Hammond Packing Plant
The Hammond Packing Plant was a division of the G.H. Hammond Company, Limited located at South 36th and O Streets in South Omaha, Nebraska.[1]
History
The plant was opened in the 1880s and was then closed in 1901, when it was bought by the Armour Company for $5,000,000. In 1905 the National Packing Company bought the plant to reopen it. National was later busted by the federal government in the "Beef Trust" conspiracy.[2] There were a number of riots and civil unrest that originated or included events at the Cudahy Packing Plant.[3]
See also
References
- ^ (1898) Chicago Securities. Volume 8. Chicago Directory Company. p 197.
- ^ (1904) "Packing house notes", Ice and Refrigeration. Nickerson & Collins Co. p 245.
- ^ Nebraska Bureau of Labor and Industrial Statistics. (1894) Biennial report of the Bureau of Labor and Industrial Statistics of Nebraska. p 463.
External links
- "Historic photo of Hammond Packing Plant" Archived 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine
- v
- t
- e
Meatpacking industry in Omaha
- South Omaha
- Livestock Exchange Building
- Union Stockyards
- Packer's National Bank Building
- South 24th Street
- Syndicate Park
- Greek Town
- Armour and Company
- Cudahy Packing Company
- Swift & Company
- Morris & Company
- Sheely Packing Company
- Hammond
- Swift
- Cudahy
- Armour
- Wilson
- Boyd's
- Bill Paxton
- Herman Kountze
- John Creighton
- James Boyd
41°12′32″N 95°58′01″W / 41.20878°N 95.96708°W / 41.20878; -95.96708