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Post Consumer Brands

Post Consumer Brands (previously Post Cereals and Postum Cereals; also known as simply "Post") is an American consumer packaged goods food manufacturer headquartered in Lakeville, Minnesota.

Post Consumer Brands, LLC
FormerlyPostum Cereal Company (1895–1929)
General Foods (1929–1990)
Kraft (1990–2007)
Post Cereals (2007–2015)
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryFood processing
Founded1895; 129 years ago (1895) in Battle Creek, Michigan
FounderC. W. Post
HeadquartersLakeville, Minnesota, U.S.
Area served
Worldwide
ProductsBreakfast cereals, granola, pet food, peanut butter
Brands
ParentPost Holdings
Websitepostconsumerbrands.com

The company, founded in 1895 by C. W. Post, owns a large portfolio of cereal brands that include Bran Flakes, Honey Bunches of Oats, Golden Crisp, Grape-Nuts, Honeycomb, Oreo O's, Pebbles, and Waffle Crisp, among others. The company also produces several pet food brands, including Rachael Ray Nutrish, Kibbles 'n Bits, and 9Lives, and markets Peter Pan Peanut Butter.

History edit

 
C.W. Post, founder

C. W. Post established his company in Battle Creek, Michigan, having lived there since 1891, when he was a patient at a holistic sanitarium operated by Dr. John Harvey Kellogg.[1][2] Dr. Kellogg, with his brother W. K. Kellogg, had developed a dry corn flake cereal that was part of their patients' diet. Post's first product, introduced in 1895, was not a cereal, however, but a roasted, cereal-based beverage, Postum. Having developed an aversion to coffee during his time in the sanitarium, Post positioned Postum as a healthy alternative. Its advertising slogan, which he coined himself, was, "There's a Reason." Postum's main ingredients were naturally caffeine-free wheat grain, bran, and molasses. Initially, Postum had to be brewed like coffee, but in 1911, Post introduced a powdered, instant formulation. This version of the product was manufactured in Battle Creek until it was discontinued in 2007. As of January 2013, Eliza's Quest Food had succeeded in returning Postum to many grocery stores across the United States and Canada.

In 1897, Post introduced his first dry cereal, a crunchy blend of wheat and barley, which he called Grape Nuts. His first corn-flake product was introduced as "Elijah's Manna" in 1904. Owing to consumer resistance to the (inaccurate) biblical reference[3] that was so great that even Great Britain flatly refused to register the name as a trademark, it was renamed Post Toasties in 1907.[4]

C. W. Post was an astute businessman who believed that advertising and aggressive marketing were the keys to a successful enterprise. Within 10 years of its incorporation, his Postum Cereal Company had more than $10 million in capital and was spending $400,000 a year on advertising, sums which were remarkable for the period.[5] Although he vigorously opposed labor unions, his employees were the highest-paid in his industry and working conditions at the Post factory were exemplary. He even developed a factory town in which he sold homes to his workers at favorable rates.

Postum Cereal Company lost its founder in 1914. C.W. Post underwent an apparently successful appendectomy at the Mayo Clinic, but shortly after returning home to recuperate, he died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Post had for years suffered from bouts of illness and depression. While his death was without warning, his company was not left rudderless. His daughter, Marjorie Merriweather Post, had been raised in the business and was familiar with virtually every aspect of its operations.[6] She assumed control of the now $20-million Postum Company and managed its affairs for the next eight years. While she did not oversee major product innovations, she did have a good feel for business and for promoting talented managers. In addition, her second marriage, in 1920, was to Edward F. Hutton, the founder of a brokerage firm on Wall Street.

Gross revenues in 1921 were $17.75 million.[7] In 1922, Hutton took the newly incorporated Postum Cereal Company public by issuing 200,000 common shares. The 1920s was a period in which common stock was still considered highly speculative, and consequently the newly issued shares carried a dividend at the rate of $5.00 per year.

Revenues in 1922 were essentially the same as in 1921, but in 1923, they were $22.25 million and a stock split, in the form of a 100% stock dividend, increased the authorized shares to 400,000. These shares also earned a $3.00 annual cash dividend, representing a 20% increase over the presplit rate. In 1925, with revenues now at $27.4 million, the stock was split once again and the dividend was increased to $4.00 per new share.

Major acquisitions edit

 
Commemorative placque at the Postum Cereal Company Factory, September 2014

Starting in 1925, under the leadership of financier (and at one point, son in-law to the founder), E. F. Hutton as chairman and Colby M. Chester as president, Postum Cereal made the first of a series of corporate acquisitions which would within a few years transform it into the dominant U.S. packaged grocery products manufacturer.

It began late that year with the purchase of the Jell-O Company. Jell-O had been first produced in 1897 by Pearle Bixby Wait, a carpenter from the town of LeRoy in northern New York state. Mr. Wait's product was based upon a patent that had been issued to inventor and industrialist Peter Cooper in 1845, but which Cooper had never developed commercially. However, Wait was unsuccessful in marketing Jell-O, and in 1899, he sold the rights to it for $450 to a neighbor, Orator Francis Woodward, who had founded the Genesee Pure Food Company in 1897. Genesee became the Jell-O Company in 1923, the same year it began marketing D-Zerta, a sugar-free gelatin, and a powdered mixture for making ice cream in the kitchen.

In 1926, Postum Cereal acquired Igleheart Brothers, Inc (established in 1856), the makers of Swans Down cake flour, and followed this with the purchase of the Minute Tapioca Company. "Tapioca Superlative" had been invented in 1894 by a Boston woman, Susan Stavers, who made it from tapioca flakes that she ran through her coffee grinder. Later that year, she sold the rights to John Whitman, of Orange, Massachusetts, who changed its name to "Minute Tapioca". In 1908, he changed the name of his company to that of his product. The "Minute" brand would later become better known for a General Foods innovation introduced in 1949 known as Minute Rice, a brand of parboiled rice.

As a consequence of the Jell-O and Minute Tapioca acquisitions, Postum Cereal's revenues in 1926 jumped to $46.9 million. The number of shares stood at 1.375 million, including shares issued to acquire Jell-O and Minute Tapioca. The dividend was increased to $4.70 a year.

The acquisition spree continued in 1927 with the purchase of two similarly named confectionery companies, chocolate-maker Walter Baker (founded in 1765, making it the oldest component of the Postum constituent companies), and coconut-processor Franklin Baker, which had begun early in the 19th century as a flour broker, but whose confectionery products dated from 1895. This was followed by the purchase of Log Cabin Products, the maker of Log Cabin Syrup (first produced in 1887), and of Richard Hellmann, Inc (established in 1913), the producer of Blue Ribbon mayonnaise. And late in the year, Postum Cereal began selling its first coffee product, "Sanka", by obtaining US marketing rights from Dr Ludwig Roselius of Bremen, Germany. Roselius had developed the decaffeinated coffee in 1906 and began selling it in the US in 1923.[8]

Three more acquisitions followed in 1928. The most important was that of the Cheek-Neel Coffee Company. Its product, Maxwell House, dating from 1892, was a well-known brand in what was still a fragmented US coffee market. Within a few years, however, it was to become the number one brand in America and would retain that position well into the 1980s. Also acquired during 1928 was the La France Manufacturing Company, a maker of starch and other laundry products (this being Postum's first venture into nonedibles), and the Calumet Baking Powder Company, the leading maker of this kitchen essential.

