Sexton Foods
Encyclopedia
John Sexton & Company, also known as Sexton Quality Foods, was a broad line national wholesale grocer that serviced the restaurant, hotel and institutional trade from regional warehouses and truck fleets located in major metropolitan areas of the United States. Sexton Quality Foods eventually became US Foodservice in 1997. The company was established in Chicago, Illinois
Chicago
Chicago is the largest city in the US state of Illinois. With nearly 2.7 million residents, it is the most populous city in the Midwestern United States and the third most populous in the US, after New York City and Los Angeles...

 in 1883 by John Sexton.

John Sexton

John Sexton was born June 29, 1859 in Dundas, Ontario to Michael and Ellen (O'Connor) Sexton from County Clare, Ireland. John Sexton worked in a general store in Niagara, Ontario 1874–1877. He immigrated to Chicago in 1877 at 18 and began working for various wholesale grocers in Chicago as a clerk and city salesman. During this time, he realized that there was an opportunity to specialize in selling quality teas, coffees and spices.

John Sexton married Annie Louise Bartleman (born Chicago 1866) on August 11, 1886. The Bartleman’s immigrated from Saxe-Coburg Gotha, Germany in the mid-1850s. The couple had five children, Thomas G. (b. 1890), Franklin (b. 2/16/1891), Sherman J. (b. 9/12/1892), Helen (Egan) (b.?) and Ethel (Marten) (b.1896) the family home was 2263 North Dayton Street in Chicago. All three sons and both sons in laws worked for the company in various roles.

John Sexton & Co Established

In 1883, at the age of 25, John Sexton invested his entire life savings of $400 and formed a corporation with George A. Hitchcock named Hitchcock & Sexton Company which opened a retail tea, coffee and spice store located at the corner of State Street & Lake Street in downtown Chicago. In 1886, John Sexton bought out his partner and changed the name to John Sexton & Company.

As business increased, John Sexton opened 3 more retail stores in the Chicago area including one in Joliet. This made Sexton one of the first retail coffee and tea chain proprietors in the United States. To help him run his business, he recruited his sisters Mary (Barton), Sarah (O'Leary), Beatrice (Mulligan), his brother James Sexton and cousins, Dan E. and Frank W. Upton to move to Chicago from Dundas, Ontario. Each sister ran one of his retail stores and lived above it with their families. In addition to family, John Sexton relied on recruiting high quality employees by offering attractive wages, sales commissions and fair dealing.

As word spread of Sexton’s quality products, fair dealings and unconditional guarantee, restaurant and hotel customers came to the Sexton retail stores to buy spices, tea and coffee. Sexton also added dried and canned goods to his stores. In addition, John Sexton began to call on the Chicago restaurants and hotels directly. In addition, he hired salesmen and delivery drivers to service on the wholesale accounts. He also purchased horses and wagons to make deliveries. By 1888, Sexton decided to close his four retail stores and focus solely on his Chicago wholesale customers. Sexton expanded the 250 N. State Street store by renting the rest of the building.
In 1890, John Sexton established an institutional department to call on hospitals, colleges, schools, railroad dining cars and orphanages around the country. These institutional customers required consistent quality products that were available in sufficient quantity all year long. Sexton developed an extensive product line as well as a distribution network based in Chicago. To call on the institutional market throughout the country, Sexton recruited commission based salesmen in the major urban markets of Atlanta, Boston, Cleveland, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, New York, Salt Lake City, San Francisco and Washington DC.

In addition to the major urban markets, Sexton recruited regional commission based salesmen to call on customers who required quality groceries in large quantity to feed their clients or work force but were far from major metropolitan areas. For instance, regional Sexton salesmen called on lumbermen, ranchers, miners and grain farmers who had large work forces to feed. These salesmen would also call on hotels, restaurants, hotels, hospitals, schools and orphanages. To further establish the Sexton brand, he advertised in specific hospital and institutional dietician publications. The most effective marketing for Sexton was at professional trade conventions where Sexton Quality Foods would sponsor a tasting booth featuring its products. Institutional customers could sample Sexton Products and Sexton salesmen could develop contacts and sales leads. This proved enormously successful since no other grocery company at the time was effectively servicing this huge market. The1893 Chicago’s World Fair provided a chance to show case Sexton’s ability to deliver quality food in large quantity to meet the demand of the huge influx of tourist into Chicago.
Sexton Quality Foods also published a mail order catalog targeted to the rural customers that sold food and farm supplies. Orders were shipped from Chicago via rail to regional terminals where railway express would make the final delivery to the customer. Sexton Quality Foods catalog business was an important division for years. It was ultimately led by John Sexton’s second oldest son, Franklin Sexton who later led the coffee and tea division and became the company treasurer. Known as the “Country Division”, the majority of the products sold were coffee, spices, flour, canned fruits and canned vegetables. However, paint, motor oil, nails, roof tar and canvas were also sold. The Sexton Country Division flourished until automobiles became affordable. As rural automobile ownership increased, the Country Division slowed. Rural customers were more likely to drive to town to make frequent smaller purchases rather than large orders from Chicago. The last country division catalog was published in the late 1930s.

