Continental Can Company

Continental Can Company (CCC) was an American producer of metal containers and packaging company.

The Continental Can Company was founded by Edwin Norton[1] T.G. Cranwell in 1904,[2] three years after the formation of its greatest rival, American Can Company.[2] Continental acquired the patents of United Machinery Company, one of the few companies producing can-making machinery that had not been bought by American Can. CCC began shipping product in 1905.[2]

During World War II, Continental Can Company helped the war effort by building aircraft parts and bombs in their manufacturing plants.[2] The United Steelworkers of America was the union representing hundreds of manufacturing workers at Continental Can Company.[2]

In 1956, CCC acquired the Hazel-Atlas Glass Company, the third largest producer of glass containers, which led to the United States v. Continental Can Co. Supreme Court ruling in 1964.

History

The company bought the Standard Tin Plate Company in 1909 to ensure that they would have a steady supply of tin. Continental's original business consisted only of packers' cans for fruits and vegetables. Given the seasonal nature of this work, the company decided to expand to general canning in 1912. By 1913 the company had acquired all of the interests of a New Jersey corporation also called Continental Can Co., as well as the Export & Domestic Can Co. and the Standard Tin Plate Co. The same year, Continental was incorporated in the state of New York.[2]

During the 1920s Continental expanded rapidly, purchasing almost twenty competing companies. It opened its first West Coast plant in 1926. In 1928 Continental acquired the third-largest can company in the country, the United States Can Company. By 1934 Continental and its rival, American Can, were producing approximately two-thirds of the 10 million cans made annually in the country. At this time, the company was operating thirty-eight plants in the United States and Cuba. Continental suffered a drop in its income during the Depression; even so, by 1932 the company had never reported a money-losing year.[2]

By the mid-1930s, with 38 plants nationwide, the company employed about 1,800 men and 1,200 women around the Chicago area.[1]

Continental bounced back from the Depression years, and by 1940 its operating revenue had increased to $120.7 million from $80.9 million in 1935. In 1940 the company built plants in Canada as well. Continental continued to expand during the following decade through acquisitions, and the company entered the fields of paper and fiber containers, bottle caps, and synthetic resins. By the end of the 1940s, the company had sixty-five plants, including eight plants producing fiber and paper containers, four plants producing crown caps, and one plant producing plastics. By 1954 the company's gross sales reached $616 million, and its net income was approximately $21 million. At that time, Continental was operating eighty-one plants.[2]

During the company's first fifty years of existence, it had purchased and absorbed twenty-eight independent can companies, as well as other concerns producing fiber drums, paper containers, and bottle tops. In 1956 Continental acquired Hazel-Atlas Glass Co., the third-largest U.S. manufacturer of glass containers. Continental then became the first company with a full line of containers in metal, paper, and glass. It also purchased Cochrane Foil Company, a manufacturer and distributor of aluminum plates and rigid foil packages for the frozen-food industry and other food suppliers. The company also bought Robert Gair Company, a leading producer of paperboard products, that same year. Due to such acquisitions, Continental briefly surpassed American Can's annual sales, topping $1 billion in 1957. By 1960 the company operated 155 plant facilities.[2]

The introduction of the easy-to-open metal can top in 1963 led to an increase in the use of metal cans rather than glass bottles for beverages. By the end of 1966 over 45 percent of U.S. beer and over 15 percent of U.S. soft drinks were packaged in metal cans. That same year Continental introduced the first commercially practical welded can. In 1969 the company acquired Schmalbach-Lubeca-Werke A.G., the largest packaging producer in the European community. By that time, Continental had 228 manufacturing plants.[2]

By 1973 the metal can industry was in a crisis due to oversupply and tough competition. Both Continental and American Can were said to have made the wrong decisions in the previous decade by adding capacity for both tin plate and tin-free steel production while the aluminum can was gaining popularity. Another problem was growing public opposition to throwaway cans. Continental's profits from domestic can-making dropped from $115 million in 1969 to $52 million in 1973. The company then closed many old-style integrated manufacturing plants in favor of large automated metal-processing centers and separate can-assembly operations situated near its customers' plants. In 1973 the company developed a system for the ultraviolet curing of inks and coatings on metal plate, and installed a number of such systems.[2]

Continental Group

In 1976, CCC changed its name[3] to the Continental Group, a conglomerate with operations in many countries,[1] but kept "Continental Can" as its packaging unit within Continental Group.[4] In 1987,[5] the remnants of Continental Can became part of the United States Can Company[1] (a subsidiary of Inter-American Packaging)[5] and two of its executives left to form Silgan Holdings. Continental Group was dismantled in 1991 and, in early 1991, Continental Can Company was ordered to pay out $415 million to some 3,700 former employees and members of the United Steel Workers of America, when the courts found that the company had attempted to defraud the employees of pensions during the late 1970s.[4] The rights to the name "Continental Can Company" name and logo were sold in 1991 and renamed to the Viatech Continental Can Company, Inc. in October 1992.[4] In June 1998 Suiza Foods Corporation completed its acquisition of Continental Can.[4] In July 1999, Suiza sold all of Continental Can's U.S. packaging operations in partial exchange for a minority interest in the purchaser, Consolidated Container Company.[6] As of 2000, the only remaining business of Continental Can is Dixie Union, a small flexible film business based in Kempten, Germany.[6]

Deals

(source[2])

Facilities

Chairmen

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Continental Can Co., Encyclopedia of Chicago, Chicago Historical Society, 2004-5
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "Continental Can Co., Inc.". Lehman Brothers Collection - Twentieth Century Business Archives. Harvard Business School. 2008. Retrieved 2009-10-08.
  3. Continental Group Company, International Directory of Company Histories, Vol. 1. St. James Press, 1988, ISBN 978-0-912289-10-6 (at FundingUniverse, retrieved 23 July 2010)
  4. 1 2 3 4 Viatech Continental Can Company, Inc., International Directory of Company Histories, Vol. 25. St. James Press, 1999, ISBN 978-0-912289-10-6 (at FundingUniverse, retrieved 23 July 2010)
  5. 1 2 United States Can Company, Petitioner, Cross-respondent, v. National Labor Relations Board, Respondent, Cross-petitioner.united Steelworkers of America, Afl-cio-clc, Intervening respondent, Cross-petitioner, United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit. 984 F.2d 864, argued Oct. 21, 1992, decided Jan. 28, 1993 (retrieved from Justia.com 24 July 2010)
  6. 1 2 "Suiza Foods Corporation Announces Investment in Spanish Dairy Processor Leche Celta and the Sale of Its European Metal Packaging Operations", Business Wire, 2000 (retrieved 24 July 2010 from HighBeam Research)
  7. Virginia Can Company 128-5455 - Untitled, United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service, National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section 7 Page 2, Virginia Can Company/S.H. Heironimus Warehouse, Roanoke, Virginia, 2006 (retrieved 24 July 2010)
  8. "The Papers of Lucius DuBignon Clay - Biographical and Subject Summary" George C. Marchall Research Foundation
  9. Kisatsky, Deborah: The United States and the European Right, 1945–1955. p.11 Ohio State University Press, 2005
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