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Irv Robbins

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Irv Robbins

Siblings
  
Shirley Robbins

Role
  
Businessman

Nieces
  
Edie Baskin

Spouse
  
Irma Gevurtz (m. 1942)


Irv Robbins QUOTES BY IRV ROBBINS AZ Quotes

Born
  
December 6, 1917

Occupation
  
Co-founder of Baskin-Robbins

Died
  
May 5, 2008, Rancho Mirage, California, United States

Children
  
John Robbins, Marsha Veit, Erin Robbins

Organizations founded
  
Baskin-Robbins

Irv Robbins and 31 Flavors


Irvine "Irv" Robbins (December 6, 1917 – May 5, 2008) was a Canadian-born American businessman. He co-founded the Baskin-Robbins ice cream parlor chain in 1945 with his partner and brother-in-law Burt Baskin.

Contents

Irv Robbins wwwhollywoodmemoircomimagesrirvrobbinsjpg

Burton Baskin and Irv Robbins went into which type of business?


Early life

Irv Robbins Leadership Qualities of Irvine Robbins Irv Robbins leader

Robbins was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, to a Jewish family. His father, Aaron Robbins, owned a dairy and The Olympic Store ice cream business at 954 Court C in Tacoma, Washington, US. He attended both Tacoma's Stadium High School, where he was a yell leader, and Seattle's Garfield High School.

Irv Robbins Irvine Robbins 1917 2008 Genealogy

Robbins grew up scooping cones in his family's ice cream store for customers who always seemed to be having a good time. He recalled that he often "finished a day's work happy" and wanted that same feeling when he started his own business.

Irv Robbins attended the University of Washington in Seattle, was a member of the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, and graduated with a degree in Political Science. He served in the U.S. Army as a Staff Sergeant in California, during World War II and was discharged August 1945.

Business career

After getting out of the Army in 1945, he soon opened the Snowbird Ice Cream store on December 7, 1945 in Glendale, California. Robbins cashed in a $6,000 insurance policy given him for his Bar Mitzvah to start the business.

Burt Baskin owned a men's store in the Palmer House in Chicago, and married Robbins' sister Shirley in 1942. He had enlisted in the Navy and was released from service early 1946 and came to California, where Robbins convinced him that selling ice cream was more fun than selling men's ties & shirts, and within a couple of months he opened Burton's Ice Cream at 561 So. Lake Pasadena, California.

By 1948, the five Snowbird and three Burton's shops had been combined into a single enterprise, and they had devised their 31st flavor—Chocolate Mint. The partners came to the conclusion that because of the new stores they had opened, they were devoting less and less time to each individual store. "That's when we hit on selling our stores to our managers," Robbins said in the 1985 Los Angeles Times story. "Without realizing it at the time, we were in the franchise business before the word 'franchise' was fashionable. We opened another store and another and another. . . ." They made an agreement with the new store owners, which became "franchise agreements" and they became the first food company ever to franchise their outlets. Little did the McDonald's and Burger Kings of the future know, but the idea took hold in other retail establishments, and the age of "franchising" was underway.

In 1953, they renamed the company Baskin-Robbins, deciding the order of their names with a coin toss. The "31 flavors" concept was introduced that same year to bring attention to a deep menu that featured a flavor for every day of the month.

Baskin-Robbins had 43 stores by the end of 1949, more than 100 by 1960 and about 500 when the ice cream empire was sold to United Fruit Company for an estimated $12 million in 1967. Six months later, Burt Baskin died of a heart attack at 54. Robbins stayed involved with the company for 11 more years and retired in 1978. 25 years later Baskin-Robbins had become the world's largest chain of ice cream stores, with 5,500 outlets around the world.

Baskin-Robbins is now a part of Dunkin' Brands.

Personal life

Robbins was Jewish. He married Irma Gevurtz in 1942, just before he went to serve in the U.S. Army. Robbins and Irma had three children: Marsha, John and Erin. Baskin and his wife Shirley had two children, Edie and Richard.

Robbins died on May 5, 2008 at Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage, California, according to his daughter, Marsha Veit of Mount Kisco, New York. He had been in ill health for some time, she said. His interment was at Forest Lawn Cemetery (Cathedral City).

References

Irv Robbins Wikipedia


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