Financially, the year culminated on October 1 with the inclusion of Postum, Inc in the newly reformulated Dow Jones Industrial Average of 30 common stocks.[9] By year-end, revenues stood at $101 million and the dividend on the five million authorized shares was $5.00 per year, a 25-fold increase since 1922.

Purchase of General Foods and renaming edit

 
General Foods 1937 Specimen Stock Certificate

By far the most important acquisition of 1929 was of the frozen-food company owned by Clarence Birdseye,[10] called "General Foods Company". Birdseye (December 9, 1886 - October 7, 1956) was one of the most important entrepreneurs in the history of the food industry. Born in New York City, he became interested in the frozen preservation of food during the course of working as a fur trader in Labrador between 1912 and 1916. By 1923, he had developed a commercially viable process for quick-freezing foods using a belt mechanism, which he patented. In 1924, with backing from three investors, he formed the General Seafoods Company, in Gloucester, Massachusetts, to produce frozen haddock fillets packed in plain cardboard boxes.

The founder's visionary daughter, Marjorie Merriweather Post, a brilliant pioneering businesswoman, was first to become excited about the prospects for the frozen foods business. In 1926, she had put into port at Gloucester on her yacht, Hussar (IV), and was served a luncheon meal which, she learned to her amazement, had been frozen six months before. Although she eventually became the richest woman in America because of her business genius, it took Marjorie Post three years to finally convince Postum's management to acquire the company. In a deal arranged by Marjorie, who immediately understood the value of Clarence Birdseye's patents, Postum paid $10.75 million for a 51% interest and its partner, Goldman Sachs, paid $12.5 million for the other 49%.[11] Following this acquisition, Postum, Inc changed its name to General Foods Corporation. Goldman sold its share back to General Foods in 1932, apparently at a slight loss.

Shortly after the acquisition, General Foods began test-marketing an expanded line of frozen foods, but the company quickly realized that a packaging process alone would not be sufficient to market frozen products in stores. To be sold, the packages had to be kept frozen while on display, so Birdseye engineers began development of a freezer cabinet designed specifically to hold frozen foods. The cabinet, which first appeared in 1934, required a great deal of space and electricity, which were not readily available in most grocery stores of the period. For those stores which could accommodate them, the payback was immediate. Housewives quickly realized that keeping packages of frozen food in the icebox could mean fresher meals and fewer trips to the market.[12]

The company published a cook book in 1932, the General Foods Cook Book, dedicated "To the American homemaker". Five editions were published between 1932 and 1937. The book includes photographs (among which is "General Foods offers over twenty famous products for your well-stocked pantry shelf") and a subject index.[13]

After General Foods edit

In 2011, Ralcorp announced plans to spin off Post Foods into a separate company. About a quarter of Ralcorp's sales in 2010 were generated by its Post Foods unit.[14] The spinoff was completed with an IPO for Post Holdings, Inc. on February 7, 2012.[15]

In 2014, the company acquired Michael Foods.[16] The following year, Post Foods purchased MOM Brands (formerly Malt-O-Meal Co.) creating the third largest breakfast cereal company in the US. At this point, Post Foods rebranded as Post Consumer Brands, and is headquartered in Lakeville, Minnesota.

In July 2017, Post Holdings bought Weetabix Limited for £1.4 billion.[17] In 2019, the company began combining some of its MOM Brands and Weetabix cereal brands under the Three Sisters Cereal name.

On December 8, 2020, Post Holdings announced that it was acquiring the Peter Pan peanut butter brand from Conagra Brands.[18] The transaction was completed on January 25, 2021.[19] With the acquisition of Peter Pan peanut butter on January 25, 2021, Post created a new group called Animated Brands,[20] with the Peter Pan brand being the founding member. Animated Brands is managed under Post Consumer Brands.

On June 1, 2021, Post announced it acquired the ready-to-eat ("RTE") cereal business of TreeHouse Foods.[21] The TreeHouse Foods RTE cereal business was added to Post Consumer Brands' broad portfolio of private label cereal products.

In February 2023, Post Holdings announced its acquisition of pet food brands like 9Lives, Kibbles 'n Bits and Gravy Train. Such acquisition would enable Post's entry to the 'pet food category'. After the completion of this acquisition, Post intends to develop a new pet food category within Post Consumer Brands. [22][23][24]

Postum advertisements edit

Postum, a coffee substitute made out of roasted grain, was created in 1895. It was popular through the early 20th century, particularly during World War II when coffee was rationed.

Due to its decline in popularity, Post announced its discontinuation in 2007.[25][26][27] It was later revived by Eliza's Quest Food in 2013.[28]

