Franco-American (brand)
Franco-American is a brand name of the Campbell Soup Company.
History
The original Franco-American Food Company was founded by Alphonse Biardot, who immigrated to the United States from France in 1880. In 1886, he and his two sons opened a commercial kitchen in Jersey City, New Jersey, featuring the foods of his native country. The company proved a success, particularly with its line of canned soup and pasta, and it was acquired by Campbell's in 1915.
The Franco-American name was phased out over the next two decades for soup products and in the late 1990s for pasta products. However their product line was still sufficient to continue advertising well into the 1970s, with Barry Manilow performing their jingle "Who Can? Franco Ameri-Can". On November 18, 2004, Campbell's announced it was discontinuing the name for pasta products in favor of its own "to boost sales of what had been Franco-American's canned SpaghettiOs, RavioliOs, Macaroni and Cheese, and regular spaghetti, along with beef, chicken and turkey gravy varieties sold in cans and jars".[1]
As of 2008, the Campbell Soup Company continues to sell gravy under the Franco-American name,[2] along with a small line of condensed soups that are similar to soups sold under the Campbell's brand.
Their logo can still be found on the back of SpaghettiOs cans, next to the copyright.
References
- "Campbell Soup retires Franco-American brand". Daily Herald. Provo, UT. November 19, 2004. Retrieved June 20, 2020.
- Campbell's Gravies at CampbellSoup.com