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In 1993, Royal Crown Cola Company was purchased by Triarc Companies, Inc, [13] adding approximately $25 million a year to the marketing budget. [14]In September 2000, Royal Crown was acquired by Cadbury Schweppes (which owned Dr Pepper) through its acquisition of Triarc's beverages business (which also included Snapple).
Upper 10 is a caffeine-free drink lemon-lime soft drink, similar to Sprite, Starry, and Bubble Up.It was bottled by RC Cola. [1]The Upper 10 brand debuted in 1933 as a product of the Nehi Corporation (later Royal Crown Corporation). [2]
The Chero-Cola company added Nehi Cola to its line of sodas in 1924 in order to offer a broader variety of flavors. [2] [1] The soda was a creation of businessman Claud A. Hatcher. [1] The name "Nehi" was to remind customers that it came in "knee-high" tall bottles. [3] It offered orange, grape, root beer, peach, and other flavors of soda. [2]
Following a reformulation in 1934, Chero-Cola was renamed Royal Crown Cola, later shortened to just RC Cola. [5] Along with these two products, Hatcher developed a line of several other flavored sodas under the Royal Crown moniker. In 1905, Hatcher formed Union Bottling Works, a company to bottle these products.
Kick was a citrus-flavored soft drink product by Royal Crown Company, Inc. introduced to the market in 1965. It was the year 1965 that Royal Crown Cola in Nashville and Johnson City Tennessee introduction of their Kick "like a Mule" brand. The carbonated citrus flavored soda with the infusion of caffeine.
That October, Cadbury Schweppes purchased Royal Crown Cola from Triarc. [10] In 2006 and 2007, Cadbury Schweppes purchased the Dr Pepper/Seven Up Bottling Group, along with several other regional bottlers. This allowed DPS to bottle many of its own beverages and combat the recent decision by many Pepsi and Coca-Cola bottlers who had dropped ...
Sold for: $558,000. With only 600 bottles ever produced, this blended red wine marked the final harvest before the vineyard’s old vines were uprooted.Made during the tail end of World War II ...
The first soft drinks to be sold in all-aluminum cans were R.C. Cola and Diet-Rite Cola, both made by the Royal Crown Cola company, in 1964. The early pull-tabs detached easily. In 1976, the Journal of the American Medical Association noted cases of children ingesting pull-tabs that had broken off and dropped into the can. [32]