Post Consumer Brands brands – present cereals and products edit

  • 100% Bran – currently only available in Canada
  • Airly Foods - Butter
  • Airly Foods - Cheddar
  • Airly Foods - Chocolate
  • Airly Foods - Cinnamon
  • Airly Foods - Salted Caramel
  • Airly Foods - Sea Salt
  • Bran Flakes
  • Better Oats - 100 Calorie Maple & Brown Sugar[29]
  • Better Oats - 100 Calorie Apples & Cinnamon
  • Better Oats - 100 Calorie Cinnamon Roll
  • Better Oats - Classic Maple & Brown Sugar
  • Better Oats - Classic Strawberries & Cream
  • Better Oats - Organic Maple and Brown Sugar
  • Better Oats - Organic Bare
  • Better Oats - Organic Old Fashioned Oats
  • Better Oats - Organic Steel Cut Oats
  • Better Oats - Organic Quick Oats
  • Better Oats - Steel Cut Maple & Brown Sugar
  • Better Oats - Steel Cut Maple & Brown Sugar with Protein
  • Better Oats - Steel Cut Original
  • Better Oats - Thick & Hearty Maple & Brown Sugar
  • Better Oats - Thick & Hearty Apples & Cinnamon
  • Better Oats - Thick & Hearty Blueberry Muffin
  • Chips Ahoy!
  • CoCo Wheats
  • Farina (food) Mills hot wheat cereal
  • Cocoa Pebbles
  • Fruity Pebbles
  • Marshmallow Fruity Pebbles
  • Fruity Pebbles Treats
  • Fruity Pebbles Crisps[30]
  • Cocoa Pebbles Crisps
  • Golden Crisp
  • Grape-Nuts
  • Grape-Nuts Flakes
  • Great Grains Banana Nut Crunch
  • Great Grains Blueberry Morning
  • Great Grains Cranberry Almond Crunch
  • Great Grains Crunchy Pecans
  • Great Grains Raisins, Dates & Pecans
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Honey Roasted
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – with Almonds
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – with Real Strawberries
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Vanilla
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Pecan & Maple Brown Sugar
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Frosted
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Whole Grain Honey Crunch
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Granola – Honey Roasted
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Granola – French Vanilla
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Granola – Maple Pecan
  • Honey Maid S'mores
  • Honeycomb
  • Honeycomb Big Bites Original[31]
  • Honeycomb Big Bites Chocolate
  • Oh's
  • Oreo O's
  • Malt-O-Meal - Maple & Brown Sugar Hot Wheat
  • Malt-O-Meal - Chocolate Hot Wheat
  • Malt-O-Meal - Original Hot Wheat
  • Malt-O-Meal - Apple Zings
  • Malt-O-Meal - Berry Colossal Crunch
  • Malt-O-Meal - Berry Colossal Crunch with Marshmallows
  • Malt-O-Meal - Chocolate Marshmallow Mateys
  • Malt-O-Meal - Chocolately Chip Cookie Bites
  • Malt-O-Meal - Churr-O's
  • Malt-O-Meal - Cinnamon Toasters
  • Malt-O-Meal - Coco Roos
  • Malt-O-Meal - Cocoa Dyno-Bites
  • Malt-O-Meal - Cocoa Dyno-Bites with Marshmallows
  • Malt-O-Meal - Cookies & Cream
  • Malt-O-Meal - Crispy Rice
  • Malt-O-Meal - Frosted Flakes
  • Malt-O-Meal - Frosted Mini Spooners
  • Malt-O-Meal - Fruity Blasts
  • Malt-O-Meal - Fruity Dyno-Bites
  • Malt-O-Meal - Fruity Dyno-Bites with Marshmallows
  • Malt-O-Meal - Golden Honey O's
  • Malt-O-Meal - Golden Puffs
  • Malt-O-Meal - Honey Buzzers
  • Malt-O-Meal - Honey Graham Toasters
  • Malt-O-Meal - Honey Nut Scooters
  • Malt-O-Meal - Marshmallow Mateys
  • Malt-O-Meal - Oat Blenders with Almonds
  • Malt-O-Meal - Oat Blenders with Honey
  • Malt-O-Meal - Peanut Butter Cups
  • Malt-O-Meal - Raisin Bran
  • Malt-O-Meal - S'mores
  • Malt-O-Meal - Strawberry Cream Mini Spooners
  • Malt-O-Meal - Tootie Fruities
  • Malt-O-Meal - Tootie Fruities with Marshmallows
  • Post Dunkin' cereal - Caramel Macchiato
  • Post Premier Protein cereal - Chocolate Almond
  • Post Premier Protein cereal - Mixed Berry Almond
  • Raisin Bran
  • Shredded Wheat (made by Nestlé and General Mills in the United Kingdom and Ireland)
  • Shredded Wheat – Original Spoon Size
  • Shredded Wheat – Original Big Biscuit
  • Shredded Wheat – Wheat'N Bran Spoon Size
  • Shreddies – currently only available in Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Germany (made by Nestlé and General Mills in the United Kingdom and Ireland)
  • Waffle Crisp

Post Consumer Brands discontinued cereals edit

  • 40% Bran Flakes
  • Alpha-Bits
  • Beep Beep (with the Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner as mascots)[32]
  • BlueBerry Morning
  • Bran & Prune Flakes[33]
  • Cinna-Crunch Pebbles (discontinued 2001)
  • Corn Crackos[34]
  • Corn-Fetti (early 1950s), later known as Sugar Coated Corn Flakes (late 1950s), later known as Sugar Sparkled Corn Flakes (1960s)
  • Corn Flakes & Blueberries[35]
  • Corn Flakes & Peaches[36]
  • Corn Flakes & Strawberries[37]
  • Count Off[38]
  • Crispy Critters
  • Crispy Numbers (in Canada)
  • Cröonchy Stars[39]
  • Cupcake Pebbles
  • C.W. Post (granola cereal, discontinued 1994)
  • Dino Pebbles[39]
  • Dino S'mores Pebbles
  • Fruity Pebbles Xtreme
  • Cinnamon Pebbles
  • Fortified Oat Flakes[40]
  • Fruit & Bran (formerly Fruit & Fibre)
  • Fruit Wheats (Shredded Wheat variant, discontinued 1990)
  • Golden Oreo O's
  • Good MOREnings Cocoa Cinnamon (chocolate flavored rings)
  • Good MOREnings Berry Wheels (strawberry flavored rings)
  • Good MOREnings Strawberries 'n' Creme (strawberry-flavored corn flakes)
  • Good MOREnings Waffle Crunch (a variation of Waffle Crisp)
  • Grape-Nuts Fit
  • Grape Nut O's
  • Great Grains Digestive Blends – Berry Medley
  • Great Grains Digestive Blends – Vanilla
  • Great Grains Protein Blend – Cinnamon Hazelnut
  • Great Grains Protein Blend – Honey, Oats & Seeds
  • Heart of Oats[41]
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Just Bunches – Honey Roasted
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Just Bunches – Cinnamon
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – with Real Peaches
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Granola – Raspberry
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Granola – Cinnamon
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Granola – Protein Chocolate
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Morning Energy – Chocolatey Almond Crunch
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Morning Energy – Cinnamon Crunch
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Fruit Blends – Banana Blueberry
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Fruit Blends – Peach Raspberry
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Greek – Honey Crunch
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Greek – Mixed Berry
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Tropical Blends – Mango Coconut
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – Raisin Medley
  • Honey Bunches of Oats – with Cinnamon Bunches
  • Honey Maid Honey Graham
  • Hulk
  • Huskies
  • Marshmallow Alpha-Bits
  • Mini Cinnamon Churros - sweetened wheat breakfast cereal based on the churro.[42]
  • Marshmallow Pebbles
  • Oat Flakes[43]
  • Pink Panther Flakes[44]
  • Poppin' Pebbles
  • Post Extra[45]
  • Post Ghosties (with Casper the Friendly Ghost as its mascot)[46]
  • Post Honey Nut Crunch Raisin Bran
  • Post Size 8[47]
  • Post-Tens, an assortment of 10 single-serving boxes of seven different Post cereals in one package,[48] designed to compete with Kellogg's Variety Pack[49]
  • Post Toasties
  • Post Top 3[50]
  • Puffed Corn Flakes[51]
  • Raisin Grape-Nuts[52]
  • Reptar Crunch[53]
  • Rice Krinkles[54] (originally Sugar Krinkles,[55] then Sugar Rice Krinkles,[56] finally Frosted Rice Krinkles[57] before discontinuation)
  • Selects Banana Nut Crunch[58]
  • Selects Maple Pecan Crunch
  • Sesame Street Cereal – Apple
  • Sesame Street Cereal - Blueberry
  • Sesame Street Cereal - Strawberry
  • Shredded Wheat – Frosted Cinnamon Roll
  • Shredded Wheat – Frosted Mixed berry
  • Shredded Wheat – Frosted S'mores Bites
  • Shredded Wheat – Honey Nut Spoon Size
  • Shredded Wheat – Lightly Frosted Spoon Size
  • Shredded Wheat – Vanilla Almond Spoon Size
  • Smurfberry Crunch[39]
  • Smurf Magic Berries[39]
  • Sour Patch Kids cereal
  • Strawberry Honeycomb[39]
  • Super Orange Crisp[59]
  • TEAM Flakes
  • Trail Mix Crunch – Cranberry Vanilla (discontinued Fall 2010)
  • Trail Mix Crunch – Raisin and Almond

