Reily Foods Company

Reily Foods Company
Private
Industry Food & Beverages
Founded 1902
Headquarters New Orleans, LA, USA
Key people
William B. Reily III, Chairman
Products See brands listing.
Website http://www.reilyproducts.com/site.php

Reily Foods Company is the primary division of Wm. B. Reily & Company Inc. and specializes in selling food and beverages. The company started in the coffee and tea business and has diversified through to include condiments, dressings, seasonings, and baking products. Luzianne Iced Tea is available nationally while other products have greater distribution and demand in the Southern United States. The Reily Foods Company is headquartered in the Central Business District of New Orleans, Louisiana.[1]

History

William B. Reily began his career in the grocery and packaged goods business in the late 1870s as a country store clerk in Bastrop, LA. After spending eight years in that position, Reily decided to open his own retail grocery store. Only two years later, Reily moved 25 miles south to Monroe, LA where he started the Southern Grocery Company, Inc., a wholesale grocery business. During this time he noticed the popularity of his coffee products and realized that he could create a profitable coffee roasting business. After 14 years of building and running his successful wholesale business in Monroe, Reily moved to New Orleans to start what would become the Reily Foods Company.

On December 11, 1902, Reily and his partners began their coffee roasting, grinding and distributing company in New Orleans. At the time, more than 85% of all coffee beans imported into the United States passed through New Orleans so it gave Reily first choice of the best coffee beans available. Later the next year, the company added to its products offerings as a convenience to its customers. Both his coffee and tea products were sold under the Luzianne (a regional pronunciation of Louisiana) brand name that he created. In 1906 the company was renamed the Reily Taylor Company and then later, in 1919, became Wm. B. Reily & Co., Inc.

In 1932, noticing the increased popularity of iced tea, especially in the South, Reily and his sons created a blend of tea made specifically to be used for iced tea. Luzianne Iced Tea has since become the cornerstone product of the company and the second best selling iced tea in the United States.

Lee Harvey Oswald, assassin of President John F. Kennedy, worked briefly at Reily's New Orleans facility in the months before the assassination. Oswald was discharged from his position on July 19, 1963.[2] In 2003, Judyth Vary Baker—whose employment records show that she worked at the Reily Coffee Company in New Orleans at the same time Oswald did—appeared in an episode of Nigel Turner's documentary television series, The Men Who Killed Kennedy.[3] Baker claimed that in 1963 she was recruited by Dr. Canute Michaelson to work with Dr. Alton Ochsner and Dr. Mary Sherman on a clandestine CIA project to develop a biological weapon that could be used to assassinate Fidel Castro. According to Baker, she and Oswald were hired by Reily in the spring of 1963 as a "cover" for the operation.[4] Baker further claimed that she and Oswald began an affair, and that later Oswald told her about Merida, Mexico—a city where he suggested they might begin their lives over again.[3][5] According to John McAdams, Baker presents a "classic case of pushing the limits of plausibility too far."[6] Others on both sides of the research community have widely dismissed her claims.[7] However, other researchers, including Jim Marrs, James Fetzer and Jesse Ventura,[8] have concluded the opposite—that Baker's claims are credible.

Major acquisitions

For the first half of the 20th century, Wm. B. Reily & Co. and the Reily Foods Company remained a producer of only Luzianne coffee and tea products. It wasn’t until its 1965 acquisition of the JFG Coffee Company that Reily Foods began diversifying their product offerings. Though JFG brought with them mostly coffee brands and production facilities, Reily also acquired a small regional mayonnaise brand. Three years later, Reily acquired CDM coffee from Blue Plate Foods, a wildly popular brand of coffee in New Orleans that had been around since before the start of the 20th century.

In 1974, Reily purchased Blue Plate Foods from the Hunt-Wesson Company, which added Blue Plate Mayonnaise to their list of brands. Blue Plate was the first commercially prepared mayonnaises and is one of the most popular brands of mayonnaise in the South. Over the next 30 years, Reily acquired several brands from both regional and national companies. They include Swans Down Cake Flour, Try Me Sauces & Seasonings (namely Tiger Sauce), Wick Fowler’s 2-Alarm Chili, La Martinique Salad Dressings, Carroll Shelby’s Original Texas-Style Chili, Old Dutch Salad Dressing, Bean Cuisine Soups, Presto Cake Flour, No Pudge Fat Free Brownie Mix, and a controlling interest in Abita Springs Water Co.

The Reily family

Throughout its 100+ years of existence, the Wm. B. Reily & Company and the Reily Foods Company has been run by a member of the Reily family. From 1902 to 1932, William B. Reily led the company from a startup coffee roasting company to one of the region’s top suppliers of coffee and tea products. From 1932 to 1968, his two sons (William B. Reily, Jr. and James W. Reily) took control of the company, leading it to rapid expansion in the coffee and tea markets. In 1968, William B. Reily III took control of the company and in the years since has led the diversification of its product offerings through product innovations and acquisitions. Currently, the fourth generation of family, Bo Reily, serves as president of the Abita Springs Water Company, a subsidiary of Reily Foods.

Brands

Subsidiaries

References

  1. "Contact Us." Reilly Foods Company. Retrieved on January 21, 2010.
  2. Vincent Bugliosi, Reclaiming History p. 701
  3. 3.0 3.1 Turner, Nigel. The Men Who Killed Kennedy, Part 8, "The Love Affair", 2003.
  4. Baker, Judyth. Me and Lee, (Walterville: Trine Day LLC, 2010), p. 150. ISBN 978-0-9799886-7-7
  5. JudythVaryBaker.com
  6. McAdams, John (2011). "Witnesses Who Are Just Too Good". JFK Assassination Logic: How to Think About Claims of Conspiracy. Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books. pp. 73–75. ISBN 9781597974899. Retrieved January 8, 2013.
  7. A partial list of those who consider Vary Baker's claims to be a hoax includes: Attorney and author Vincent Bugliosi, researcher Mary Ferrell, researcher Barb Junkkarinen, Professor John McAdams of Marquette University and David A. Reitzes of jfk-online.com.
  8. Ventura 2013.

External links