In 1898, John Sexton & Co. was incorporated. The company directors were John Sexton President, Dan E. Upton (cousin) Vice President, Harold R. White, Secretary and William M. O'Leary (nephew) Treasurer.
As John Sexton & Co. grew, the Sexton name became synonymous with quality products, fair dealings, uniform consistent food quality and unconditional guarantee. A bronze plaque hung in the building lobby that read "All who come here to buy or sell fairly are always welcome."

Some of the original brand names used by Sexton included: Calumet, LaSalle, Pride of the West, Pyramid and Edelweiss. The most lasting innovation pioneered by John Sexton & Co. was the 1 gallon #10 can. Hail as the perfect restaurant pack size, the #10 can was sanitary, economical and revolutionized kitchen storage since the can was easy to lift, easy to open, stacked well and did not require refrigeration. The #10 can is still the industry standard.

At the end of 1907, John Sexton & Co. had 125 employees in Chicago, a large Chicago customer base serviced by a city sales force, a national customer based serviced by a regional sales force and a strong rural mail order trade. Sexton had out grown the State Street location. John Sexton & Co. moved 4 blocks west to the corner of Lake and Franklin Streets (195 W. Lake Street). In 1908, Sexton Quality Foods leased the entire six-story building for a term of 10 years that expired April 1918. A side note in Chicago real estate history, in 1885, J.B. Clow & Sons, a cast iron pipe manufacturer entered into a 99-year ground lease with land owner John Peacock at a rate of $3,000 per year with 4% annual increases. That same year, J.B. Clow & Sons constructed a six-story office building. In 1908, J.B. Clow & Sons relocated to a larger building at Harrison and the River and leased the building to John Sexton & Co. By 1909, John Peacocok's widow sold the ground to George L. Thatcher for $173,000. John Sexton & Co. organized the building into sales, warehouse, manufacturing and laboratory. At the new location, Sexton expanded into the manufacture of pickles, relishes, spices and preserves. Company horses were stabled at a livery one-mile west of the building.

John Sexton & Co Modernization

By 1912, Sexton had out grown the Lake & Franklin location. In 1913, Sexton purchased a 1 acres (4,046.9 m²) parcel of land on the north side of the Chicago River on the corner of Illinois & Orleans Streets. The majority of Sexton’s customers at that time were not in Chicago. Access to the railroads was critical to growing the business. Institutional customers throughout the country would order groceries by the railcar from Sexton Quality Foods. Sexton wanted his new building to be able to receive and dispatch rail shipments directly. In 1913, construction of a 300000 square feet (27,870.9 m²), 6 story, fire sprinklered, multi-use building designed by architect Alfred S. Alschuler [1]was started.

In 1915, Sexton moved into the new building that housed the corporate offices, sales offices, country division, dry goods warehouse, food laboratory, refrigeration plant and the Sexton Quality Foods manufacturing division, the Sunshine Kitchens, which produce private label sauces, soups and specialty products exclusively sold under the John Sexton & Co banner. The first floor was divided into railcar receiving, railcar shipping, country parcel shipping, city delivery and city receiving. The building was large enough to unload three railcars simultaneous.

In 1924, John Sexton decided to modernize the company's city delivery fleet by purchasing 26 electric trucks from the Commercial Truck Company of Philadelphia, PA. and purchasing 6 gasoline 1.5 ton 6-wheeled trucks manufactured by Diamond T
Diamond T
The Diamond T was an American automobile manufactured in Chicago from 1905 until 1911 by the Diamond T Motor Car Company. It was a powerful touring car . The company later became known for its trucks...

 of Chicago. The modernization retired 50 horses and 35 grocery wagons. Each CT Electric Truck averaged 12 miles (19.3 km) per delivery day, were extremely reliable, easy to drive and well adapted for city deliveries However, in cold weather, batteries were less efficient and the hard rubber tires had poor traction on snow covered streets. The result was a diminished range for the electric trucks. The CT Electrics were in service until the late 1930s and were gradually phased out as the Chicago area expand into the suburbs, the delivery distances increased, the roads got better and commercial trucks improved. The 6 Diamond T
Diamond T
The Diamond T was an American automobile manufactured in Chicago from 1905 until 1911 by the Diamond T Motor Car Company. It was a powerful touring car . The company later became known for its trucks...

