taken by the crisp colors of the Cornell University football team's uniforms.[1]To this day, the layout of the can, with its red and white design and the gold medal seal from the 1900 Paris Exhibition, has changed very little.
Campbell Soup became one of largest food companies in the world under the leadership of William Beverly Murphy. He was elected executive vice president of Campbell Soup in 1949 and was president and CEO from 1953 to 1972. While at Campbell's Soup Company, he took the corporation public and increased its brand portfolio to include Pepperidge Farm breads, cookies, and crackers, Franco-American gravies and pastas, V8 vegetable juices, Swanson broths, and Godiva Chocolates.
Campbell Soup invested heavily in advertising since its inception, and many of its promotional campaigns have proven value in the Americana collectible advertising market. Perhaps best known are the "Campbell Kids." Ronald Reagan was a spokesman for V8 when it was first introduced.[citation needed] A "pretty groovy deal" in 1968 offered a paper Souper Dress available for $1.00 and two labels.[citation needed] Also produced were Campbell's Menu Books and Help for the Hostess series of cookbooks. One of the longest lasting recipes, but certainly odd to modern tastebuds, is the recipe for Tomato Soup Cake.
In addition to collectible advertising, the company has also had notable commercial sponsorships. Among these was The Campbell Playhouse, which had previously been Orson Welles' Mercury Theatre On The Air. Campbell's took over as sponsor of the radio theatre program in December of 1938.
In the UK and Ireland, the cans will be rebranded as Batchelors Condensed Soup from March 2008(since the license for the brand name expires in mid 2008) but labels will carry: "Formerly Campbell's. Same great taste." Premier Foods, St. Albans, Hertfordshire bought Campbell Soup Company in the UK and Ireland, for £ 450m ($ 830m), but not the brand. 22 flavours will be branded as Batchelors but recipes will remain the same. Also, US-based Campbell Soup Company will still produce Campbell's Condensed Soup but cannot sell the product in the UK for another 5 years. [2]
Many canned soups, including Campbell's condensed and Chunky varieties, have relatively high doses of sodium and thus are not desirable for those on low-sodium diets. However Campbell's Healthy Request Soups and Low Sodium Soups have reduced sodium levels.[3]
Campbell's owns numerous brands, categorized for different lines. Many of Campbell's brands are listed below.
- Campbell's Chunky™ Soups: Uncondensed soups with large portions of vegetables and other ingredients; especially known for its commercials starring famous NFL players and sometimes their mothers.
- Campbell's Condensed Soups: Campbell's flagship line
- Campbell's Fun Favorites Soups
- Campbell's Healthy Request® Soups: Soups with lower quantities of ingredients such as sodium
- Campbell's Kitchen Classics™ Soups
- Campbell's Select™Soups
- Campbell's Oriental™Soups: Chinese Oriental Soups
- Campbell's Soup at Hand® Soups: Drinkable soups in special microwave-safe cans
- Campbell's Velish: Name used in Australia for range of vegetarian soups
- Campbell's Country Ladel: Name used in Australia for range of home style soups
- Tomato Soup Lovers
- Simply Home Soups
- Campbell's Supper Bakes® Meal Kits
- Campbell's Tomato Juice
- Pace® Foods: A popular line of salsas
- A brand of homemade-style cookies and snack crackers, such as Goldfish crackers. Pepperidge Farm also markets gourmet cookies, breads, croutons, and stuffing.
- Prego® Pasta Sauces
- Swanson® Broth"
- V8 Vegetable Juice
- V8 Splash® Juice Drinks
- V8 V.Fusion
- Campbell Food Service: School cafeteria service
- Arnott's Biscuits Holdings, Australia's largest supplier of biscuits and second largest supplier of snack foods
- Devos Lemmens (Belgium)
- Franco-American- retired as of 2004
- Godiva
- Heisse Tasse (Germany)
- Homepride (UK)- Sold 2006
- Liebig (France)
- Oxo (UK) - Sold 2006
- Raguletto
- Royco (France & Belgium)
- Bla Band (Sweden & Finland)
- ^ Campbell's Soup History: Introduction from Campbell's official website
- ^ BBC NEWS, UK shops to lose famous soup can
- ^ Campbell's FAQ
- Collins, Douglas (1994). America's Favorite Food: The Story of Campbell Soup Company. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. ISBN 0-8109-2592-3
- Shea, Martha Esposito and Mathis, Mike (2002). "Images of America: Campbell Soup Company". Arcadia Publishing ISBN 0738510580
Categories: Articles lacking sources from July 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since July 2007 | Companies established in 1869 | Campbell's brands | Companies based in New Jersey | Food companies of the United States | Brand name soups
