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Foremost Dairy Products

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Foremost Dairy Products, Incorporated was a large dairy in the southern United States.

J. C. Penney, founder of the department store bearing his name, was behind the creation of the Foremost Dairy Products Company. In one of his addresses he said: "There is a $300,000,000 undeveloped dairy potential in the south alone. The activities of the Foremost Dairy Products Organization will be devoted to the development of this potential source of income."[1]

Penney, along with his partner Ralph W. Gwinn, invested heavily in Florida real estate in the 1920s, especially Clay County in northeast Florida around Jacksonville. They established Penney Farms (an experimental farming community), which provided the basis for the Foremost Dairy Products Company.[2]

History

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In February 1929, about 25 dairies merged into a new organization to be named Foremost Dairy Products, Inc. This consolidation was announced by Dr. Burdette G. Lewis of the Penney-Gwinn Corporation, which was the primary party to the merger. Lewis to be President of the company and J. C. Penney, Chairman of the Board. Combined companies had physical assets exceeding $4,500,000 and annual sales of more than $6,000,000.[3] They were located in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina. Each joining dairy maintained control of their business locally, combining their assets to allow greater purchasing power for cattle, supplies and equipment.[4]

Later that year, in November 1929, Foremost purchased Southwest Dairy Products in a deal involving $15,000,000. They now operated in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Missouri.[5]

Foremost Dairy Products, Inc came to its end in 1931, a victim of the Great Depression. In the fall of that year, they were forced to sell all assets at foreclosure. Its company charter was revoked for failure to pay its capital stock tax.[6]

The principal players in the company did not give up, however, and in September 1931 formed a new company, Foremost Dairies, Inc., which bought much of the assets of the now defunct Foremost Dairy Products, Inc. They first sold a number of their processing plants, either to outside investors or back to their local owners, and subsequently purchased with the new company all remaining assets of the old one. This entailed a complicated multi-year endeavor to reorganize the company, with much buying and selling of assets, as described in a very detailed 1934 stock sale prospectus.[7]

Foremost Dairies, Inc.expanded from serving 12 communities in 4 states (1932) to serving 112 communities in 22 states plus the Far East (1953). International operations were located in Hawaii, Guam, Okinawa and Japan. Annual sales were about $160,000,000 in 1953.[8]

Dairies associated with the initial merger:[9]

Florida
Penney Farms of the J. C. Penney-Gwinn Corporation (Clay County); Tampa Stock Farms Dairy (Tampa); J. R. Berrier Ice Cream Company (Jacksonville); Halifax Creamery, Inc. (Daytona Beach); W. C. Berrier Creamery, Inc. (Lakeland); S. M. Breedlove Company (Live Oak); Flowers Ice Cream Company (Tallahassee)
Georgia
S. M. Breedlove Company (Valdosta); Jessup Ice Cream Company (Atlanta); Antrim Ice Cream Company (Atlanta); Atlanta Ice Cream Company (Atlanta); Gate City Ice Cream Company (Atlanta); Joseph Costa Company (Athens); Georgia-Carolina Dairy Products Company (Augusta); Augusta Creamery (Augusta); Kinnet Odom Company (Macon); Columbus Dairy Company (Columbus); Americus Ice Cream Company (Americus); Tifton Ice Cream Company (Tifton); Flowers Ice Cream Company (Thomasville); S. B. Breedlove Ice Cream Company (Valdosta); Georgia Milk Company (Waycross); Crescent City Ice Cream Company (Gainesville); Purity Ice Cream Company (Rome); Ashburn Creamery (Ashburn)
South Carolina
Rogers Ice Cream Company (Columbia); Hub City Ice Cream Company (Spartanburg)
Alabama
Jersey Ice Cream Company (Birmingham); Kratzer Ice Cream Company (Montgomery)

References

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  1. ^ The Tampa Times Wednesday, November 27, 1929. Page Nine. Article: "Southern Firm Buys Dairies In Southwest. Foremost Products Co. Now Largest in South".
  2. ^ The Tampa Tribune. Saturday, February 16, 1929. Page Six. Article: "Company Here In $4,000,000 Dairy Merger".
  3. ^ JCPenney Collection. DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University. Manufacturers Record. February 21, 1929. Page 87. Article by Burdette G. Lewis "$4,500,000 Dairy Merger Completed In Florida And Other States". Manufacturers Record was a weekly southern industrial and financial newspaper.
  4. ^ JCPenney Collection. DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University. Foremost Dairy Products, Incorporated publication. 1929. Detailed summary of company for potential investors
  5. ^ The Tampa Times Wednesday, November 27, 1929. Page Nine. Article: "Southern Firm Buys Dairies In Southwest. Foremost Products Co. Now Largest in South".
  6. ^ Letter: J. R. Lindley, Treasurer of Foremost Dairies, Inc. of Jacksonville , Fl. To Miss Ora McIntosh of Tampa, Fl. Dated January 13, 1944.
  7. ^ JCPenney Collection. DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University. "Prospectus For Sale of Preferred and Common Stock of Foremost Dairies, Inc., A Delaware Corporation". July 31, 1934
  8. ^ JCPenney Collection. DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University. Foremost Dairies, Inc. publication."Foremost Up To Date (Special Report)". Oct 7, 1953. 12 pages. Supplementary Report to The Foremost Story 1951.
  9. ^ The Tampa Tribune. Saturday, February 16, 1929. Page Six. Article: "Company Here In $4,000,000 Dairy Merger