- Page 5: THE HOUSE OF MORRELL
- Page 8 and 9: COPVRIGIIT 1948 IIV John MoRRr.r.t,
- Page 10 and 11: mirablc transportation facilities.
- Page 12 and 13: plants in the Hawkeye State, accoun
- Page 14 and 15: packing company in the United State
- Page 17 and 18: THE HISTORY OF JOHN MORRELL & CO, B
- Page 19: 1 B 3t T 1 n 3 6 (^li^ter In the gl
- Page 22 and 23: esented God's wishes. And if future
- Page 24 and 25: definite information as to which so
- Page 26 and 27: JililL rvi O R R E. L. I_
- Page 28 and 29: outside his own business. This busi
- Page 30 and 31: tcrs enjoyed the comforts of a happ
- Page 32 and 33: grandparents, George Morrell and El
- Page 35 and 36: With the enlargement of the busines
- Page 37 and 38: STORY OF MEAT — U. S. A. BACKGROU
- Page 39 and 40: other 'vehicular mediums' bring in
- Page 41 and 42: chons should kill, cure and pack bo
- Page 43: etween the states brought great dem
- Page 47 and 48: continued to prosper, Atkinson grad
- Page 49 and 50: Tales." The books of this series ga
- Page 51 and 52: well, thus placing him on an equal
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I a a 7 1 B T e The success of Thom
- Page 55 and 56:
and forceful character, an indefati
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Messrs. Budgett & Co., Bristol 2 1
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When the Birkenhead refinery was op
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the year before by James Fergusson.
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leased, one for killing, one for cu
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soon after I arrived. It was a gran
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: heard people offering one hundred
- Page 69 and 70:
pulling pianos out of a third story
- Page 71 and 72:
And this item came from the Spirit
- Page 73:
I 8 f 7 1 a b 6 saw the death of Jo
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Yorkshire; ALFRED Illingworth, of T
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the sum of £40,000, the residue th
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o o o o r> o moo •+V3 o to t. o c
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shall be made a rule of Her Majesty
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the infancy of any such child to ap
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of certain resolutions for the amen
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the son of John Morrell's brother,
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Their packing business has heretofo
- Page 93 and 94:
'-**•*' —»- - *^ ^ •- » •
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will be vats, cess pools, chill roo
- Page 97 and 98:
idea for the new trade-mark design.
- Page 99:
ehave himself towards his Master, a
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debts, and other assets occupied, u
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packed for shipment to England, a s
- Page 107 and 108:
eady to scrape, they are raised fro
- Page 109 and 110:
in boxes or barrels go through near
- Page 111 and 112:
and are taken to the lard vats a nu
- Page 113 and 114:
activities in connection with the O
- Page 115 and 116:
hygiene and sanitation, it came int
- Page 117 and 118:
chill rooms which have fallen behin
- Page 119 and 120:
longer a desirable place and must o
- Page 121 and 122:
deal of the territory there would n
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^J/iar,^ti^^(hii^ 1847-1915 CHAIRMA
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or 12 the result hung in the balanc
- Page 127 and 128:
ing sum in those days. But because
- Page 129 and 130:
when there was a short break in his
- Page 131 and 132:
Several trade-marks came into exist
- Page 133:
18 9 7 ^SiAf^DV y^^^^^Y^^ •^r %^
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: was coming on the market, making
- Page 138 and 139:
The activities of the company's com
- Page 140 and 141:
Ottumwa, C. E. L. Gregson and Alfre
- Page 142 and 143:
easons for moving into the New York
- Page 144 and 145:
with the Bank of Liverpool, could n
- Page 146 and 147:
for that purpose in Ottumwa. After
- Page 148 and 149:
In 1900 preparations were made for
- Page 150 and 151:
keep the boiler fires going. When t
- Page 152 and 153:
Named as Kelley's assistant was Cha
- Page 154 and 155:
design was representative of a fema
- Page 157:
I 9 O 7 y^l "Tprtrtlr As the compan
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scene was Jack Morris who became pl
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: hogs and i,i86 cattle had been sl
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: Ottumwa lawyer, who served the co
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had been brought about by the death
- Page 168 and 169:
2. Part of the consideration for th
- Page 170 and 171:
Morrell, in America, was superseded
- Page 172 and 173:
The affairs and business of the fir
- Page 174 and 175:
For some reason or other the cannin
- Page 176 and 177:
When Alfred Morrell was elevated to
- Page 178 and 179:
property at Ottumwa and Des Moines,
- Page 180 and 181:
1 ; As English and European markets
- Page 182 and 183:
Garrod, H. Johnson, E. J. Alty, T.
