H. B. Reese

H. B. Reese
Photo of H.B. Reese
Born Harry Burnett Reese
(1879-05-24)May 24, 1879
York County, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died May 16, 1956(1956-05-16) (aged 76)
West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S.
Resting place Hershey Cemetery, Hershey, PA
Other names HB, Harry Reese, Poppy Reese, Mr. Reese's
Occupation Chocolatier/Confectioner
Known for Inventing Reese's Peanut Butter Cups
Net worth approx. $1.8 Billion USD
Title Founder and Chairman of the Board, H.B. Reese Candy Company, Hershey, PA
Spouse(s)
Blanche Edna Hyson (m. 1900)
Children 16
Website www.harryburnettreese.info

Harry Burnett "H. B." Reese (May 24, 1879 – May 16, 1956) was an American inventor and businessman known for creating the No. 1 selling candy brand in the United States, Reese's Peanut Butter Cups[1] and founding the H.B. Reese Candy Company.[2] In 2009, he was posthumously inducted into the Candy Hall of Fame.[3]

Early life

H.B. Reese was born on May 24, 1879 on the Frosty Hill Farm, an agricultural and dairy farm located near the Muddy Creek Forks Historic District in York County, Pennsylvania.[2] He was the only child of Annie Belinda Manifold (1854–1935) and Aquilla Asbury Reese Jr. (1845–1914). When it came to earning money as a young man, Reese was creative. He farmed the land, but also milked cows because doing so was a quick way to earn cash. He even built a pond where he raised frogs that he sold to restaurants in the Baltimore area. By 1898, Reese was an accomplished French horn player who performed with local area bands.[4]

Marriage and family

On August 1, 1900 Reese married Blanche Edna Hyson (1882–1968), the daughter of Mary Elizabeth Markey (1857–1952) and Robert Bortner Hyson (1853–1930). Together they had 16 children, 8 daughters and 8 sons (13 of whom survived to adulthood).[5]

A true family man, Reese's mother Annie Belinda Manifold (1854–1935) as well as her two sisters, Elizabeth Turner Manifold (1846-1910) and Mary Collins Manifold (1847-1933), lived with him for the rest of their lives. At least 20 family members were present during a typical Reese family supper and sometimes more than 40 people were present when friends and relatives were invited to join them.[4]

Early career

By 1903, Reese was managing the fishing operations of his father-in-law’s cannery business located in Ditchley, Virginia. In 1912 he managed a dairy farm in Woodbine, Pennsylvania, but took a factory job in New Freedom, Pennsylvania in 1915 to support his growing family.[6]

Dairy manager for Mr. Hershey

In 1916, Reese read an employment ad in the York Daily Record by Milton S. Hershey seeking to hire people to manage and operate his numerous dairy farms that were located in the Hershey, Pennsylvania area. In 1917, Hershey hired Reese to work as a dairyman at Farm 28-A. In 1918, Hershey asked Reese to manage a dairy farm called the Round Barn. Milton Hershey visited the Round Barn every two weeks because it was an experimental dairy farm that used new milking machines (more efficient than milking cows by hand) as he sought new approaches to animal treatment and milk production. However by 1919, Hershey found the Round Barn too expensive to operate and closed it down.[6]

Early candy ventures

R&R Candy Company

Jobless in 1919, Reese formed a new business called the R&R Candy Company that he operated from an old canning factory located in Hummelstown, Pennsylvania where he manufactured milk chocolate covered almonds and raisins, selling them to local stores.[7]

Superior Chocolate and Confectionery Company

Reese knew he needed high-quality manufacturing equipment in order to boost the potential of his Hummelstown, Pennsylvania candy business. So in January, 1920 he reorganized the R&R Candy Company as the Superior Chocolate and Confectionery Company and proceeded to raise today's equivalent of $290,000 by issuing stock in the newly formed company. A State charter for the new company was issued on May 14, 1920 with the following company officers:[8]

  • President: Joseph Burkholder
  • Secretary: E. M. Hershey
  • Treasurer: J. Landis Strickler
  • Manager: Harry B. Reese

Nonetheless, the business ultimately failed.[9]