 Trucks were used for suburban Chicago deliveries and averaged 180 miles (289.7 km) each per delivery day in 1924.

John Sexton & Co. National Expansion

In 1928, at the age of 70, John Sexton stepped down as president of Sexton Quality Foods but remained the chairman. John Sexton asked his sons, Thomas, Franklin and Sherman who should lead the company. All agreed that Sherman was the best choice. Sherman became president of the company in 1928. Franklin remained the treasurer and Thomas remained vice president of merchandising. In 1930, at the age of 71, John Sexton died while on vacation in Los Angeles. After his death, the ownership of the company was divided between John Sexton’s wife Annie Louise (33%) and their children Thomas (13.3%), Franklin (13.3%), Sherman (13.3%), Helen (13.3%) and Ethel (13.3%).

By late 1931, the John Sexton & Co. leadership was as follows, Annie Louise (Bartleman) Sexton, Chairman, Sherman J. Sexton, President (Sales & Advertising), Harold R. White, Vice President (Canned & Dried Foods), Franklin Sexton, Secretary (Tea & Coffee) and Edmund A. Egan, Treasurer (Maintenance & Operation). In 1933, Sexton Foods opened the first distribution center outside Chicago by renting a warehouse in Brooklyn and buying a delivery fleet of 5 Diamond T trucks dedicated to the New York Market. The New York sales office was then supported by a regional distribution network that could provide next day delivery. That same year, the first Sexton professional salesmen training school was established. Henry A. Marten, husband of Ethel, led the Sexton Salesman School.

Sexton Quality Foods expanded their print advertising to the restaurant, college, hospital and food service trade publications in order to directly reach their customers. In addition, Sexton Quality Foods had a sales booth at all major trade conference for hospital administrators, college dietitians and restaurant associations. Sexton also published the first Sexton Cook Book in 1937. There were two other subsequent Sexton Cook Books published in 1941 and 1950. These cook book compiled large quantity recipes that the Sexton Customers had developed. In addition, Sexton Quality Foods routinely published pamphlets with menu ideas, food suggestions and business hints. Sexton Quality also publish annual hard cover diaries that featured customers’ large quantity recipes.

In January 1941, Sexton expanded by opening a branch warehouse and truck fleet in Dallas, TX at 1917 N. Houston Street. The Dallas branch would receive railcars of groceries from suppliers, canners and the Sexton Quality Foods Manufacturing Divisions. In 1941, Sexton introduced a line of frozen fruits and vegetables. The frozen food line was discontinued in mid-1942 due to the United States entering World War II and the need for Sexton to focus on providing groceries to the war effort. In August 1943, John Sexton & Co purchased the J. C. Stewart Company, an institutional wholesaler, coffee roaster and spice blender located in Pittsburgh, PA. Stewart Company had annual sales of $2 million had extensive coffee roasting facilities and was a leading processor marschino cherries and spices. Sexton relocated all coffee and spice blending operations to Pittsburgh. Investment banking firm of Floyd D. Cerf Company of Chicago represented Sexton in the transaction. By 1943, Sexton had the ability to supply, manufacture and distribute large amounts of institutional groceries from Sexton warehouses in Chicago, Brooklyn, Dallas and Pittsburgh.

In 1946, Sexton purchased a six story 110000 square feet (10,219.3 m²) building from stationary supplier Deeps, Inc. The building was located at 32-04 Northern Boulevard, Long Island City, NY and was originally constructed for Standard Radiator Co. As World War II ended, the third generation returned from war service and began working for the company. During this time, there were three sons, two son-laws, many cousins and over 25 grandsons working for Sexton Quality Foods. By 1949, John Sexton & Co. was operating branch warehouses in Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Long Island City, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. Territories served by a Sexton salesmen, but too remote from a Sexton branch warehouse, received rail shipments directly from Chicago. The majority of the Sexton manufacturing was still done at the Chicago facility. However, the chemical manufacturing plant had moved to Philadelphia. The Coffee roasting and spice blending operations had moved to Pittsburgh. In 1950, Sexton Quality Foods leased a 130000 square feet (12,077.4 m²) warehouse in San Francisco, CA to support the established west coast sales force and to expand into California, Oregon and Washington.