- Page 185:
'^^ ^^^^ period /^iilSlS' began for
- Page 188 and 189:
houses in a period prior to the war
- Page 190 and 191:
: In July of 1919 many of the large
- Page 192 and 193:
it is held everywhere it is known,
- Page 194 and 195:
try, seeing to it that it is prompt
- Page 196 and 197:
aimed at and provides no means for
- Page 198 and 199:
1912 because of his health. Even so
- Page 200 and 201:
The Kittery Realty Company, at its
- Page 202 and 203:
sarily brought a decrease in hog re
- Page 204 and 205:
supervision until 1920 when Robert
- Page 206 and 207:
After the strike quite a number of
- Page 208 and 209:
tuberculosis law. In his message to
- Page 210 and 211:
It was during this period that many
- Page 212 and 213:
^f?k
- Page 214 and 215:
500 reading "Iowa's Pride," and 2,5
- Page 217:
1 Q "2 y • 1 S36 ^MtAnic^ With th
- Page 220 and 221:
: President T. Henry Foster replied
- Page 222 and 223:
The corporate structure came in for
- Page 224 and 225:
in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. The r
- Page 226 and 227:
Raw materials — Livestock and Sup
- Page 228 and 229:
for the new Delaware corporation we
- Page 230 and 231:
4 C /VW^e^ 1694- CHAIRMAN, JOHN MOR
- Page 232 and 233:
maelstrom of declining prices. Alth
- Page 234 and 235:
livestock and payrolls, and in the
- Page 236 and 237:
ment of the business in complying w
- Page 238 and 239:
not all due to natural conditions,
- Page 240 and 241:
tator. There is no denying the fact
- Page 242 and 243:
the Ottumwa and Sioux Falls plants
- Page 244 and 245:
i2(y^. 'h^.Qi^c^^^ MANAGER, TOPEKA
- Page 246 and 247:
me. Later I learned that Topeka is
- Page 248 and 249:
deal was completed in November of 1
- Page 250 and 251:
uildings which had housed the Liver
- Page 252 and 253:
ing was started. Also during 1936,
- Page 254 and 255:
Dr. E. S. Dickey, for some 30 years
- Page 256 and 257:
1934) '^ years to the day from the
- Page 258 and 259:
lished within the beef department a
- Page 260 and 261:
Dr. Gross. The main purpose in esta
- Page 262 and 263:
Don McNeill, who was later to achie
- Page 264 and 265:
od was the formation of male chorus
- Page 266 and 267:
,j»£. Ww^J^,•^ (}-aj.o4i''i-
- Page 268 and 269:
seizure of the company's branches a
- Page 270 and 271:
other than those available in the U
- Page 272 and 273:
ing the actual story. Possibly no b
- Page 274 and 275:
That accounts for the home front st
- Page 276 and 277:
y March of 1946, J, C. Stentz, the
- Page 278 and 279:
: Commenting on the hog kill for th
- Page 280 and 281:
tion in the industry that many of t
- Page 282 and 283:
Q^m%
- Page 284 and 285:
essary while the business was under
- Page 286 and 287:
made to better accommodate the volu
- Page 288 and 289:
after the company's physical proper
- Page 290 and 291:
sistant, Owen Lewis, who had been n
- Page 292 and 293:
During 1940 the Ottumwa trade-mark
- Page 294 and 295:
industry and thinking and planning
- Page 297 and 298:
company brought this statement from
- Page 299:
income for members in return for co
- Page 302 and 303:
l"irst Iniililing to be erected on
- Page 304 and 305:
*~" The Gn packing pi at Sioux Fab
- Page 306 and 307:
An early view of the Sioux Falls of
- Page 308 and 309:
T. H. FOSTER Director, Chairman of
- Page 310 and 311:
A. C. MORRELL T.H.FOSTER G. ]\I. FO
- Page 312 and 313:
Hog killing floor, Ottum\v:x. Jack
- Page 314 and 315:
*~ Ottumwa sausage department. ( ie
- Page 316 and 317:
t \'ic\v of the A. W. Foster & Co.,
- Page 318 and 319:
Balley-Raggelt, Iielaiul, 20 Ballin
- Page 320 and 321:
Downic, J. M., 193 Dred Scott decis
- Page 322 and 323:
Realty Company, 149 ; secretary, 14
- Page 324 and 325:
Imports, 35, 171 Inspection, Federa
- Page 326 and 327:
Monlgomeiy, K. Ames, iii Moore, H.
- Page 328 and 329:
791 business divided, 85; becomes a
- Page 330 and 331:
Nelson, T. A., i66 Nelson, T. P., 1
- Page 332 and 333:
; Singeing machine, 47 Sioux Falls,
- Page 335:
ACKNOWLEDGMENT MUCH OF THE MATERIAL