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The timeline and product history is adapted from "A Chronological History of Kraft General Foods, Inc.", prepared by the KGF Archives Department, Glenview, IL, c. 1994.
  2. ^ Details of C. W. Post's career may be found in American National Biography, Vol. 7, pp. 725-7, published by Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ In I Kings 17:6, Elijah was described as having ravens feed him "bread and meat," rather than manna, when in hiding from King Ahab. Exodus 16:31 describes manna as "white [and having a similar flavor to] wafers--made with honey," but the Israelites found it a poor daily substitute for the diet of meats, fishes, cucumbers, melons, leeks, onions, and garlic which they had enjoyed in Egypt.
  4. ^ The Kellogg brothers had been selling their corn flakes and other cereal products since 1897, but with only limited success. Post, who took the cereal business seriously, was equipped to market and advertise his products nationwide; so successfully, in fact, that W.K. Kellogg broke away from his brother and in 1907 founded his own company, the Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company (renamed the Kellogg Company in 1922). Kellogg's Corn Flakes eventually overtook Post Toasties in popularity and the latter brand is today only a minor player in the dry-cereal market.
  5. ^ See International Directory of Company Histories, Volume 2, pp 530-32, published by St. James Press, 1990, for details relating to the company during this period.
  6. ^ Biographical details of Post's life may be found in American National Biography, Volume 7, p. 732.
  7. ^ Financial details for the company during this period may be found in the annual issues of Moody's Manual of Investments American and Foreign Industrial Securities, published by Moody's Investor Services.
  8. ^ "Sanka" is a contraction of the French words, sans caféine. Roselius for many years had had little success in finding a viable decaffeination process. Legend has it that when a shipment of green coffee sank in Bremen harbor, the beans came out caffeine free. Ultimately, Roselius settled on a washing process under more sanitary conditions. General Foods purchased Roselius's American company outright in 1932 and the original German company, Sanka HAG, AG, in 1979.
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-05-28. Retrieved 2021-07-27.
  10. ^ Details of Birdseye's remarkable career may be found in American National Biography, Vol. 2, pp. 808-9.
  11. ^ Following the sale, Birdseye remained in the frozen foods business. In 1932, he established Birds Eye Frozen Foods, which by later in the decade was selling almost 100 different frozen products. It is not immediately clear how General Foods came to acquire the product name, but Birds Eye frozen vegetables were a major component of its business until the division was sold to Dean Foods in 1993.
  12. ^ The space and power requirements for the burgeoning frozen-food section was one factor which led to the rapid development of larger self-service supermarkets beginning in the late 1930s.
  13. ^ General Foods Consumer Service Department General Foods Cook Book. New York: General Foods Corporation
  14. ^ Boyle, Matthew (July 14, 2011). "Ralcorp to Spin Off Post Foods After Failing to Find Buyer". Bloomberg.
  15. ^ York, New (2012-02-07). . Exchanges.nyx.com. Archived from the original on 2014-02-24. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  16. ^ "Post Holdings to Acquire Michael Foods for $2.45 billion". Post Holdings. 2014-04-17. Retrieved 2021-07-26.
  17. ^ "Weetabix to be sold to US company Post Holdings". BBC News. 18 April 2017. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  18. ^ Barr, Diana (8 December 2020). "Post Holdings to buy Peter Pan peanut butter brand". www.bizjournals.com. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
  19. ^ "Post Holdings and Conagra Brands Announce Completion of Acquisition of Peter Pan® Peanut Butter Brand by Post Holdings". GlobeNewswire News Room. 25 January 2021. Retrieved 10 February 2021.
  20. ^ "Animated Brands: A Family of Brands to Know and Love". Animated Brands. Retrieved 2021-08-31.
  21. ^ "Post buys TreeHouse Foods' ready-to-eat cereal business for $85M". Food Dive. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  22. ^ "Post Holdings entering pet food market". Food Business News. Retrieved 3 June 2023.
  23. ^ "Post Holdings acquires pet-food brands from J.M. Smucker". Just Food. 9 February 2023. Retrieved 3 June 2023.
  24. ^ "Smucker sells off Nutrish, 9Lives, other pet food brands". Petfood industry. 8 February 2023. Retrieved 3 June 2023.
  25. ^ Israelsen-Hartley, Sara (January 1, 2008), "Fans in withdrawal from coffee substitute Postum", Deseret News, retrieved 2012-11-21
  26. ^ Stephenson, Kathy (January 1, 2008), "Mormons mourn Postum's passing", The Salt Lake Tribune, retrieved 2012-11-21
  27. ^ Rowe, Taashi (January 16, 2008). "Goodbye to Postum". Adventist News Network. Retrieved 2014-07-20.
  28. ^ "Where To Buy", Postum.com, Eliza's Quest Foods, archived from the original on 2013-01-31, retrieved 2013-01-31
  29. ^ "Better Oats Instant Oatmeal: Taste the Difference | Post Consumer Brands".
  30. ^ "Snacks".
  31. ^ "The Original Honeycomb Cereal".
  32. ^ Vintage Old 1960s Animated Post Beep Beep Cereal with Wylie Coyote and Roadrunner Commercial. YouTube. 29 June 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  33. ^ Post Bran & Prune Flakes - Classic TV Commercial. YouTube. 2 March 2013.[dead YouTube link]
  34. ^ Vintage Old 1960s Post Cereal Corn Crackos Animated Commercial. YouTube. 13 July 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  35. ^ Corn Flakes and Fruit Cereal Series II Classic Commercial 1960s Pt 2. YouTube. 23 July 2013.[dead YouTube link]
  36. ^ Corn Flakes and Peaches Cereal II Vintage Commercial 1960s Pt 2. YouTube. 23 July 2013.[dead YouTube link]
  37. ^ Post Fruit in the Box Cereals II Classic 1960s Pt 4. YouTube. 20 July 2013.[dead YouTube link]
  38. ^ Post Count Off Cereal (1962) - Classic TV Commercial. YouTube. 20 August 2012.[dead YouTube link]
  39. ^ a b c d e . The Huffington Post. Archived from the original on 2012-03-02. Retrieved 2014-03-30.
  40. ^ "Fortified Oat Flakes Cereal - MrBreakfast.com". mrbreakfast.com.
  41. ^ Vintage Old 1950s Post Heart of Oats Cereal Commercial. YouTube. 24 July 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  42. ^ . Post. Archived from the original on March 13, 2013. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
  43. ^ 1960 POST OAT FLAKES CEREAL COMMERCIAL. YouTube. 13 November 2013.[dead YouTube link]
  44. ^ Pink Panther Flakes cereal commercial. YouTube. 28 October 2012.[dead YouTube link]
  45. ^ YouTube. youtube.com.[dead YouTube link]
  46. ^ Vintage Old 1960s Post Casper The Ghost Ghosties Animated Cereal Commercial. YouTube. 23 July 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  47. ^ Vintage Old 1960s Post Size 8 Cereal Commercial. YouTube. 31 August 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  48. ^ Vintage Old 1950s Post Tens Cereal Multi Packs Corn Flakes, raisan bran commercial. YouTube. 10 February 2014.[dead YouTube link]
  49. ^ 1956 Commercial for Kellogg's Variety Pack ( Never used). YouTube. 31 August 2012. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  50. ^ Vintage Old 1960s Post Top 3 Cereal Commercial. YouTube. 18 September 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  51. ^ Vintage Old 1950s Post Puffed Corn Flakes Cereal Commercial. YouTube. 28 August 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  52. ^ "Raisin Grape-Nuts: Raisin Grape-Nuts Cereal Box". mrbreakfast.com.
  53. ^ "26 Cereals From The '90s You'll Never Be Able To Eat Again". BuzzFeed. 4 May 2013.
  54. ^ 1963 RICE KRINKLES RICKSHAW RACER COMMERCIAL. YouTube. 3 March 2013.[dead YouTube link]
  55. ^ vintage_ads (15 June 2012). "Freaky Friday - Evil Clown Phobia, anyone?". livejournal.com.
  56. ^ Creepy Post Sugar Rice Krinkles Cereal - Classic 1960s TV Commercial. YouTube. 6 June 2012.[dead YouTube link]
  57. ^ Early 1970s Post Frosted Rice Krinkles Cereal TV commercial (animated). YouTube. 9 August 2010.[dead YouTube link]
  58. ^ "My Breakfast Cereal Was Discontinued". bcbusiness.ca.
  59. ^ Vintage Old 1960s Post Super Orange Crisp Animated Cereal Commercial. YouTube. 13 August 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.

