When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: early willamette tomato company

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tillie Lewis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tillie_Lewis

    She was an early promoter of the Italian San Marzano tomato to the Stockton, California area and established tomato and multiple agricultural products canning in both the San Joaquin and Stanislaus Counties. Her company became the fifth largest canning business in the United States by 1950.

  3. Gazelle (1854 sidewheeler) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gazelle_(1854_sidewheeler)

    Gazelle's builders were doing business as the Willamette Falls Canal, Milling and Transportation Company, referred to at the time as the "Willamette Falls Company." [ 3 ] The choice of a side-wheel design, adopted by all the early steamers on the Columbia and Willamette rivers, was an error, as the sternwheel design was much better suited to ...

  4. Willamette Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willamette_Industries

    Willamette Industries was founded in Dallas, Oregon, in 1906 as the Willamette Valley Lumber Company. [4] Louis Gerlinger, Sr. was president of the new company and H.L. Pittock, vice president. George T. Gerlinger served as secretary and manager while F.W. Leadbetter was treasurer. George Cone served as director and mill superintendent. [5]

  5. Wilco (farm supply cooperative) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilco_(farm_supply...

    Wilco is a farmer-owned farm supply cooperative that began as the Santiam Farmers Co-op in the 1930s [1] based in the Willamette Valley of the U.S. state of Oregon. In 1967, the Santiam Farmers Co-op merged with 4 other co-ops, the Mt. Angel Farmers Union Warehouse, the Donald Farmers Co-op, the Valley Farmers Co-op in Silverton , and the Canby ...

  6. Ewing Young - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ewing_Young

    Ewing Young: His expeditions across Western North America. Ewing Young was born in Tennessee to a farming family in 1799. [1] In the early 1820s, he had moved to Missouri, then the far western edge of the American frontier, not far from the border of the Spanish-controlled territories of present-day Texas, New Mexico and the Southwestern United States.

  7. Gordie C. Hanna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordie_C._Hanna

    The development of the world’s first mechanical harvesting tomato wasn’t Hanna’s only contribution to tomato production. With the harvestable tomato in hand, in 1961 he teamed up with UC Davis agricultural engineer Coby Lorenzen (who also won the John Scott Award in 1976 [1]) to develop a harvester to reap the hardier variety of tomato. [3]

  8. Early Girl Tomato Jam Recipe - AOL

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/early-girl-tomato-jam

    Place a saucer with five metal teaspoons in a flat place in your freezer for testing the jam later.?Bring a medium kettle of water to a boil, then carefully drop the tomatoes into the water to ...

  9. George K. Gay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_K._Gay

    George Kirby Gay (August 15, 1810 – October 7, 1882) was an English sailor and later settler in the Oregon Country.He was a member of the Willamette Cattle Company that brought livestock to Oregon and built the first brick house in the United States west of the Rocky Mountains.