Type | Subsidiary of Colgate-Palmolive |
---|---|
Industry | Dog food Cat food |
Founded | 1939 |
Founder(s) | Dr. Mark Morris Sr. |
Headquarters | Topeka, Kansas, United States |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Dr. Mark Morris Sr. Dr. Mark Morris Jr. |
Revenue | 2.2 Billion |
Website | www.hillspet.com |
Hill's Pet Nutrition, Inc is a subsidiary of Colgate-Palmolive Company. They are a large scale provider of dog and cat foods.
Contents |
In 1928, Dr. Mark L. Morris Sr. established Raritan Hospital for Animals in Edison, New Jersey. At the time, this was one of only two small animal hospitals in the United States. By 1939, Dr. Morris believed managing nutrition could have a positive effect on the health of companion animals.
In the late 1930s, Morris Frank, a young blind man, was touring the country with his guide dog Buddy promoting Seeing Eye dogs. However, Buddy, a German Shepherd Dog, was suffering from kidney failure and Mr. Frank asked Dr. Morris for help. Dr. Morris believed the illness was a result of poor nutrition, and began developing a new pet food to help Buddy. With his wife, Louise Morris, in the kitchen, Dr. Morris formulated the dog food. Louise and three other women continued making the food in the Morris family basement, storing it in Ball jars. Raritan Ration B was the forerunner of Hill's Prescription Diet k/d Canine and is developed for dogs with renal failure and insufficiency.
Dr. Morris mailed the food to Mr. Frank, who was on tour across the country with Buddy. However, the jars often broke in transit. The U.S. was in World War II and glass was scarce. Morris Frank arranged for delivery of several thousand cans and a hand-operated canning machine to Dr. Morris. His staff then started canning food. So, in 1948, Dr. Morris contracted with Burton Hill of the Hill Packing Company in Topeka, Kansas, to can the food with a new name, Canine k/d, and licensed Hill to produce his pet food formulas.
In the following years, the partnership between Dr. Morris and the Hill Packing Company evolved into Hill's Pet Nutrition, and it continued to grow and add formulas of therapeutic pet food to its Prescription Diet line of products. Dr. Morris established a research laboratory in Topeka in 1951, when four Prescription Diet pet foods for dogs were available.
Dr. Morris' son, Dr. Mark Morris Jr., continued to help grow Hill's Pet Nutrition over the next several decades. Dr. Morris Jr. noticed a demand for consistent, high-quality pet food for use in research. As a result, he developed a food for healthy pets. In 1968, the food line was made available through veterinarians and pet professionals as Hill's Science Diet. The line has continued to expand, and today includes more than fifty pet foods formulated for many life stages and special needs in healthy pets.
In 1976, the Colgate-Palmolive Company purchased Hill's Pet Nutrition. Today, Hill's pet food products are available in 86 countries around the world and company sales reached $1 billion in 1999. Today, Hill's product lines include more than 60 Prescription Diet brand pet foods and more than 50 Science Diet brand pet foods.
Research and product development for Hill's takes place in Topeka, Kansas at the Hill's Pet Nutrition Center. This center houses veterinarians and board-certified specialists in nutrition and internal medicine that are responsible for working with companion pets to develop products meeting veterinarian-quality standards for nutrition and taste.
Each companion pet has a team to provide it clean living quarters, exercise areas, an agility course and other human and animal companions. The facility also houses a fully equipped veterinary hospital certified by the American Animal Hospital Association. This means the hospital conforms to the standards of small animal veterinary hospitals.
Today, Hill’s manufactures Hill’s Prescription Diet brand pet foods, therapeutic pet foods available only through veterinarians, and Hill’s Science Diet brand pet foods sold through veterinarians and pet specialty stores.
Hill's has a large line of prescription foods for cats and dogs with specific diseases. While "Prescription diet" dry and canned food is available only through a vet or pet pharmacy, they typically contain no drugs or medicines.
One Prescription Diet line and five products of the Science Diet line were involved in the 2007 pet food recalls for their inclusion of melamine tainted wheat gluten received from China.[1] [2][3][4]