Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. historiadelaempresa.com › hj-heinz️ Hj Heinz

    El fundador Henry J. Heinz comenzó a envasar productos alimenticios a pequeña escala en Sharpsburg, Pensilvania, en 1869. Allí fundó Heinz Noble & Company con un amigo, L. Clarence Noble, y comenzó a comercializar rábano picante. La empresa quebró en 1875, pero al año siguiente Heinz fundó otra compañía, F & J Heinz, con su hermano ...

  2. Henry John Heinz (October 11, 1844 – May 14, 1919) was an American entrepreneur who, at the age of 25, co-founded a small horseradish business in Sharpsburg, Pennsylvania.

  3. 2 de jan. de 2013 · H.J. Heinz ( HNZ) still pours out tasty numbers amid its ketchup and other products, with sales at $11.6 billion in fiscal 2012 and a near doubling of its stock price since 2009. Heinz (1844-1919 ...

  4. 14 de mai. de 2016 · Find a Grave Memorial ID: 467. Source citation. Business Magnate. The son of German immigrants, he was the founder of the H.J. Heinz Company that grew into one of the largest food processers in the United States. When he was a youth, his father ran a brickyard, and part of that property was used by his mother as a garden.

  5. A captain of industry in the early 20th century, Henry John Heinz established the H. J. Heinz Company, famous for its ketchup. Born in October, 1844, he cultivated his business from a horseradish bottling operation to a multi-national corporation by his death in May 1919. Building factories in his hometown of Pittsburgh and across the world ...

  6. History, Business. Business History Review. 1999. This article assesses the brand-building strategies of Henry Heinz. Heinz began selling bottled horseradish to Pittsburgh residents in 1869. When he died in 1919, his company, H.J. Heinz, was one of…. Expand. 55. Semantic Scholar extracted view of "Henry J. Heinz: A biography" by E. McCafferty.

  7. 15 de out. de 2019 · Innovative Factory. By 1898, Heinz’s factory had become the largest food processing facility in the world, built of the finest brick and beautified with stained glass windows. A marvel to visitors, the factory featured all the latest technologies, including one of the first electric ventilation systems in Pittsburgh.