OUR
HISTORY
Although the
Horace A Kimball and S. Ella Kimball Foundation was not legally
established until July 20th, 1956, its roots along with those of
its sister organization, the Phyllis Kimball Johnstone and H. Earle
Kimball foundation, go back to the early 1900s. It was then that
Horace A. Kimball of Providence, Rhode Island, a retired woolen
manufacturer, acquired controlling interest of the Clicquot Club
Beverage Company of Millis, Massachusetts, primarily for the benefit
of his son, Horace Earle, and daughter, Phyllis.
At the time,
like so many industrialized companies in the Northeast, Clicquot
was foundering in the panic of 1893 and 1894.
The internationally
famous Clicquot Club Ginger Ale evolved from of all things, sparkling
or carbonated cider, which was produced on a Millis Farm by one
Charles LaCroix and Henry Millis, son of Lansing Millis for whom
the town was named. Sparkling cider was the product which started
the Clicquot story .
LaCroix had worked out a way to carbonate cider and bottled it for
his own and his friends' enjoyment. Because it was so like champagne,
Henry Millis suggested that he name it Clicquot Club, borrowing
the term from the famous family whose historic product is still
bottled in the chateau country of France.
With Millis'
help, LaCroix acquired some bottling equipment, purchasing a foot
power filling machine, the first device of its kind to come into
New England.
Ginger
Ale Replaces Cider
LaCroix began
operations in 1881. When the cider had been sold, the equipment
stood idle. Millis sent LaCroix to see the A.D. Puffer Company of
Boston who supplied machinery and extract for soft drink bottlers.
Puffer showed LaCroix how to make ginger ale, birch beer, sarsaparilla
and other popular soft drinks of the day. Thus, to keep the sparkling
cider bottling equipment busy 12 months a year, Clicquot
Club Ginger Ale was born.
Millis had financed
the building of a small plant located near a spring-fed source of
water of remarkable purity and flavor - and so the famous Clicquot
spring began to furnish water in great abundance. This pure natural
water source was destined to play an important part in developing
the quality and flavor of Clicquot Club beverages in the years to
come.
Within a few
years the manufacture of sparkling cider was dropped. Ginger ale
and other flavors grew in popularity to the point where concentrating
on them became the obvious road to success.
It would be
nice to report that Clicquot's early progress was made over a smooth
and royal road, but the facts are quite different. In the 1880s
it was a small, comfortable business, growing each year in a leisurely
sort of way. Equipment was crude. Footpower machinery produced one
bottle at a time. Bottles were washed by soaking in tubs of caustic
solution and carefully rinsed by hand, a bottle at a time. One footpower
filler could produce 100 to 125 cases a day. Around 1899 the
plant began putting up 16-ounce full pint bottles and started to
sell to the wholesale grocery trade. Brownell & Field Company of
Providence, an old established firm gave Clicquot its first "big"
order. It was for 50 cases. Clicquot's bottles were quite fancy.
They carried a label and "necktie", and the necks were foil-wrapped.
Each bottle was also individually wrapped in special red, white
and blue paper held in place by a sticker which explained how to
lift the crown, a new device, from the bottle top.
H.
Earle Kimball Comes to Millis
In the panic
of 1893-94, Henry Millis and LaCroix suffered considerable financial
loss, which was typical of many business ventures in the industrial
Northeast. Conditions were extremely bad. At one time there was
only one employee. He would bottle the product one day and sell
it the next. After some difficult years during which the business
was variously owned, the controlling interest was acquired by Horace
A. Kimball, who sent his son H. Earle Kimball to Millis to manage
the affairs of the company.
The real success
of Clicquot Club dates from the day young Kimball came to Millis.
He had played football and baseball at Brown University, and he
brought to Millis the ideals of fair play, American Sportsmanship
and personal integrity, he had learned on the playing fields of
his Alma Mater. His father gave him only one piece of advice...to
modernize the plant and to advertise the product, but only after
he had earned the money with which to progress in both directions.