On December 29, 1951, John Sexton’s widow, Annie Louise Sexton, 90 years of age, chairman of John Sexton & Company died in Miami Beach. At the time of her death, she had 5 children, 25 grandchildren and 62 great-grandchildren. She is buried next to her husband at Calvary Cemetery in Evanston, IL.

In January 1953, Sexton purchased the Columbia Conserve Company, a food manufacturer located in Indianapolis, IN. The Sunshine Kitchens relocated to the newly purchased facility. However, Indianapolis grocery orders were still shipped from Chicago. The reason was that each night, up to 6 Sexton trucks from the Indianapolis facility would deliver Sexton manufactured products to the Chicago warehouse and return with the next day's Indianapolis orders. In October 1953, five grandsons were elected to the board of directors: John S. Marten of Indianapolis, Alfred Egan of Dallas, John P. Sexton of Philadelphia, Thomas W. Sexton of Chicago and William C. Sexton of Chicago. Franklin Sexton, Thomas G. Sexton, Edmund Egan remained as board members. At the close of 1953, Harold R. White, Vice President (Canned & Dried Foods) retired after 50 years with the company. Harold was the leading authority on canned and dried foods in the wholesale grocery industry and oversaw Sexton's food quality standards and laboratory. Ora Chidester was elected Vice President (Canned & Dried Foods). Matthew Theis, Vice President (Manufacturing) retired after 50 years with the company. Harry Gaugham was elected Vice President (Manufacturing). Franklin Sexton retired as secretary of the company after 47 years of service, but remained a board member. Stanley Wojteczko, company controller was elected secretary of company.

In early 1955, Sexton announced plans to sell the Illinois and Orleans building and construct a new 175000 square feet (16,258 m²) warehouse on 7 acres (28,328 m²) at 47th Street and Kilbourne Avenue on the south side. The new warehouse would house the distribution and sales office for Chicago. All food manufacturing was relocated to Indianapolis and the existing Indianapolis plant was enlarged The John Sexton & Co. building on the corner of Illinois and Orleans was converted to condominiums in the mid 1990s. The terra cotta JS & Co logos in the brickwork as are still visible.

During the 1950s, Sexton Quality Foods experienced rapid growth as the nation began to dine out more and food service customers demanded quality and consistent products and timely deliveries. By 1958, at the company's 75th anniversary, Sexton had a coast-to-coast distribution network with warehouses, sales operations and truck fleets located in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and San Francisco to service over 50,000 customers.

John Sexton & Co. Leadership Succession

On March 13, 1956, 63-year old Sherman Sexton died unexpectedly of an aneurysm. He is buried at All Saints Cemetery in Des Plaines. Sherman had begun work for his father at the Lake & Franklin location as a Teamster in 1909 and his career had spanned 47 years. Sherman had led the company from a Chicago based grocery mail order house to a coast to coast foodservice distributor with over $40 million in sales. The untimely death of Sherman created enormous turmoil since there was no clear succession for company leadership. 65-year old Thomas G. Sexton stepped in as the president. Brothers Thomas, Franklin and Sherman had all joined the Teamsters Union on the same day in 1909. Tom had been vice president in charge of merchandising since 1926. In late 1956, Beatrice Foods approached Thomas G. Sexton and Ethel Marten (daughter of John Sexton) with an offer to purchase John Sexton & Co., both said no.

In March 1959, the board of directors held a special election for a new company president. The four candidates were Thomas G. Sexton, Thomas Webb Sexton (son of Thomas G.), John S. Marten (son of Ethel) and Thomas Mackin (Mack) Sexton (son of Franklin). Mack Sexton won the vote and became president in 1959. Thomas G. Sexton became chairman of the board. Again, Beatrice approach John Sexton & Co. with an offer to purchase the company, Mack said no.

John Sexton & Co. Goes Public

On November 16, 1960, John Sexton & Co issued 200,000 shares (26.76%) of the 747,437 shares outstanding at $16.50 per share in the over the counter market (NASDAQ) to become a public company. 33,000 of the shares represented new financing of the company for use as working capital. The 200,000 share offer were oversubscribed and closed at $16.50 per share. Hornblower & Weeks
Hornblower & Weeks
Hornblower & Weeks was an investment banking and brokerage firm founded by Henry Hornblower and John W. Weeks in 1888. At its peak in the late 1970s, Hornblower ranked eighth among member firms of the New York Stock Exchange in number of retail offices, with 93 retail sales offices located in the...

 was the managing underwriter. The financial structure of the company had evolved from its humble beginnings as a partnership formed in Chicago in 1883 to a public company with 747,437 shares outstanding with 72% held by family members and 26.76% held by the public.