External links edit

  • Official website  

post, consumer, brands, previously, post, cereals, postum, cereals, also, known, simply, post, american, consumer, packaged, goods, food, manufacturer, headquartered, lakeville, minnesota, llcformerlypostum, cereal, company, 1895, 1929, general, foods, 1929, 1. Post Consumer Brands previously Post Cereals and Postum Cereals also known as simply Post is an American consumer packaged goods food manufacturer headquartered in Lakeville Minnesota Post Consumer Brands LLCFormerlyPostum Cereal Company 1895 1929 General Foods 1929 1990 Kraft 1990 2007 Post Cereals 2007 2015 Company typeSubsidiaryIndustryFood processingFounded1895 129 years ago 1895 in Battle Creek MichiganFounderC W PostHeadquartersLakeville Minnesota U S Area servedWorldwideProductsBreakfast cereals granola pet food peanut butterBrandsList Bran Flakes Grape Nuts Honey Bunches of Oats Honeycomb Kibbles N Bits Malt O Meal Oreo O s Pebbles Peter Pan Peanut Butter Puffins cereal Rachael Ray Nutrish Waffle CrispParentPost HoldingsWebsitepostconsumerbrands comThe company founded in 1895 by C W Post owns a large portfolio of cereal brands that include Bran Flakes Honey Bunches of Oats Golden Crisp Grape Nuts Honeycomb Oreo O s Pebbles and Waffle Crisp among others The company also produces several pet food brands including Rachael Ray Nutrish Kibbles n Bits and 9Lives and markets Peter Pan Peanut Butter Contents 1 History 1 1 Major acquisitions 1 2 Purchase of General Foods and renaming 2 After General Foods 2 1 Postum advertisements 3 Post Consumer Brands brands present cereals and products 4 Post Consumer Brands discontinued cereals 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp C W Post founderC W Post established his company in Battle Creek Michigan having lived there since 1891 when he was a patient at a holistic sanitarium operated by Dr John Harvey Kellogg 1 2 Dr Kellogg with his brother W K Kellogg had developed a dry corn flake cereal that was part of their patients diet Post s first product introduced in 1895 was not a cereal however but a roasted cereal based beverage Postum Having developed an aversion to coffee during his time in the sanitarium Post positioned Postum as a healthy alternative Its advertising slogan which he coined himself was There s a Reason Postum s main ingredients were naturally caffeine free wheat grain bran and molasses Initially Postum had to be brewed like coffee but in 1911 Post introduced a powdered instant formulation This version of the product was manufactured in Battle Creek until it was discontinued in 2007 As of January 2013 Eliza s Quest Food had succeeded in returning Postum to many grocery stores across the United States and Canada In 1897 Post introduced his first dry cereal a crunchy blend of wheat and barley which he called Grape Nuts His first corn flake product was introduced as Elijah s Manna in 1904 Owing to consumer resistance to the inaccurate biblical reference 3 that was so great that even Great Britain flatly refused to register the name as a trademark it was renamed Post Toasties in 1907 4 C W Post was an astute businessman who believed that advertising and aggressive marketing were the keys to a successful enterprise Within 10 years of its incorporation his Postum Cereal Company had more than 10 million in capital and was spending 400 000 a year on advertising sums which were remarkable for the period 5 Although he vigorously opposed labor unions his employees were the highest paid in his industry and working conditions at the Post factory were exemplary He even developed a factory town in which he sold homes to his workers at favorable rates Postum Cereal Company lost its founder in 1914 C W Post underwent an apparently successful appendectomy at the Mayo Clinic but shortly after returning home to recuperate he died of a self inflicted gunshot wound Post had for years suffered from bouts of illness and depression While his death was without warning his company was not left rudderless His daughter Marjorie Merriweather Post had been raised in the business and was familiar with virtually every aspect of its operations 6 She assumed control of the now 20 million Postum Company and managed its affairs for the next eight years While she did not oversee major product innovations she did have a good feel for business and for promoting talented managers In addition her second marriage in 1920 was to Edward F Hutton the founder of a brokerage firm on Wall Street Gross revenues in 1921 were 17 75 million 7 In 1922 Hutton took the newly incorporated Postum Cereal Company public by issuing 200 000 common shares The 1920s was a period in which common stock was still considered highly speculative and consequently the newly issued shares carried a dividend at the rate of 5 00 per year Revenues in 1922 were essentially the same as in 1921 but in 1923 they were 22 25 million and a stock split in the form of a 100 stock dividend increased the authorized shares to 400 000 These shares also earned a 3 00 annual cash dividend representing a 20 increase over the presplit rate In 1925 with revenues now at 27 4 million the stock was split once again and the dividend was increased to 4 00 per new share Major acquisitions edit nbsp Commemorative placque at the Postum Cereal Company Factory September 2014Starting in 1925 under the leadership of financier and at one point son in law to the founder E F Hutton as chairman and Colby M Chester as president Postum Cereal made the first of a series of corporate acquisitions which would within a few years transform it into the dominant U S packaged grocery products manufacturer It began late that year with the purchase of the Jell O Company Jell O had been first produced in 1897 by Pearle Bixby Wait a carpenter from the town of LeRoy in northern New York state Mr Wait s product was based upon a patent that had been issued to inventor and industrialist Peter Cooper in 1845 but which Cooper had never developed commercially However Wait was unsuccessful in marketing Jell O and in 1899 he sold the rights to it for 450 to a neighbor Orator Francis Woodward who had founded the Genesee Pure Food Company in 1897 Genesee became the Jell O Company in 1923 the same year it began marketing D Zerta a sugar free gelatin and a powdered mixture for making ice cream in the kitchen In 1926 Postum Cereal acquired Igleheart Brothers Inc established in 1856 the makers of Swans Down cake flour and followed this with the purchase of the Minute Tapioca Company Tapioca Superlative had been invented in 1894 by a Boston woman Susan Stavers who made it from tapioca flakes that she ran through her coffee grinder Later that year she sold the rights to John Whitman of Orange Massachusetts who changed its name to Minute Tapioca In 1908 he changed the name of his company to that of his product The Minute brand would later become better known for a General Foods innovation introduced in 1949 known as Minute Rice a brand of parboiled rice As a consequence of the Jell O and Minute Tapioca acquisitions Postum Cereal s revenues in 1926 jumped