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| H. Earle Kimball
okays an advertising layout presented to him by Advertising
Director, Frank Weston as Vice President and General Sales
Manager, A.T. Barnard smiles approval. |
After Kimball came to Millis, the sale of Clicquot Club Ginger Ale
began to broaden. The company's policy in those early days was to
sell its product through wholesale grocers like S.S. Pierce Company
of Boston and C.A. Cross & Company of Fitchburg. From New England
the business spread toward New York, New Jersey, through the Middle
Atlantic states and on toward the Pacific Coast. Wholesale grocers
bought by the carload, and Clicquot's own sales staff was supplemented
by manufacturers' agents located in principal cities.
By
1907 Clicquot Club was ready to begin national advertising. In that
year the company spent $7,000 to tell magazine readers about their
product. It was the first investment in a great merchandising force
which never stopped for half a century. In that year Clicquot Club
became a nationally advertised product.
No
Compromise with Quality
When World War
I came along, Clicquot Club was at a height of national popularity.
With the advent of the United States into the European fracas came
a serious shortage of sugar and other ingredients. Clicquot's dilemma
was either to alter the quality of its product or to restrict its
manufacture. There was no hesitation. The formula was never changed.
Only as much as Clicquot Club Ginger Ale was made as the sugar supply
permitted. There was no compromise with quality in the 1916-1918
period, and this same experience was destined to be repeated in
World War II when conditions were virtually the same.
Nearly
all the popular magazines of the day were used by Clicquot Club
in its early advertising. Many of them have long since suspended
publication, such as the Saturday Evening Post. After World
War I Clicquot began to use daily newspapers and outdoor billboards,
continuing this policy until 1926 when radio, then a new advertising
medium, offered its own particular facilities to advertising.
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Harry Reser playing the banjo
to Clicquot penquins.
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Clicquot Club became one of America's pioneer radio advertisers,
creating the Clicquot Club Eskimos, a bright dance orchestra under
the direction of Harry Reser which remained on the NBC network week
after week from 1926 through 1934. At one time the program was especially
cited by NBC as being the oldest continuous weekly show on the network.
From the days of the old crystal sets to the latest type of consoles,
the Eskimos were standard weekly entertainment in millions
of American homes, and the sale of the product extended throughout
the length and breadth of America and far beyond its shores.
Magazine, newspaper and outdoor
advertising was continued although radio, for a time at least, became
the leading medium. In 1924, Clicquot Club installed the largest
animated electric sign in the world on Broadway at Times Square,
a full city block long, 6 stories above the street. The vivid action
of the eskimo boy, the whip cracking and the radiating Aurora Borealis
required 21 miles of wiring and 20,000 electric lamps at a cost
of $90,000 a year.
During
this period full trainloads of Clicquot Club Ginger Ale and other
beverages left the 1/3-mile-long siding at Millis for Chicago, Philadelphia
and other American centers to be distributed via wholesale grocers
to the retailers of the land. to California via pan-isthmian steamers
heavy shipments went to the Pacific Coast and to the Orient.
Full
Quarts Introduced
During the mid-thirties
there came a demand for larger bottles. In 1934 when this became
evident, Clicquot Club bottled its product in full quarts and introduced
its new package with a "high hat" parade in Boston. . . a huge procession
of Clicquot Club trucks, each driven by a man in formal afternoon
clothes.
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Clicquot
Plant in Millis, Massachusetts at it looked in 1930.
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But the period
of long-haul shipments was drawing to a close. Higher freight rates
and other transportation problems were soon to make their influence
felt on Clicquot's policy. The time had come for Clicquot Club to
be manufactured nearer to its consumer markets if the policy of
giving the public a quality product at the lowest possible price
was to continue. Thus it was decided in 1938 to offer the Clicquot
Club franchise to selected local bottlers who could meet Clicquot's
high standards of quality. Bottling techniques had improved. Water
rectifying and purifying methods had been perfected, and for the
first time it seemed possible to manufacture a product of uniform
excellence in hundreds of Clicquot Club franchise plants throughout
the country. Because of its famed quality, its well known name and
trade-mark, and the great power of its national advertising, Clicquot's
offer attraced leading bottlers from coast to coast.