The desire for John Sexton & Co. to go public was to gain better access to the commercial credit market. The Sexton Management saw opportunity to expand product lines and distribution networks, but its capital structure as a private company limited its borrowing capacity. As a public company, Sexton capital stock could be issued to purchase other grocery companies and fund expansion. In addition, the Sexton family held the majority of their wealth in the private John Sexton & Co. stock. Some family members wanted a publicly traded stock which could easily be sold at a true market price. The alternative was to try to sell their Sexton shares to another family member at a negotiated price.

In 1961 John Sexton & Co. had over 1,400 employees including 300 salesmen who were generating $49.5 million. 10 Sexton distribution warehouses were located in Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Englewood, NJ, Indianapolis, Newton, MA, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and San Francisco, CA. Sexton serviced over 50,000 customers located throughout the USA of which 40% were restaurants, 28% were schools and colleges and 32% consisted of clubs, hospitals, convents and hotels. The Sexton catalogue included over 2,250 food and non-food items of which 26% were manufactured in Sexton manufacturing facilities located in Indianapolis and Englewood, NJ. The rest of the Sexton products were manufactured by non-affiliated third parties. The Sexton delivery fleet consisted of 112 trucks and tractor-trailer-combinations of which 95 were owned by the company and the remainder leased. In certain areas of the country, Sexton utilized common carriers to delivery their products. Sexton was focused on meeting the rising demand from their customers as America began to embrace away from home eating as entertainment. To meet the increase demand, Sexton began modernizing their warehouses and manufacturing facilities.

As of June 30, 1961 John Sexton & Co was generating $49.5 million in sales and the balance sheet had current assets of $15.4 million with liabilities of $4.9 million including $3.9 million of long term debt, $1.0 million of accounts payable and working capital of $10.5 million consisting of short term revolving credit lines. Book value was $16.57 per share. Dividends had consistently been paid since 1935 and in 1961 were paying $0.90 per share.

In July 1961, Franklin Sexton, secretary of the company, son of John Sexton, died at age 70. He had begun his career on State Street store in 1909 working for his father, John Sexton, as a Teamster making grocery deliveries in Chicago by horse and wagon. He oversaw the expansion of the country division, expansion of Sexton's national distribution network, the building of the Sexton plant on Illinois & Orleans and led the Sexton coffee and tea product lines. His career spanned over 50 years. He is buried at Calvary Cemetery in Evanston, IL.

On October 4, 1961, John Sexton & Co conducted a secondary offering of 70,000 share of stock at $23.50 per share at the request of the Ethel Sexton Marten Family and the Franklin Sexton Estate. The Marten family sold 49,924 of 50,924 shares and the Franklin Sexton Estate sold 20,076 of 57,436 shares. Hornblower & Weeks
Hornblower & Weeks
Hornblower & Weeks was an investment banking and brokerage firm founded by Henry Hornblower and John W. Weeks in 1888. At its peak in the late 1970s, Hornblower ranked eighth among member firms of the New York Stock Exchange in number of retail offices, with 93 retail sales offices located in the...

 was the managing underwriter. The Marten family, led by sons John S. Marten and Harry Marten, left the company and purchased Fred's Frozen Foods
Fred's Frozen Foods
Fred's Frozen Foods and Fred's for Starters are frozen food brands that traces their origin to Fred Luker who first started manufacturing frozen meat and vegetable products in Noblesville, Indiana in 1947...

, a food manufacturer located in Noblesville, Indiana.

John Sexton & Co. Focuses on Growth

With the new access to capital, John Sexton & Co. added product lines, expanded into new territories and modernized its distribution system. New warehouses were built or leased in Dallas, Pittsburgh, Detroit, San Francisco and Philadelphia. In 1962, John Sexton & Co. and S.E. Rykoff
S.E. Rykoff
S.E. Rykoff & Co., also known as SERCO, was a broad line national wholesale grocer that serviced the restaurant, hotel and institutional trade from regional warehouses, sale forces and truck fleets located primarily on the west coast of the United States. S.E. Rykoff & Co. eventually became US...

