Chicken of the Sea
A portion of Chicken of the Sea's current logo | |
Subsidiary | |
Genre | Seafood |
Headquarters | San Diego, California, USA |
Owner | Thai Union Group |
Website | www.chickenofthesea.com |
Chicken of the Sea was an American leading provider of packaged seafood, that is now owned by the Thai Union Group located in Samutsakorn, Thailand. The brand provides tuna, salmon, clams, crab, shrimp, mackerel, oysters, kipper snacks and sardines in cans, pouches and cups,under the brand names “Chicken of the Sea,” “Van Camps,” “Genova,” “Pacific Pearl,” and “Ace of Diamonds.”[1]
Company
As a subsidiary, its divisional headquarters are based in San Diego, California. The company markets a variety of other seafood items under the Chicken of the Sea brand name, including tuna, salmon, clam, crab, shrimp, oysters, mackerel, kipper snacks and sardines. The original company was founded in 1914 when Frank Van Camp and his son bought the California Tuna Canning Company and changed the name to the Van Camp Seafood Company. The phrase Chicken of the Sea, first devised as a way to describe the taste, was so successful that soon it also became the company name.
In 1963, Van Camp Seafood Company was purchased by Ralston Purina. In 1988, Ralston sold its Van Camp division to an Indonesian corporation, P.T. Mantrust, which had financial problems, and the primary creditor, Prudential Life Insurance Company, became the majority owner.
In 1997 the company was purchased by the investment group Tri-Union Seafoods LLC, made up of three partners:
- Thai Union International Inc., a Thai conglomerate based in Bangkok and the then-largest tuna packer in Asia and second largest in the world
- Edmund A. Gann, American owner of Caribbean Marine Service, Co., Inc., a tuna-fishing fleet
- Tri-Marine International, Inc., a global trading company formed in Singapore in 1972 dealing in tuna and tuna products headed by Renato Curto, president and majority shareholder.
The new owners changed the name of Van Camp Seafood Company to Chicken of the Sea International. In 2000, Tri-Marine International Inc and Edmund A. Gann sold their 50 percent interest in Chicken of the Sea to Thai Union International, Inc., leaving Thai Union the sole owner of the company. Chicken of the Sea International and Tri-Union International LLC merged into one company, still called Chicken of the Sea International.
With the 2003 acquisition of Empress International, an importer of frozen shrimp and other shellfish, Chicken of the Sea's total annual sales climbed to $600 million. In 2006, Thai Union formed a new division, Chicken of the Sea Frozen Foods, to focus on sales of premium quality fresh and frozen seafood products. This division has grown quickly, helping to further grow Chicken of the Sea's brand awareness and distribution in the food service and retail industries.
2014 marks Chicken of the Sea's 100th Anniversary and to celebrate they are paying it forward to local communities by giving away $1,000,000 to charitable organizations through a campaign called "100 Years of Good."
In August 2015, , Chicken of the Sea was sued, accused of colluding with Bumble Bee Foods and StarKist to fix prices.[2]
Chicken of the Sea was in talks to merge with Bumble Bee, but it was called off, December 3, 2015, after Justice Department expressed "Serious Concerns".[1][3]
Product name
The company's official explanation for the name of their product:
- In the "old days," fishermen referred to the white albacore tuna as "chicken of the sea." It was called this because the white color and very mild flavor reminded them of chicken. The founder of the company thought this would be a unique name for a brand of tuna, and the Chicken of the Sea brand is now widely known in the Americas.
Their advertising mascot, a blonde mermaid with a golden scepter, was introduced in the 1950s and soon became a familiar product icon. In her book, The Longest Trek: My Tour of the Galaxy, Grace Lee Whitney is credited as being the original Chicken of the Sea Mermaid. One of the photographs in the book documents this. (She is mostly famous for playing Yeoman Janice Rand in the first season of the original Star Trek TV series).
Jessica Simpson famously ate a can of Chicken of the Sea tuna on her TV show Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica, in which she asked her then-husband Nick Lachey: "Is this chicken, what I have, or is this fish? I know it's tuna, but it says Chicken... by the Sea [sic]."
Bibliography
"The Longest Trek: My Tour of the Galaxy"; by Grace Lee Whitney, Jim Denney, Foreword by Leonard Nimoy; Publisher: Linden Publishing; 1st edition (July 1, 1998); ISBN 1884956033 and ISBN 978-1884956034; pg 36
References
- 1 2 http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/chicken-sea-and-bumble-bee-abandon-tuna-merger-after-justice-department-expresses-serious
- ↑ "Lawsuit alleges StarKist colluded over prices; Ansys reports dip in profits; Arnet steps aside at Women and Girls Foundation". Pittsburgh Star Gazette. 6 August 2015. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
- ↑ "Chicken of Sea, Bumble Bee Abandon Tuna Merger as US Objects". ABC News. Retrieved 2015-12-04.
External links
- Chicken of the Sea Official Site
- Chicken of the Sea Mermaid
- Chicken of the Sea 100 Years of Good
- Chicken of the Sea Recipes