Under pressure to support his 10-children with yet another baby on the way, Reese took a paper mill job in Spring Grove, Pennsylvania where he worked a second job as a butcher and also a third job canning vegetables.[7]

Hershey factory employee

In 1921, Reese's father-in-law purchased a home at 18 E. Areba Avenue in Hershey, Pennsylvania for his son-in-law's growing family. With his return to Hershey, Reese began working at The Hershey Company factory in the shipping department and was soon promoted to foreman.[9]

On the side, working from the basement of his Areba Avenue home, he made a variety of confectionery products including hard candy, chocolate covered nut (fruit) and raisins, mint (candy) as well as two popular milk chocolate covered caramel-coconut candy bars that he invented:[10]

  1. The Lizzie Bar named for his oldest daughter, Mary Elizabeth.
  2. And the Johnny Bar named for his son, John, who worked alongside his father in The Hershey Company shipping department.

The ingredients for both bars included fresh grated coconut, caramel, molasses, cocoa butter and honey. The main difference between the two bars was that the Johnny Bar had Nut (fruit) as an ingredient. From the very beginning, Reese used chocolate manufactured by The Hershey Company for his chocolate coatings.[11]

Reese enjoyed enough success to finally quit his factory job at The Hershey Company and set out on his own to "make a living" manufacturing candy.[6]

H.B. Reese Candy Company

Reese incorporated the H.B. Reese Candy Company in 1923. Selling a large assortment of candies on consignment, his employees coated by hand each piece of candy on marble slabs, some coated with milk chocolate and others with dark chocolate that were placed in two-pound and five-pound boxes that were sold in department store candy displays. To promote sales, Reese set up special coating tables in the front display windows of large, downtown department stores and had his employees coat candies in full view of shoppers passing by while other employees handed out freshly made samples.[12]

Here's a brief list of the candy initially manufactured by the H.B. Reese Candy Company. They were made with ingredients such as real cocoa butter, fresh cream, fresh grated coconut and freshly roasted peanuts:[4]

Butter creamMarshmallow
ButterscotchMarshmallow-Nut (fruit)*
Chocolate Jets*Nougat*
Coated Date (fruit)*Nuttees*
Coconut Caramel*Peanut Butter Cups*
Coconut Cream*Peanut Clusters*
Cream CaramelPeppermint Cream*
Honey Dew Coconut*Raisin Clusters*

Note: *These 12-candies were sold in five-pound boxes during the holiday season.[4]

Borrowing money from a York County, Pennsylvania bank in 1926, Reese built a large home and a new factory that were located next to each other at 203-205 W Caracas Ave in Hershey, Pennsylvania. By 1935, he had 62 employees as well as his 6 sons working for him and was so successful that he was able to pay off all his mortgages.[13]

Reese's Peanut Butter Cups

By 1928, H.B. (Poppy Reese) and Blanche (Mommy Reese) had sixteen children. That same year, H.B. Reese invented Reese's Peanut Butter Cups which became part of his assorted chocolate line.[9]

How H.B. Reese Invented Reese's Peanut Butter Cups

"In late 1927, H.B. was delivering some of his candy to a store in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the Bluebird Candy Shop. The owner of the shop was having problems with another supplier who could not keep him supplied with a candy made of peanut butter covered with chocolate. He asked H.B. if he could supply him with something like that. H.B. saw an opportunity and with considerable persistence, seized it. H.B. originally rolled the peanut butter into a small ball and dipped it into chocolate; the peanut butter manufacturing process was easy to automate, and the cup was used to help that process, since it provided a small compartment for each item. The candy was quickly added to the assortment box in 1928."[4]

The Success of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups

Soon the company was packaging 120 individually wrapped pieces per box that sold for a penny per cup. The penny peanut butter cup was the candy that helped Reese pay off the mortgages on both his house and factory by 1935. This was especially noteworthy since the United States was still in the grip of the Great Depression and chocolate was considered a luxury.[4]

During World War II, economic constraints and scarcity of materials led him to discontinue his other candies and concentrate solely on his Peanut butter cup, his most popular offering.