 & Co of Los Angeles entered negotiation where Sexton Quality Foods would purchase Rykoff in a stock and debt assumption transaction. Rykoff had a very strong presence in the Los Angeles foodservice market that was attractive to Sexton Foods. Sexton Foods had found that purchasing a strong local market leader, rather than starting from stratch enable it to quickly penetrate a new market. Sexton Foods and S.E. Rykoff
S.E. Rykoff
S.E. Rykoff & Co., also known as SERCO, was a broad line national wholesale grocer that serviced the restaurant, hotel and institutional trade from regional warehouses, sale forces and truck fleets located primarily on the west coast of the United States. S.E. Rykoff & Co. eventually became US...

 were not able to reach agreement. After which, Sexton Quality Foods announced plans to open a 30000 square feet (2,787.1 m²) warehouse and Sexton truck fleet in the Compton warehouse district of Los Angeles to support the southern California and Nevada Sexton sales force. Also in 1962, the Long Island City Sexton warehouse was sold and Sexton relocated the New York branch to 360 Van Brunt St, Englewood, NJ

In 1964, Sexton purchased the institutional wholesale grocery department of National Brands Inc. located in Miami, FL. A Sexton Warehouse was established in Miami that year. In 1965, Sexton purchased Cincinnati Foods, Inc., an institutional wholesaler located in Cincinnati, OH and a Sexton Warehouse was opened.

In 1967, John Sexton & Co. operated 13 warehouses, which served over 70,000 customers throughout the continental United States, in the West Indies and Hawaii. Sexton branch warehouses were located in Atlanta, Boston (Newton, MA), Chicago, Cincinnati, Dallas, Detroit, Los Angeles, New York (Englewood, NJ), Orlando, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, St. Louis and San Francisco.

Nearly all 2,250 products distributed by Sexton were sold under its own trade names, brands and labels. Products included a broad line of canned foods, canned and processed meats, coffee, tea spice and paper products, everything except frozen foods, meat, milk and fresh produce. About 27 percent of the products distributed by Sexton were manufactured, processed, packed, bottled, or canned in Sexton manufacturing plants, the balance of the Sexton products were purchased from other food manufacturers. To insure high quality foods, Sexton had operated food laboratories since the 1890s for the systematic testing of "quality" in the products it produced, the products it distributed and for the development of new products. By July 1, 1967, Sexton had developed and placed on the market a number of new convenience products including "Jet Set," an instant gelatin, canned "Chopped Chicken Livers" and "Spoon-Redi," a line of puddings to be spooned directly from the can into dessert dishes.

During its fiscal year that ended June 28, 1968, Sexton had net sales of $91 million, $28 million in assets, net earnings of $2 million and $1 million in short term debt. In June 1968, Sexton was the largest independent institutional dry grocery wholesaler in the United States and the only such wholesaler distributing nationwide and manufacturing a significant portion of its products. To put the size of the John Sexton & Co. into perspective, during the 1960s and 1970s, Sexton was the largest importer of tuna worldwide.

John Sexton & Co. Purchased by Beatrice Foods

In 1968, Mack Sexton was approached by Beatrice Foods with an offer to purchase the John Sexton & Co. Beatrice was attracted to Sexton Quality Foods’ distribution network, quality, variety of private label products, specialized food offerings, sales force and profitability. Mack Sexton’s initial response was no, but Beatrice Foods was very interested. Eventually both parties reached an agreement. Beatrice increased the purchase, pledged capital to expand Sexton Quality Foods distribution network, pledged capital to introduce a new Sexton frozen product line and pledged that the Sexton leadership would continue to lead and operate the company as a separate entity. On December 20, 1968, Beatrice acquired the business and assets of John Sexton & Co., exchanging approximately 375,000 shares of Beatrice's preferred convertible preference stock valued at $37,500,000. John Sexton & Co. would become a separate independent division of Beatrice Foods still led by Mack Sexton (son of Franklin), William Egan (son of Helen) and William Sexton (son of Sherman). Mack became a vice president of Beatrice and a Beatrice board member. John Sexton & Co. put Beatrice Foods into the wholesale grocery business and Beatrice put John Sexton & Co. into the frozen foods business. Beatrice and the Sexton leadership were interested in maximizing the investment in John Sexton & Co. by growing the company.
In 1969, rather than proceeding with the original Sexton Quality Foods plan to acquire a frozen food manufacturer, Sexton tapped Beatrice's frozen foods expertise and capital to launch a Sexton frozen product line that included frozen meats, fruits, vegetables and ethnic entrees. Sexton Quality Foods new frozen line required the addition of industrial freezer storage to all 13-branch warehouses and retrofitting all delivery trucks with freezers. Over the next 4 years, five of the eight planned additional Sexton branch warehouses were opened in Hawaii, Indianapolis, Houston, Seattle and Minneapolis.