The success
of the company continued for a time, but problems lay ahead. Kimball
was getting older and the drive from his home in Providence to Millis
became more taxing. Other companies were making their mark. The
competition from the likes of Cott and Canada Dry was felt, and
the American public had a big thirst for cola drinks. Coca Cola
and Pepsi Cola along with root beer and Moxie cut the demand for
ginger ale and the other flavors that Clicquot was producing, although
Clicquot remained the favorite ginger ale.
Kimball
Looks for Assistance
In 1952 H. Earle
Kimball and his sister Phyllis Kimball Johnstone owned 51% and 49%
of Clicquot stock, respectively. Both were married but neither Clicquot
owners had children. Kimball wanted to continue the business of
the company but with the pressures mounting, he sought help. He
turned to his lawyer, friend, and fellow Brown graduate, Thomas
F. Black, Jr., then of the firm of Greenough, Lyman & Cross in Providence.
He wanted to retire and have Black run the company.
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Black
agreed but by then he was also President of the Providence
Institute for Savings (the Old Stone Bank). Black also admitted
he knew little about the bottling business and suggested the
inclusion of Adolph F. Haffenreffer, chairman and treasurer
of Enterprise Brewery of Fall River, manufacturers of Boh
or Bohemian Beer. Kimball instructed his lawyer to do his
bidding but brought up another matter. what to do with the
company after his death? Black suggested to Kimball, the creation
of several private charitable foundations; one in the name
of his parents, Horace A. and Sarah Ella Kimball, the other
in his name, and that of his sister, Phyllis Kimball (Johnstone).
Her husband, Chester A. Johnstone, was a retired vice president
of Clicquot Club.
It is important to note here partial instructions given to
the trustees by Kimball in regards to his desires concerning
the foundation which was to bear his parents name:
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T
homas F. Black, Jr.,
Former Clicquot Club President and original Kimball Foundation
Trustee
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In my will I have provided that the residue of my estate,
a substantial portion of which I expect will consist of
the stock of Clicquot Club Company....will go to The Foundation,
described therein. Accordingly, The Foundation will become
the owner of the stock of this company...
I have purposely not incorporated the foregoing directions
in my will because (1) I do not want the operations of the
Clicquot Club Company restricted so that its future as a
successful business operation would be endangered, as that
would not help the furthermore of aid to charitable organizations,
and (2) I do not wish to embarrass the operations of the
company by encouraging some to assert claims which might
not be true or just.
I
call attention to the fact that in making my own personal
contributions to charity during my lifetime I have given
to many different institutions and charitable purposes and
casues, but it is not my wish that distributions made by
The Foundation shall necessarily follow the pattern of my
own giving because I realize that with changing times different
needs of the community assume different importance. I would
like the directors or trustees to continue the Clicquot
Club Company business for as long as my directors or trustees
deem such operation to be consistent with good business
practice and no longer.
I
request without limiting my directors or trustees that in
making distribution or trustees that in making distribution
of the principal and income of the Foundation preference
be given to inhabitants of the State of Rhode Island, and
charitable, religious or educational institutions or associations
serving the inhabitants of Rhode Island...
August
5, 1952, H. Earle Kimball
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Black became
president of Clicquot and piloted the company for several years
after the death of Kimball in the mid 1950s. During this period,
a serious threat emerged from the offices of La Maison Veuve Clicquot-Ponsardin,
the most celebrated vitner of France. Lansing Millis had called
his ginger ale Clicquot, because it reminded him of the famous French
wine. In the late fifties, officials of Veuve Clicquot threatened
court action if the American soft drink manufacturer didn't cease
using the name Clicquot. Black travelled to France and a meeting
was held at which it was agreed that the Millis based company would
drop the name at an agreed future date.
(From
Boston Herald, Business Section, February 1956.)
Clicquot Club Introduces "Lotts Sparkle"
The Clicquot Club Company, Millis, Mass., manufacturer of ginger
ale, sparkling water and other soft drinks, plans a stepped
up advertising and merchandising program based on market by
market promotions. The company will mark its seventy-fifth anniversary
in business next year.
The campaign will use the firm's Eskimo boy trade character,
one of the most famous in the history of adverising, and will
introduce a companion character in the form of a blonde girl,
also in Eskimo costume, to be know as "Lotta Sparkle."