Throughout the war, Reese built his company based on the success of a single product, Reese's Peanut Butter Cups. And instead of selling the product by weight, peanut butter cups were packaged for retail sale with each candy wrapper prominently displaying the slogan: "Made in Chocolate Town, So They Must Be Good". Additionally in 1943, the five-cent cup was introduced and as packaging machine and plant automation were placed into production, the sales of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups doubled every four years.[14]

Before H.B. Reese died in 1956, he began construction of a second plant located at 925 Reese Avenue, Hershey, Pennsylvania. Completed on November 30, 1957, this new modern plant contained 100,000 square feet of state-of-the-art manufacturing technology built at a cost equivalent of $6.9 million at a time when the sales of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups were equivalent to $125 million.[15]

Death

After a short illness, H.B. Reese died of a Myocardial infarction[16] on May 16, 1956 at the St. Mary's Medical Center located in West Palm Beach, Florida (where Reese had been vacationing). His residence at the time of his death was located at 630 Linden Road, Hershey, PA.

Legacy

On July 2, 1963 (seven years after the death of H.B. Reese), when the sales of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups were equivalent to $243 million, his sons Robert, John, Ed, Ralph, Harry and Charles Richard Reese, merged the H.B. Reese Candy Company with The Hershey Company in a tax free stock-for-stock merger. In 2018 after 55 years of stock splits, the Reese brothers' original 666,316 shares of Hershey common stock represent 16 million Hershey shares valued at over $1.8 billion that pay annual cash dividends of $42 million.[17] At the time of its 1963 merger, the H.B. Reese Candy Company was celebrating its 40th Anniversary and had just added 200,000 square feet of new state-of-the-art manufacturing capacity to its 925 Reese Avenue, Hershey, PA plant.[8] In 1969, only 6 years after the Reese/Hershey merger, Reese's Peanut Butter Cups became the best-selling product of The Hershey Company.[9]

As of September 20, 2012, Reese's Peanut Butter Cups were the No. 1 selling candy brand in the United States with sales of $2.603 billion.[1] Furthermore back in 1973, the non-union H.B. Reese Candy Company plant added yet another 200,000 square feet of manufacturing space in order to begin production of the Kit Kat for sale in the United States[8] which had 2012 U.S. sales of $948 million, making Kit Kat the No. 4 selling candy brand in the United States.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Snickers Surging to Top of Global Candy Race". Ad Age. September 20, 2012. Retrieved February 27, 2018.
  2. 1 2 "REESE'S Peanut Butter Cups". Brad Reese Peanut Butter and Chocolate. Retrieved 14 October 2016.
  3. "Harry Burnett "H.B." Reese Inducted into the Candy Hall of Fame in 2009". NCSA National Confectionary Sales Association: Candy Hall of Fame Inductees. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Reese's Peanut Butter Cups: the Untold Story: Inventor, H.B. Reese. iUniverse. November 19, 2008. p. 108. ISBN 9780595608041. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  5. "The Fascinating Rise Of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups". Business Insider. June 30, 2013. Retrieved February 27, 2018.
  6. 1 2 3 "Reese Candy Company". Hershey Community Archives. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  7. 1 2 "H.B. Reese Made A Sweet Business Out Of Quality Candy". Investor's Business Daily. January 21, 2015. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  8. 1 2 3 "H.B. Reese Chronology". Hershey Community Archives. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  9. 1 2 3 4 "Was it Hershey or Reese That Made Peanut Butter Cups Great?". Atlas Obscura. October 27, 2016. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  10. "11 Delicious Facts About Reese's". Mental Floss Magazine. March 22, 2016. Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  11. "10 Things You Never Knew and Should Know About Reese's". Spoon University Food Resource. March 10, 2017. Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  12. "7 Things You Never Knew About Reese's, Straight From an Employee". POPSUGAR. August 20, 2017. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  13. "The History of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups". Today I Found Out. June 5, 2013. Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  14. "Made in Hershey, So It Must Be Good: H.B. Reese Candy Company". Hershey Community Archives. September 15, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2018.
  15. "The H.B. Reese Candy Company Story". Lebanon Daily News. June 9, 1956. Retrieved March 21, 2018.
  16. "H. B. Reese". NNDB. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  17. "The 1963 Reese/Hershey Merger Closing Agenda" (PDF). BradReeseCom. Retrieved March 21, 2018.
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