In January 1978, Thomas G. Sexton, son of the founder, retired president and chairman of the company died at the age of 88 at his home in Barrington Hills, IL. Tom Sexton began work for his father in 1909 at the Lake & Franklin location. His first job was as a teamster delivering grocery in Chicago by horse and wagon. His career spanned 51 years until his retirement in 1959.

Beatrice operated John Sexton & Co. as an independent division until 1983. Mack Sexton remained president of John Sexton & Co., a vice president of Beatrice and had a seat on the Beatrice board of directors until his retirement in 1981. A legal side note, Mack Sexton was the defendant in the first successful age discrimination case. Beatrice allegedly pressured Mack to improve business results. Mack decided to remove family members from the company. On January 24, 1977, Mack Sexton, president of the Sexton Division, called his cousin William C. Sexton (son of Sherman J. ) into his office and discharged him, indicating that more aggressive "younger blood" was required for management. William Sexton was 59 years old and a 41-year employee. Please see Sexton v. Beatrice Foods for more information.

John Sexton & Co. Purchased by S.E. Rykoff & Co.

After many years of buying companies, Beatrice began the process of divesting. In 1983, Beatrice announce that it was divesting 50 business of which, John Sexton & Co. was generating $380 million in sales which represented a 10% annual revenue growth since its purchase in 1967.

The CEO of S.E. Rykoff & Co., Roger Coleman approached Beatrice with an offer to buy John Sexton & Co. Beatrice initially said no. In 1983, S.E. Rykoff & Co. ($346 million in sales) was a broad line grocer and restaurant equipment provider that operated in California, Nevada, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii. Rykoff had begun in 1911 as a family grocery store located near Union Station in downtown Los Angeles. In 1919, S.E. Rykoff dropped the retail customers and focused exclusively on wholesale customers. In 1972 S.E. Rykoff & Co went public and the shares were traded in the over the counter market (NASDAQ).

S.E. Rykoff & Co. CEO, Roger Coleman persuaded Beatrice to sell John Sexton & Co. for $84 million. With the purchase of Sexton Quality Foods, Rykoff double in size, gained a national distribution network of 18 warehouses, a national sales force, recognized brand name, a loyal customer base, food manufacturing facilities, food laboratories, test kitchens, chemical manufacturing facilities, a coffee roasting plant and a spice blending operation. The Sexton Quality Foods west coast branches in Seattle, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Hawaii were absorbed into the Rykoff operations. Sexton Quality Foods branches in the south, Midwest, east and south continued to operate under the Sexton banner. In 1984, to reflect the importance of the Sexton Foods acquisition, S.E. Rykoff & Co. changed the company name to Rykoff-Sexton. However, Rykoff-Sexton continued to operate Sexton Quality Foods and Rykoff as two separate companies.

Rykoff-Sexton and US Foodservice Merge

By the early 1990s, Rykoff-Sexton had successfully merged the two separate operating companies and was labeling the majority of the products under the Rykoff-Sexton Banner. The result was better operating efficiencies, economies of scale and recognizable brand name. In 1995, Rykoff-Sexton relocated the headquarters from Los Angeles, CA to Lisle, IL. Rykoff-Sexton was generating $1.6 billion in annual sales, which represented a 7% annual revenue growth rate since 1984.

By the mid 1990s, the restaurant industry had further evolved into a chain system where consistent, ready to assemble food products were demanded. Large national restaurant chains wanted to deal with one large national food distributor that could provide food products to their exact specifications as well as be able to deliver them every week. Rykoff-Sexton's management had decided that the best strategy was to strategically purchase other broad line grocers and grow revenue. During the mid 1990’s, Rykoff-Sexton purchased Continental Foods of Baltimore, MD for an undisclosed price and H&O Foods of Las Vegas, NV for $5.5 million in cash and assumption of $26.6 million in debt.

In February 1996, Rykoff-Sexton and US Foodservice of Wiles-Barre, PA announced their intent to merge. The merger was unanimously approved by the boards of directors of both companies. In 1996, US Foodservice was generating $1.5 billion in revenue and Rykoff-Sexton was generating $2 billion. The merger would combine the third and fourth largest U.S. broadline foodservice distributors with combined annual sales of approximately $3.5 billion. The 8.8 million shares of US Foodservice were exchanged for $270 million in Rykoff-Sexton stock. The $350 million in US Foodservice debt was assumed by Rykoff-Sexton. Rykoff-Sexton (RYK) funded the purchase by issuing 14.3 million new shares at $25 per share.