The Lotta Sparkle personality will appear in newspaper advertising
and on television commercials as being present "in every
glass of Clicquot." |
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Miss "Lotta Sparkle," Clicquot
Club's new trademark character, meets Thomas
F. Black, Jr., Clicquot Club president, at a party
which marked the start of a stepped-up advertising campaign
for the company.
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Company
Sold to Cott
Declining sales,
increased competition and the thought of losing their long held
name, probably had a lot to do with the company being sold to Cott
Beverage of Connecticut in 1960.
There are many
descendants of hard working and dedicated employees of the Clicquot
Club Company who, even to this day, are unhappy with the way things
ended. After all, Clicquot was Millis and Millis was Clicquot -
their feelings are understandable.
The company
operated for a number of years under the direction of John Cott
who continued to bottle Clicquot until the name change agreement
went into effect. Cott Beverage was later sold to Canada Dry and
the plant closed. The old plant building is now used by chain store
retailers mostly for storage.
On the smoke
stack the name Clicquot is faded by the elements but still proudly
visible, a stark reminder of a great past. Presently, directly across
the road from the plant is a popular and successful restaurant named
the Clicquot Grille where sons and daughters of past employees dine
and view the remanants of the famous eskimo, "Lotta Sparkle" and
the best ginger ale ever made.
The
Foundations
Attention was
turned to the operation of the two foundations by trustees, Black
and Haffenreffer, who elected a third, Philip A. Feiner, a Providence
businessman and former secretary and director of Clicquot.
Schedule of First Contributions
Made By The Horace A. Kimball And S. Ella Kimball Foundation-
Dec. 31, 1957
| Date
Made |
Donee |
Amount
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| 12/28/56 |
United
Fund, Inc., Providence, RI |
$2,000.00
|
| Rhode
Island Hospital, Providence, RI |
$1,500.00
|
| Brown
University, Providence, RI |
$1,500.00
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| Providence
College, Providence, RI |
$1,500.00
|
| Roger
Williams General Hospital, Providence, RI |
$1,500.00
|
| Providence
Lying-In Hospital, Providence, RI |
$1,500.00
|
| 11/1/57 |
Providence
College, Providence, RI |
$1,500.00
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| Brown
University, Providence, RI |
$1,500.00
|
| Rhode
Island Hospital, Providence, RI |
$5,000.00
|
| United
Fund, Inc., Providence, RI |
$2,000.00
|
| 11/22/57 |
Roman
Catholic Bishop of Fall River, a Corporation Sole,
Fall River, Mass. |
$1,000.00
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Total...$20,500.00
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Summary of Operations of Harce
A. Kimball and
S. Ella Kimball Foundation Through Decmber 31, 1957
The
Horace A. Kimball and S. Ella Kimball Foundation was established
on July 20, 1956, in order to carry out the will dated August
5, 1952, of the late H. Earle Kimball of the City and County
of Providence and State of Rhode Island. A true copy of
this will is attached to this statement.
On December
17, 1956, the Foundation received the sum of $50,000 from
the trustees of the trust established pursuant to Article
Fifth of the will of the late H. Earle Kimball. On December
20, 1956 the Foundation received 150 shares of stock of
Clicquot Club Company, a Massachusetts corporation, as a
gift from the sister of the late H. Earle Kimball. In addition,
it received income from interest during the period ending
Decmber 31, 1957, amounting to $488.37. Also, during this
period it incurred expenses of $119.54 and made charitable
contributions amounting to $20,500. As of Decmber 31, 1957,
the Foundation had a balance on hand of $29,868.33, of which
$135 was in cash and the remainder in United States Treasury
Bills, plus the above referred to 150 shares of common stock
of Clicquot Club Company. The Foundation keeps its books
and accounts on the cash basis. Attached hereto is a true
copy of the financial statements of the Foundation for the
period through December 31, 1957.
