Collection Summary
Information for Researchers
Indexing Terms
Administrative Information
Institutional History
Bibliography
Scope and Contents
Collection Summary
Title: American Sugar Refinery Company Records
Date (inclusive): 1879-1903
Collection Number: MS 0052
Creator:
American Sugar Refinery
Company
Physical Description:
Extent: 5 volumes
(1.0 Linear feet)
Repository:
California Historical Society
678 Mission Street
San Francisco, CA, 94105
415-357-1848
reference@calhist.org
URL: http://www.californiahistoricalsociety.org/
Physical Location: Collection is stored onsite.
Language of Materials: Collection materials are in English.
Abstract: Two volumes of bylaws (1879 and 1885), a journal
(1890-1895), a cashbook (1890-1903), and a general ledger (1890-1903).
Information for Researchers
Access
Publication Rights
Copyright has not been assigned to The North Baker Research Library. All requests
for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing
to the Library Director. Permission for publication is given on behalf of The
North Baker Research Library as the owner of the physical items and is not
intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also
be obtained by the reader.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], American Sugar Refinery Company Records. MS 52,
California Historical Society.
Indexing Terms
The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the
library's online public access catalog.
American Sugar Refining Company
Bay Sugar Refinery
Havemeyers & Elder
Low, C. Adolphe
Spreckels, C. A. (Claus August), 1858?-1946
Bylaws.
Cashbooks.
Journals (accounts)
Ledgers (account books)
Sugar factories-California-San Francisco.
Sugarcane industry-California-San Francisco.
Administrative Information
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Donor unknown.
Accruals
No additions are expected.
Processing Information
Processed by Jennifer Schaffner in 1999.
Institutional History
The American Sugar Refinery was formed in 1879 with the purchase of the Bay Refinery,
which had initially been established by Claus Spreckels in 1864. Spreckels (the
"sugar king of California") "organized" the Bay Sugar Refining Company in 1863, his
start in the sugar industry. He bought the machinery in New York and returned to San
Francisco to build the refinery. Soon thereafter he sold his interest with a good
profit.
Hittell, writing in 1882, places the plant at Union and Battery. He reports the owner
then to have been C. Adolphe Low, whose name appears on the first bylaws in these
records. Shuck reports in 1897 that the company was then bought by Havemeyers and
Elder, New York. Ironically perhaps, Henry O. Havemeyer was Spreckels' rival, having
organized the American Sugar Refining Co., which was a cartel, or trust, of sugar
producers.
The American Sugar Refinery Company should apparently not be confused with the
American Sugar Refining Co., although the journal, general ledger and cashbook in
these records do have the name of the cartel stamped on the pages from 1897 on.
According to Adler, the trust, based largely on the East Coast and in the Midwest,
wanted to share the West Coast market with Spreckels. When Spreckels declined, the
American Sugar Refining Co. then gained control of its near namesake. Adler reports
that the state of California filed suit in 1888 (?) against the American Sugar
Refinery for selling out to the cartel. During the court fight the refinery was
closed, but reopened in 1890.
Spreckels retaliated against the American Sugar Refining Company cartel by building
his own refinery in Philadelphia. A price war ensued, with the trust selling sugar
below cost on the West Coast. The price war ended in 1891, when the cartel bought
controlling interests in Spreckels' Philadelphia and Bay Area refineries. Hearings
were held in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1911 regarding price-fixing ("the
great sugar war between old man Claus Spreckels and Havemeyer" - p. 1928) and other
monopolistic practices by the American Sugar Refining Co. The California companies
figure in minor ways, but Spreckels' son and other sugar magnates were questioned in
detail.
Bibliography
-
Adler, Jacob.
Claus Spreckels: the Sugar King in
Hawaii.
Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1966. p. 24
-
John S. Hittell.
Commerce and
Industries of the Pacific Coast of North America.
San
Francisco: A.L. Bancroft, 1882. p. 547
- There are but 2 refineries now in operation on the Pacific Coast, both
of which are located in San Francisco -- the California Sugar Refinery,
on Eighth and Brannan streets, owned by Claus Spreckels and his
associates; and the American Sugar Refinery (formerly known as the Bay
Sugar Refinery), on Union and Battery streets, belonging to C. Adolphe
Low & Co....
- The American Sugar Refinery, formerly known as the Bay Sugar Refinery,
located on the corner of Battery and Union streets, was formerly in the
hands of an incorporation of which Claus Spreckels was the president. In
1879 the property was sold to a company of which C. Adolphe Low is the
president. Since changing hands the capacity of the works has been
doubled.
-
San Francisco: its builders,
past and present.
Chicago; San Francisco: S.J. Clarke Publishing
Co., 1913. Vol. 1, p. 5-10.
- Havemeyer was here reported to be the power behind the American Sugar
Refining Co., a large trust. Here Spreckels is reported to have resisted
the trust, by building the sugar plant in Philadelphia that was so
controversial in the House's price-fixing hearings.
-
Shuck, Oscar T.
Historical
Abstract of San Francisco
. San Francisco: Oscar T. Shuck,
1897.
- Bay Sugar Refinery est. by Spreckels in 1864, sold in 1866, destroyed
by fire June 19, 1876. American Sugar Refinery succeeded Bay Sugar
Refinery in 1879, bought by Havemeyers & Elder, New York in March
1889.
-
United States. Congress. House. Special Committee on
Investigation of American Sugar Refining Co.
Hearings held before the Special committee on the investigation of the
American Sugar Refining Co, and others on June 12 [-August 11]
1911.
Washington: GPO, 1911. 3 vol.
Scope and Contents
The records include bylaws dated 1879 and 1885, a journal from 1890 to 1895, a
general ledger for 1890 to 1903, and a cashbook covering 1890 through 1903.