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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 0-7385-1058-0. Sidorick, Daniel (2009). Condensed Capitalism: Campbell Soup and the Pursuit of Cheap Production in the Twentieth ...
A nephew of the general manager of the Joseph Campbell Preserve Company, he went to work there in 1897 and invented condensed soup. [1] [2] Dorrance went on to become the president of Campbell Soup Company from 1914 to 1930, eventually buying out the Campbell family. [citation needed] He turned the business into one of America's longest-lasting ...
The Jos. A. Campbell Preserve Co., Camden, NJ in 1894. In 1869, Campbell founded the company that would become Campbell's Soup. In 1894 he retired and Arthur Dorrance became the company president. [7] In 1895 the first can of ready-to-eat tomato soup was available. [8] The company was reorganized into Joseph Campbell & Co. in 1896.
Betty Cronin (July 12, 1928–December 11, 2016) was an American bacteriologist and co-author of Campbell’s Great American Cookbook.Some call her "the mother of TV dinners", [1] though the development of the idea has several claimants. [2]
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Hamilton was a granddaughter of John Thompson Dorrance, who created the process for condensing soup and purchased the Campbell Soup Company from his uncle in 1914. The family still holds a large percentage of the outstanding shares of Campbell stock. Hamilton's husband Samuel M.V. Hamilton died in 1997. In 1998 Hamilton founded the SVF ...
Condensed soup (invented in 1897 by John T. Dorrance, a chemist with the Campbell Soup Company [10] [11]) allows soup to be packaged into a smaller can and sold at a lower price than other canned soups. The soup is usually doubled in volume by adding a "can full" of water or milk, about 10 US fluid ounces (300 ml).
In 2002, Reilly and Campbell's donated her recipe for green bean casserole to the National Inventors Hall of Fame. [10] She was a member of the Order of the Eastern Star and the Daughters of the American Revolution. [6] Reilly died on October 21, 2018, in Detroit, Michigan from Alzheimer's disease. [2] [7]