to 46 9 million The number of shares stood at 1 375 million including shares issued to acquire Jell O and Minute Tapioca The dividend was increased to 4 70 a year The acquisition spree continued in 1927 with the purchase of two similarly named confectionery companies chocolate maker Walter Baker founded in 1765 making it the oldest component of the Postum constituent companies and coconut processor Franklin Baker which had begun early in the 19th century as a flour broker but whose confectionery products dated from 1895 This was followed by the purchase of Log Cabin Products the maker of Log Cabin Syrup first produced in 1887 and of Richard Hellmann Inc established in 1913 the producer of Blue Ribbon mayonnaise And late in the year Postum Cereal began selling its first coffee product Sanka by obtaining US marketing rights from Dr Ludwig Roselius of Bremen Germany Roselius had developed the decaffeinated coffee in 1906 and began selling it in the US in 1923 8 Three more acquisitions followed in 1928 The most important was that of the Cheek Neel Coffee Company Its product Maxwell House dating from 1892 was a well known brand in what was still a fragmented US coffee market Within a few years however it was to become the number one brand in America and would retain that position well into the 1980s Also acquired during 1928 was the La France Manufacturing Company a maker of starch and other laundry products this being Postum s first venture into nonedibles and the Calumet Baking Powder Company the leading maker of this kitchen essential Financially the year culminated on October 1 with the inclusion of Postum Inc in the newly reformulated Dow Jones Industrial Average of 30 common stocks 9 By year end revenues stood at 101 million and the dividend on the five million authorized shares was 5 00 per year a 25 fold increase since 1922 Purchase of General Foods and renaming edit nbsp General Foods 1937 Specimen Stock CertificateBy far the most important acquisition of 1929 was of the frozen food company owned by Clarence Birdseye 10 called General Foods Company Birdseye December 9 1886 October 7 1956 was one of the most important entrepreneurs in the history of the food industry Born in New York City he became interested in the frozen preservation of food during the course of working as a fur trader in Labrador between 1912 and 1916 By 1923 he had developed a commercially viable process for quick freezing foods using a belt mechanism which he patented In 1924 with backing from three investors he formed the General Seafoods Company in Gloucester Massachusetts to produce frozen haddock fillets packed in plain cardboard boxes The founder s visionary daughter Marjorie Merriweather Post a brilliant pioneering businesswoman was first to become excited about the prospects for the frozen foods business In 1926 she had put into port at Gloucester on her yacht Hussar IV and was served a luncheon meal which she learned to her amazement had been frozen six months before Although she eventually became the richest woman in America because of her business genius it took Marjorie Post three years to finally convince Postum s management to acquire the company In a deal arranged by Marjorie who immediately understood the value of Clarence Birdseye s patents Postum paid 10 75 million for a 51 interest and its partner Goldman Sachs paid 12 5 million for the other 49 11 Following this acquisition Postum Inc changed its name to General Foods Corporation Goldman sold its share back to General Foods in 1932 apparently at a slight loss Shortly after the acquisition General Foods began test marketing an expanded line of frozen foods but the company quickly realized that a packaging process alone would not be sufficient to market frozen products in stores To be sold the packages had to be kept frozen while on display so Birdseye engineers began development of a freezer cabinet designed specifically to hold frozen foods The cabinet which first appeared in 1934 required a great deal of space and electricity which were not readily available in most grocery stores of the period For those stores which could accommodate them the payback was immediate Housewives quickly realized that keeping packages of frozen food in the icebox could mean fresher meals and fewer trips to the market 12 The company published a cook book in 1932 the General Foods Cook Book dedicated To the American homemaker Five editions were published between 1932 and 1937 The book includes photographs among which is General Foods offers over twenty famous products for your well stocked pantry shelf and a subject index 13 After General Foods editIn 2011 Ralcorp announced plans to spin off Post Foods into a separate company About a quarter of Ralcorp s sales in 2010 were generated by its Post Foods unit 14 The spinoff was completed with an IPO for Post Holdings Inc on February 7 2012 15 In 2014 the company acquired Michael Foods 16 The following year Post Foods purchased MOM Brands formerly Malt O Meal Co creating the third largest breakfast cereal company in the US At this point Post Foods rebranded as Post Consumer Brands and is headquartered in Lakeville Minnesota In July 2017 Post Holdings bought Weetabix Limited for 1 4 billion 17 In 2019 the company began combining some of its MOM Brands and Weetabix cereal brands under the Three Sisters Cereal name On December 8 2020 Post Holdings announced that it was acquiring the Peter Pan peanut butter brand from Conagra Brands 18 The transaction was completed on January 25 2021 19 With the acquisition of Peter Pan peanut butter on January 25 2021 Post created a new group called Animated Brands 20 with the Peter Pan brand being the founding member Animated Brands is managed under Post Consumer Brands On June 1 2021 Post announced it acquired the ready to eat RTE cereal business of TreeHouse Foods 21 The TreeHouse Foods RTE cereal business was added to Post Consumer Brands broad portfolio of private label cereal products In February 2023 Post Holdings announced its acquisition of pet food brands like 9Lives Kibbles n Bits and Gravy Train Such acquisition would enable Post s entry to the pet food category After the completion of this acquisition Post intends to develop a new pet food category within Post Consumer Brands 22 23 24 Postum advertisements edit Main article Postum Postum a coffee substitute made out of roasted grain was created in 1895 It was popular through the early 20th century particularly during World War II when coffee was rationed Due to its decline in popularity Post announced its discontinuation in 2007 25 26 27 It was later revived by Eliza s Quest Food in 2013 28 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Post Consumer Brands brands present cereals and products edit100 Bran currently only available in Canada Airly Foods Butter Airly Foods Cheddar Airly Foods Chocolate Airly Foods Cinnamon Airly Foods Salted Caramel Airly Foods Sea Salt Bran Flakes Better Oats 100 Calorie Maple amp Brown Sugar 29 Better Oats 100 Calorie Apples amp Cinnamon Better Oats 100 Calorie Cinnamon Roll Better Oats Classic