In September 1996, the newly merged Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice announce that corporate head quarters will be relocated to Wilkes-Barre, PA from Lisle, IL.

Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice and JP Foodservice Agree to Merge

In 1997, Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice (RYK) was generating $3.2 billion in annual sales. The combined company was in the process of re-branding all products to the US Foodservice Brand by dropping the Rykoff-Sexton, S.E. Rykoff & Co. and John Sexton & Co. brands. It was determined that a standardized and easily recognizable brand would better compete in the rapidly consolidating foodservice market. In addition, the US Foodservice brand would reflect a nationwide presence and distribution capabilities. During this time, the company headquarters were moved to Wilkes-Barre, PA.

In July 1997, JP Foodservice and Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice reached an agreement to merge the two companies. Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice share holders would exchange their Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice (RYK) stock for JP Foodservice stock (JPF). All outstanding Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice (RYK) shares were exchanged for $680 million in JP Foodservice (JPF) stock. The $700 million in Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice debt was assumed by the merged Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice-JP Foodservice balance sheet. In 1997, JP Foodservice was generating about $2 billion in annual sales primarily focused on the east coast. Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice was generating $3.2 billion in annual sales from its national distribution network and its manufacturing divisions. After the merger, the combined Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice-JP Foodservice operating company generated $5 billion in annual sales in 1997.

Rykoff-Sexton and JP Foodservice Become US Foodservice

In early 1998, the merged company Rykoff-Sexton-JP Foodservice changed its named to US Foodservice (USF) and dropped all Rykoff-Sexton-JP Foodservices brands and logos. In addition, US Foodservice focused exclusively on sales, marketing and distribution.

To help fund the merger, US Foodservice sold the Rykoff-Sexton Manufacturing Division (RSMD) to the private equity firm of Kohlberg & Company and RSMD senior management. RSMD manufactured over 1,400 food and non-food items and generated about $115 million in 1997. RSMD had manufacturing plants in Los Angeles, CA (S.E. Rykoff & Co.) which manufactured non-food items such as detergents, cleaning compounds, refuse container liners, cutlery, straws and sandwich bags, paper napkins, placemats, chefs' hats, coasters, paper lace doilies and a line of low temperature dishwashers. The plant in Englewood, NJ (Sexton Foods) manufactured coffee and spices. The 1800 Churchman Avenue plant in Indianapolis, IN (Sexton Quality Foods) manufactured more than 500 items including canned products, frozen products, refrigerated products, powdered products, shortenings/oils, dressings, sauces, syrups, flavorings, dry mixes, soup bases. RSMD supplied Rykoff-Sexton/US Foodservice but did some contract manufacture for restaurant chains and other private label brands.

The new company would operate under the name United Signature Foods L.L.C. Prior to the purchase, Kohlberg & Company required US Foodservice to enter into a 6-year supply contract with U.S. Foods LLC that increased 6% over the term. Gross proceeds from the supply agreement and asset sale totaled $101 million. Even with the sale of RSMD, some of John Sexton & Co. signature products live on. For instance, US Foodservice still markets Alamo Zestful Seasonings, Jamaica Relish (developed by Sexton Food Chef Tony Bartolotta), Chunky Bleu Cheese Dressing and Kettle Rich soups.

In 2000, US Foodservice was acquired by Dutch grocerRoyal Ahold
Ahold
Ahold is a major international supermarket operator based in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Ahold is listed on Euronext Amsterdam and the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.-History:...

 for $26 per share or $3.6 billion and the assumption of all outstanding US Foodservice debt. In 2006, Ahold stated that US Foodservice was generating $19.2 billion in sales.

In 2007, Royal Ahold sold US Foodservice through a $7.2 billion leverage buyout conducted by Clayton, Dubilier and Rice and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts. A side note, KKR purchased Beatrice Foods in 1986. Beatrice owned Sexton Foods from 1968 to 1983. As of June 2007, US Foodservice is jointly owned by Clayton, Dubilier and Rice and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts.

In 2009, US Foodservice (Chicago, IL) still privately held, was the second largest broadline foodservice distributor in the U.S. with $18.97 billion in revenue and 24,687 employees. SYSCO was the largest foodservice distributor.

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