Thomas
F. Black, Jr., President
Horace A. Kimball and S. Ella Kimball Foundation
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Adolph
F. Haffenreffer - Clicquot Club Director,
Officer and Foundation Trustee
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On January 12,
1961 Philip A. Feiner fell dead from a heart attack on Weybosset
Street in downtown Providence in the late afternoon. He had asked
that should he predecease his brother Arthur, that he (Arthur) be
appointed in his place. Arthur H. Feiner, a Providence lawyer, then
came aboard. That following May, Adolph F.Haffenreffer died, leaving
Black and Feiner to run the two foundations. Shortly thereafter,
Gordon Feiner and Thomas F. Black, III, were elected trustees. The
two foundations really functioned as one with Arthur H. Feiner,
President of the Johnstone Foundation and the elder Black, President
of the Kimball Foundation. This system worked for about eight years,
with gifts made to a variety of causes.
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Former
Kimball Trustee and Clicquot Officer, Philip
A. Feiner
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In the mid-seventies
it was decided that separation of the foundations was feasible.
It was decided that Arthur and Gordon Feiner would run the Johnstone
Foundation and Black and his son the Kimball Foundation. Arthur
Feiner and his son appointed a third trustee, as called for in the
bylaws. Arthur Feiner passed away in the late seventies. His son,
Gordon, and several other trustees still run the Johnstone Foundation
today.
A
New Beginning for the Kimball Foundation

Former Foundation
Secretary and Treasurer, T. Dexter Clarke. |
With the separation
of the two Clicquot foundations, it was also necessary to appoint
a third trustee for the Kimball organization. Black and his son
chose T. Dexter Clarke, an East Greenwich, Rhode Island lawyer and
past President of Narragansett Electric Co., a division of the New
England Electric System or NEES. During this period from the mid-seventies
to the present, a number of new ventures were undertaken. A University
of Rhode Island professor was hired to study a health care agency
in Hope Valley, RI, resulting in major changes. Kimball was the
first private foundation in Rhode Island to financially assist volunteer
fire and rescue operations in the rural towns of South County. Animal
shelters, long ignored by foundations and even by municipalities
were now funded. Small operations, soup kitchens, meals on wheels
and shelters for battered women now received help. Prior to the
1980s, most private foundations limited their gifts to large capital
campaigns conducted by hospitals, libraries, universities and environmental
causes. |
In August 1982,
Thomas F. Black, Jr. passed away at age 84. As an aside, after Mr.
Black's death, Dexter Clarke proposed a scholarship fund in Black's
name to be administered by the Rhode Island Bar Association. The
association makes several annual awards to desrving law students.
The fund is composed of monies from the Kimball Foundation, the
Providence Journal Company (of which Mr. Black was an officer and
director) and the Champlin Foundations.
The son of Thomas
F. Black, Jr., Thomas F. Black, III, was elected president of the
foundation by the remaining trustees. A new trustee, Norman D. Baker,
Jr., a Saunderstown (RI) insurance company investment manager was
selected to replace Thomas Black, Jr.. Dexter Clarke remained secretary
and treasurer. Things went along smoothly for the next nine years,
the assets of the foundation doubled to approximately seven million
dollars, primarily as a result of Mr. Baker's investment choices
and the startling growth of the stock and bond markets. In the late
1980s Dexter Clarke suffered a devastating stroke and was confined
to a nursing home for the rest of his days. He remained a trustee
and meetings were held at the nursing facility. He died in 1994.
The remaining trustees,
Black and Baker, then selected F. Thomas Lenihan, a Westerly, RI
lawyer to fill the vacant trustee position.
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Lenihan
served his position with pride, hard work, and an obvious
devotion to the foundation principals. He filled the position
for the next nine years until his untimely death in October
2003. Tom along with his wife Mary were active in the Thomas
F. Black Jr. annual scholarship fund administered by the Rhode
Island Bar Association. The funds assets grew substantially
during the period with the help of the Kimball and Champlin
Foundations, and members of the RI Bar Association.
In December
2003, the remaining trustees elected Paul Lynch, a Westerly
cement and asphalt contractor, to replace Lenihan. Black,
Baker & Lynch are the current Kimball Foundation trustees.
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Tom
Lenihan
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(Excerpts
of this text were taken from the July 1949 issue of the Clicquot
Club Trail; author unknown.)
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