Maple amp Brown Sugar Better Oats Classic Strawberries amp Cream Better Oats Organic Maple and Brown Sugar Better Oats Organic Bare Better Oats Organic Old Fashioned Oats Better Oats Organic Steel Cut Oats Better Oats Organic Quick Oats Better Oats Steel Cut Maple amp Brown Sugar Better Oats Steel Cut Maple amp Brown Sugar with Protein Better Oats Steel Cut Original Better Oats Thick amp Hearty Maple amp Brown Sugar Better Oats Thick amp Hearty Apples amp Cinnamon Better Oats Thick amp Hearty Blueberry Muffin Chips Ahoy CoCo Wheats Farina food Mills hot wheat cereal Cocoa Pebbles Fruity Pebbles Marshmallow Fruity Pebbles Fruity Pebbles Treats Fruity Pebbles Crisps 30 Cocoa Pebbles Crisps Golden Crisp Grape Nuts Grape Nuts Flakes Great Grains Banana Nut Crunch Great Grains Blueberry Morning Great Grains Cranberry Almond Crunch Great Grains Crunchy Pecans Great Grains Raisins Dates amp Pecans Honey Bunches of Oats Honey Roasted Honey Bunches of Oats with Almonds Honey Bunches of Oats with Real Strawberries Honey Bunches of Oats Vanilla Honey Bunches of Oats Pecan amp Maple Brown Sugar Honey Bunches of Oats Frosted Honey Bunches of Oats Whole Grain Honey Crunch Honey Bunches of Oats Granola Honey Roasted Honey Bunches of Oats Granola French Vanilla Honey Bunches of Oats Granola Maple Pecan Honey Maid S mores Honeycomb Honeycomb Big Bites Original 31 Honeycomb Big Bites Chocolate Oh s Oreo O s Malt O Meal Maple amp Brown Sugar Hot Wheat Malt O Meal Chocolate Hot Wheat Malt O Meal Original Hot Wheat Malt O Meal Apple Zings Malt O Meal Berry Colossal Crunch Malt O Meal Berry Colossal Crunch with Marshmallows Malt O Meal Chocolate Marshmallow Mateys Malt O Meal Chocolately Chip Cookie Bites Malt O Meal Churr O s Malt O Meal Cinnamon Toasters Malt O Meal Coco Roos Malt O Meal Cocoa Dyno Bites Malt O Meal Cocoa Dyno Bites with Marshmallows Malt O Meal Cookies amp Cream Malt O Meal Crispy Rice Malt O Meal Frosted Flakes Malt O Meal Frosted Mini Spooners Malt O Meal Fruity Blasts Malt O Meal Fruity Dyno Bites Malt O Meal Fruity Dyno Bites with Marshmallows Malt O Meal Golden Honey O s Malt O Meal Golden Puffs Malt O Meal Honey Buzzers Malt O Meal Honey Graham Toasters Malt O Meal Honey Nut Scooters Malt O Meal Marshmallow Mateys Malt O Meal Oat Blenders with Almonds Malt O Meal Oat Blenders with Honey Malt O Meal Peanut Butter Cups Malt O Meal Raisin Bran Malt O Meal S mores Malt O Meal Strawberry Cream Mini Spooners Malt O Meal Tootie Fruities Malt O Meal Tootie Fruities with Marshmallows Post Dunkin cereal Caramel Macchiato Post Premier Protein cereal Chocolate Almond Post Premier Protein cereal Mixed Berry Almond Raisin Bran Shredded Wheat made by Nestle and General Mills in the United Kingdom and Ireland Shredded Wheat Original Spoon Size Shredded Wheat Original Big Biscuit Shredded Wheat Wheat N Bran Spoon Size Shreddies currently only available in Canada the United Kingdom Ireland and Germany made by Nestle and General Mills in the United Kingdom and Ireland Waffle CrispPost Consumer Brands discontinued cereals edit40 Bran Flakes Alpha Bits Beep Beep with the Wile E Coyote and the Road Runner as mascots 32 BlueBerry Morning Bran amp Prune Flakes 33 Cinna Crunch Pebbles discontinued 2001 Corn Crackos 34 Corn Fetti early 1950s later known as Sugar Coated Corn Flakes late 1950s later known as Sugar Sparkled Corn Flakes 1960s Corn Flakes amp Blueberries 35 Corn Flakes amp Peaches 36 Corn Flakes amp Strawberries 37 Count Off 38 Crispy Critters Crispy Numbers in Canada Croonchy Stars 39 Cupcake Pebbles C W Post granola cereal discontinued 1994 Dino Pebbles 39 Dino S mores Pebbles Fruity Pebbles Xtreme Cinnamon Pebbles Fortified Oat Flakes 40 Fruit amp Bran formerly Fruit amp Fibre Fruit Wheats Shredded Wheat variant discontinued 1990 Golden Oreo O s Good MOREnings Cocoa Cinnamon chocolate flavored rings Good MOREnings Berry Wheels strawberry flavored rings Good MOREnings Strawberries n Creme strawberry flavored corn flakes Good MOREnings Waffle Crunch a variation of Waffle Crisp Grape Nuts Fit Grape Nut O s Great Grains Digestive Blends Berry Medley Great Grains Digestive Blends Vanilla Great Grains Protein Blend Cinnamon Hazelnut Great Grains Protein Blend Honey Oats amp Seeds Heart of Oats 41 Honey Bunches of Oats Just Bunches Honey Roasted Honey Bunches of Oats Just Bunches Cinnamon Honey Bunches of Oats with Real Peaches Honey Bunches of Oats Granola Raspberry Honey Bunches of Oats Granola Cinnamon Honey Bunches of Oats Granola Protein Chocolate Honey Bunches of Oats Morning Energy Chocolatey Almond Crunch Honey Bunches of Oats Morning Energy Cinnamon Crunch Honey Bunches of Oats Fruit Blends Banana Blueberry Honey Bunches of Oats Fruit Blends Peach Raspberry Honey Bunches of Oats Greek Honey Crunch Honey Bunches of Oats Greek Mixed Berry Honey Bunches of Oats Tropical Blends Mango Coconut Honey Bunches of Oats Raisin Medley Honey Bunches of Oats with Cinnamon Bunches Honey Maid Honey Graham Hulk Huskies Marshmallow Alpha Bits Mini Cinnamon Churros sweetened wheat breakfast cereal based on the churro 42 Marshmallow Pebbles Oat Flakes 43 Pink Panther Flakes 44 Poppin Pebbles Post Extra 45 Post Ghosties with Casper the Friendly Ghost as its mascot 46 Post Honey Nut Crunch Raisin Bran Post Size 8 47 Post Tens an assortment of 10 single serving boxes of seven different Post cereals in one package 48 designed to compete with Kellogg s Variety Pack 49 Post Toasties Post Top 3 50 Puffed Corn Flakes 51 Raisin Grape Nuts 52 Reptar Crunch 53 Rice Krinkles 54 originally Sugar Krinkles 55 then Sugar Rice Krinkles 56 finally Frosted Rice Krinkles 57 before discontinuation Selects Banana Nut Crunch 58 Selects Maple Pecan Crunch Sesame Street Cereal Apple Sesame Street Cereal Blueberry Sesame Street Cereal Strawberry Shredded Wheat Frosted Cinnamon Roll Shredded Wheat Frosted Mixed berry Shredded Wheat Frosted S mores Bites Shredded Wheat Honey Nut Spoon Size Shredded Wheat Lightly Frosted Spoon Size Shredded Wheat Vanilla Almond Spoon Size Smurfberry Crunch 39 Smurf Magic Berries 39 Sour Patch Kids cereal Strawberry Honeycomb 39 Super Orange Crisp 59 TEAM Flakes Trail Mix Crunch Cranberry Vanilla discontinued Fall 2010 Trail Mix Crunch Raisin and AlmondSee also editMarjorie Merriweather Post Post Texas Close City TexasReferences edit The timeline and product history is adapted from A Chronological History of Kraft General Foods Inc prepared by the KGF Archives Department Glenview IL c 1994 Details of C W Post s career may be found in American National Biography Vol 7 pp 725 7 published by Oxford University Press In I Kings 17 6 Elijah was described as having ravens feed him bread and meat rather than manna when in hiding from King Ahab Exodus 16 31 describes manna as white and having a similar flavor to wafers made with honey but the Israelites found it a poor daily substitute for the diet of meats fishes cucumbers melons leeks onions and garlic which they had enjoyed in Egypt The Kellogg brothers had been selling their corn flakes and other cereal products since 1897 but with only limited success Post who