Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Fieldbrook Farms

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Trading name
  
Fieldbrook Farms

Industry
  
Food

Founded
  
1914

Type
  
Private corporation

Founder
  
William J. Wells

Fieldbrook Farms httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen663Fie

Key people
  
Kenneth A. Johnson (President, CEO)

Products
  
Ice cream, frozen desserts

Headquarters
  
Dunkirk, New York, United States

Fieldbrook Farms is the trade name of Fieldbrook Foods Corporation, a $100 million manufacturer of private label ice cream and frozen desserts based out of Dunkirk, New York.

Contents

It is the largest private label supplier in the east. The company produces more than 1,500 varieties of packaged frozen desserts, ice cream and novelties. These products include, ice cream, frozen yogurt, sherbet & sorbet, sandwiches, IC/Fudge Bars, Ice Pops, juice & fruit bars, cones, cups and sorbet bars.

Dunkirk Ice Cream

The company was founded by William J. Wells in 1914 under the name Dunkirk Ice Cream. It was family-owned and operated for four generations until 1996. Dunkirk Ice Cream agreed to produced again for Tops Markets starting in January 1996 the My Favorite ice cream line which consists of 21 flavors.

Fieldbrook Farms

A group of investors led by James J. Greco purchased Dunkirk Ice Cream's assets and renamed the company Fieldbrook Farms Inc. in mid-1996. In December 1997, Fieldbrook Farms acquired the assets of Portland, Maine based Deering Ice Cream, which was founded in 1886, bringing with it the Howard Johnson brand ice cream rights. On May 3, 1999, Fieldbrook Farms acquired Parmalat, USA's business with its private label clients while taking over Parmlat's Kinnett Dairy which was founded in 1908.

Fieldbrook in July 2000 agreed with Fan Brands, Major League Baseball's marketing agency, for team themed products. The company also agreed to produced two private label ice cream lines, the premium line Absolutely Divine and regular Gold Emblem for [CVS Health]] in November 2000.

In October 2000, Fieldbrook announced a new bowl topping product line in October for which the company received a half a million dollar grant from Empire State Development Corp., New York's state development agency. The topping line production was expected to start in 2001.

A market slump causing the company to close its Georgia plant and miss a loan payment to GE Capital. That plus increasing milk cost caused, in September 2001, Fieldbrook Farms Inc. filed for bankruptcy chapter 11. The company operated during bankruptcy was allowed to auction itself off. Spruce Bank Enterprises, LLC, a private investment fund and food giant Suiza Foods Corp. bid for the company with Spruce Bank having the winning bid. Ken Johnson was named president and chief operating officer of the company by Spruce Bank. In March 2002, the company was renamed Fieldbrook Foods Corporation while continuing to operate as Fieldbrook Farms. In December 2010, Fiedlbrook Foods agreed to be acquired by Arbor Investments.

References

Fieldbrook Farms Wikipedia