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The Pillsbury logo.
'Pillsbury' is a
brand name used by
Minneapolis-based
General Mills and the
The J. M. Smucker Company. Historically, however, Pillsbury was a rival company to General Mills, also based in Minneapolis, that was one of the world's largest producers of
grain and other foodstuffs until its
acquisition by General Mills in
2000. De jure interpretation of
antitrust law required General Mills to sell off some of the products. General Mills kept the rights to refrigerated and frozen Pillsbury products, while dry
baking products and frosting are now are sold by Smucker under license.
Leo Burnett who created Pillsbury's
Doughboy and
Jolly Green Giant considers them two of the agency's top five brand icons.
[1]
'C.A. Pillsbury and Company' was founded in 1872 by
Charles Alfred Pillsbury and his uncle
John Sargent Pillsbury. The company was the first in the United States to use steam rollers for processing grain. The finished product required transportation, so the Pillsburys assisted in funding
railroad development in
Minnesota.
In 1889, Pillsbury and its five mills on the banks of the
Mississippi River were purchased by a
British company. The company also tried to purchase and merge with the Washburn Crosby Company (a precursor of General Mills), but the strong rivalry prevented any merger from happening at the time. In 1923 the Pillsbury family reacquired the ' Pillsbury-Washburn Flour Mills Company, Ltd.' which subsequently was incorporated in 1935 as 'Pillsbury Flour Mills Company'.
[ Pillsbury Company ] The early 1950s brought the acquisition of Ballard & Ballard Company and the beginning of prepackaged biscuit dough. Later acquisitions included restaurants Burger King, Godfathers Pizza and popular food brand
Green Giant. In 1989, the British company
Grand Metropolitan purchased the food maker, and during this ownership period the company divested itself of all production and distribution facilities (contracting these functions to other companies), making itself simply a marketing entity for its own brands (Pillsbury, Green Giant, Old el Paso, Totino's, etc). A decade later, the old rivals merged. However, the baking products division was sold to
International Multifoods Corporation, which was later acquired by Smucker's. Pillsbury sold both of their restaurant brands and exited that business completely by the late 90's.

The Pillsbury "A" Mill and neighboring Phoenix Mill in the early 1900s

The Pillsbury "A" Mill in 2006
Pillsbury once claimed to have the largest grain
mill in the world at the
Pillsbury "A" Mill overlooking
Saint Anthony Falls on the
Mississippi River in Minneapolis. The building had two of the most powerful direct-drive
waterwheels ever built, each putting out 1200
horsepower (895 kW). There are now plans to convert it into a loft-style apartment building. The Cunningham Group plans to convert six historic buildings to a mixed-use project varying from 6 to 27 floors in height. The project will include 895 units of housing and 175,000 square feet of commercial space, including the Pillsbury "A" Mill.
[1]
The Stay-Puft monster in the
Ghostbusters movie is inspired by the Pillsbury Doughboy.
External links
★
Pillsbury
★
Pillsbury Baking
Notes
1. SEC Info - Publicis Groupe SA, Bcom3 Group and The Green Giant
References
★ N.S. Gill.
Charles Alfred Pillsbury. Minneapolis.about.com
★ Andrew Haeg (July 17, 2000).
General Mills Acquires Pillsbury. Minnesota Public Radio.
★ Vault, Inc.
Pillsbury Basic Snapshot