took the cereal business seriously was equipped to market and advertise his products nationwide so successfully in fact that W K Kellogg broke away from his brother and in 1907 founded his own company the Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company renamed the Kellogg Company in 1922 Kellogg s Corn Flakes eventually overtook Post Toasties in popularity and the latter brand is today only a minor player in the dry cereal market See International Directory of Company Histories Volume 2 pp 530 32 published by St James Press 1990 for details relating to the company during this period Biographical details of Post s life may be found in American National Biography Volume 7 p 732 Financial details for the company during this period may be found in the annual issues of Moody s Manual of Investments American and Foreign Industrial Securities published by Moody s Investor Services Sanka is a contraction of the French words sans cafeine Roselius for many years had had little success in finding a viable decaffeination process Legend has it that when a shipment of green coffee sank in Bremen harbor the beans came out caffeine free Ultimately Roselius settled on a washing process under more sanitary conditions General Foods purchased Roselius s American company outright in 1932 and the original German company Sanka HAG AG in 1979 djindexes com PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 05 28 Retrieved 2021 07 27 Details of Birdseye s remarkable career may be found in American National Biography Vol 2 pp 808 9 Following the sale Birdseye remained in the frozen foods business In 1932 he established Birds Eye Frozen Foods which by later in the decade was selling almost 100 different frozen products It is not immediately clear how General Foods came to acquire the product name but Birds Eye frozen vegetables were a major component of its business until the division was sold to Dean Foods in 1993 The space and power requirements for the burgeoning frozen food section was one factor which led to the rapid development of larger self service supermarkets beginning in the late 1930s General Foods Consumer Service Department General Foods Cook Book New York General Foods Corporation Boyle Matthew July 14 2011 Ralcorp to Spin Off Post Foods After Failing to Find Buyer Bloomberg York New 2012 02 07 Post Holdings Celebrates Spinoff from Ralcorp Holdings Exchanges nyx com Archived from the original on 2014 02 24 Retrieved 2014 02 05 Post Holdings to Acquire Michael Foods for 2 45 billion Post Holdings 2014 04 17 Retrieved 2021 07 26 Weetabix to be sold to US company Post Holdings BBC News 18 April 2017 Retrieved 18 April 2017 Barr Diana 8 December 2020 Post Holdings to buy Peter Pan peanut butter brand www bizjournals com Retrieved 23 December 2020 Post Holdings and Conagra Brands Announce Completion of Acquisition of Peter Pan Peanut Butter Brand by Post Holdings GlobeNewswire News Room 25 January 2021 Retrieved 10 February 2021 Animated Brands A Family of Brands to Know and Love Animated Brands Retrieved 2021 08 31 Post buys TreeHouse Foods ready to eat cereal business for 85M Food Dive Retrieved 2021 06 07 Post Holdings entering pet food market Food Business News Retrieved 3 June 2023 Post Holdings acquires pet food brands from J M Smucker Just Food 9 February 2023 Retrieved 3 June 2023 Smucker sells off Nutrish 9Lives other pet food brands Petfood industry 8 February 2023 Retrieved 3 June 2023 Israelsen Hartley Sara January 1 2008 Fans in withdrawal from coffee substitute Postum Deseret News retrieved 2012 11 21 Stephenson Kathy January 1 2008 Mormons mourn Postum s passing The Salt Lake Tribune retrieved 2012 11 21 Rowe Taashi January 16 2008 Goodbye to Postum Adventist News Network Retrieved 2014 07 20 Where To Buy Postum com Eliza s Quest Foods archived from the original on 2013 01 31 retrieved 2013 01 31 Better Oats Instant Oatmeal Taste the Difference Post Consumer Brands Snacks The Original Honeycomb Cereal Vintage Old 1960s Animated Post Beep Beep Cereal with Wylie Coyote and Roadrunner Commercial YouTube 29 June 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Post Bran amp Prune Flakes Classic TV Commercial YouTube 2 March 2013 dead YouTube link Vintage Old 1960s Post Cereal Corn Crackos Animated Commercial YouTube 13 July 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Corn Flakes and Fruit Cereal Series II Classic Commercial 1960s Pt 2 YouTube 23 July 2013 dead YouTube link Corn Flakes and Peaches Cereal II Vintage Commercial 1960s Pt 2 YouTube 23 July 2013 dead YouTube link Post Fruit in the Box Cereals II Classic 1960s Pt 4 YouTube 20 July 2013 dead YouTube link Post Count Off Cereal 1962 Classic TV Commercial YouTube 20 August 2012 dead YouTube link a b c d e Comedy News Viral Videos Late Night TV Political Humor Funny Slideshows HuffPost Comedy The Huffington Post Archived from the original on 2012 03 02 Retrieved 2014 03 30 Fortified Oat Flakes Cereal MrBreakfast com mrbreakfast com Vintage Old 1950s Post Heart of Oats Cereal Commercial YouTube 24 July 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Mini Cinnamon Churros Post Archived from the original on March 13 2013 Retrieved April 6 2013 1960 POST OAT FLAKES CEREAL COMMERCIAL YouTube 13 November 2013 dead YouTube link Pink Panther Flakes cereal commercial YouTube 28 October 2012 dead YouTube link YouTube youtube com dead YouTube link Vintage Old 1960s Post Casper The Ghost Ghosties Animated Cereal Commercial YouTube 23 July 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Vintage Old 1960s Post Size 8 Cereal Commercial YouTube 31 August 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Vintage Old 1950s Post Tens Cereal Multi Packs Corn Flakes raisan bran commercial YouTube 10 February 2014 dead YouTube link 1956 Commercial for Kellogg s Variety Pack Never used YouTube 31 August 2012 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Vintage Old 1960s Post Top 3 Cereal Commercial YouTube 18 September 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Vintage Old 1950s Post Puffed Corn Flakes Cereal Commercial YouTube 28 August 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Raisin Grape Nuts Raisin Grape Nuts Cereal Box mrbreakfast com 26 Cereals From The 90s You ll Never Be Able To Eat Again BuzzFeed 4 May 2013 1963 RICE KRINKLES RICKSHAW RACER COMMERCIAL YouTube 3 March 2013 dead YouTube link vintage ads 15 June 2012 Freaky Friday Evil Clown Phobia anyone livejournal com Creepy Post Sugar Rice Krinkles Cereal Classic 1960s TV Commercial YouTube 6 June 2012 dead YouTube link Early 1970s Post Frosted Rice Krinkles Cereal TV commercial animated YouTube 9 August 2010 dead YouTube link My Breakfast Cereal Was Discontinued bcbusiness ca Vintage Old 1960s Post Super Orange Crisp Animated Cereal Commercial YouTube 13 August 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 External links editOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Post Consumer Brands amp oldid 1207066558, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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