BOOK - How
the Feuding Kellogg Brothers Fought their Cereal Wars
More than a century ago, Kellogg’s created the
first breakfast cereal, the corn flake, in Battle Creek, Mich. Today, the name
Kellogg’s evokes corn flakes as well as Pringles potato chips, Pop tarts,
Eggo and other snack items. But the brand’s status as an American icon glosses
over the family drama between brothers John and Will Kellogg, whose ideas gave
birth to the business.
The book, The Kelloggs: The Battling
Brothers of Battle Creek, chronicles this conflict. It is written by
Howard Markel, a professor and the director of the Center for the History of
Medicine at the University of Michigan. He recently joined the Knowledge@Wharton show, which airs on
SiriusXM channel 111, to talk about the bitterness that tinged the
brothers’ relationship.
The following is an edited transcript of the
conversation.
Knowledge@Wharton: Normally,
I would wonder why a professor of medicine would be interested in this story.
But John Kellogg was actually a very well-known physician.
Howard Markel: Yes,
he was one of the most famous physicians of his time. He was a best-selling
author. He edited a magazine that was read by millions around the world. And he
ran the Battle Creek Sanitarium, which was a world-famous medical spa, grand
hotel and up-to-date medical center that thousands of people flocked to every
year.
Knowledge@Wharton: His
success in medicine was important when he and his brother decided to get into
food production.
Markel: One of the doctor’s
great interests was in the digestive tract. He saw a great many patients with
upset stomachs, ulcers — what was then called dyspepsia and what Walt Whitman
called “the great American stomach ache.” And little wonder, if you look at
what Americans ate in the late 19th century — a lot of animal fat, heavy,
greasy fried foods, creamed vegetables, pickles, spicy condiments and so on. No
wonder everyone had a stomach ache. These very worried people came to the
doctor for digestive advice. Cereal was really a by-product of his whole
philosophy of health.
The doctor prescribed what we would call today wellness. He
called it biologic living. Some of it was based on his religion, Seventh-day
Adventism. The idea was to eat a whole-grain and vegetable diet, exercise and
the like. But he developed cereal — first wheat flakes, then corn flakes — as
an easily digestible meal.
Knowledge@Wharton: His
brother Will sees this as a potential marketing idea?
Markel: Absolutely. The
doctor was the showboat, the brilliant doctor that people wanted to see. But
Will ran that sanitarium. He was the chief of staff without title for nearly 25
years. He was a great businessman. He was also right there experimenting with
the doctor because it took thousands of tries to get the right formula for corn
flakes. He saw right away that there are a lot more of healthy people who just
want to have a healthy, nutritious breakfast than sick people who want an
easily digestible one. It was his brilliant, eureka-like moment that led to him
leaving the doctor’s employ and creating what was called the Battle Creek
Toasted Corn Flake Company. We know it today as Kellogg’s.
Knowledge@Wharton: The
relationship between the brothers is part of the story, and the fact that they
did not see eye to eye.
Markel: The doctor was
eight years older than Will, and he humiliated and browbeat his brother for
their entire lives. When they were kids, it was physical [attacks as well as]
taunting and such, but even when they worked together, the doctor treated him
like a lackey. He paid him very poorly. He humiliated him in front of the
guests. The doctor was so busy, he would ride his bike across the campus. Will
would run, and huff and puff while he took notes, so the doctor wouldn’t miss a
stitch on his great ideas. They didn’t have a great relationship.
“It was one of the
great modern inventions of the early 20th century.”
When Will left the company and started being successful, the
doctor started making his own cereal, and that took away from Will’s brand. He
actually sued the doctor, and the doctor countersued. The lawsuit went all the
way to the state supreme court over the issue of who had the right to use the
name Kellogg on a box of cereal. The doctor thought, “I’m the world-famous
doctor. I’m the digestive guru. It’s me.” And Will said, “Hey, wait a minute. I
spent millions of dollars advertising Kellogg’s Corn Flakes. They think of me.”
And guess what? Will won.
KNOWLEDGE@WHARTON HIGH SCHOOL
Knowledge@Wharton: How
successful was Will?
Markel: He was successful
beyond his wildest dreams. He said to some of his early investors, “I sort of
feel it in my bones.” This was his great creation, corn flakes. Within a few
years, they were just shipping out carload after carload of cornflakes on the
trains to the hinterlands.
In 1906, you have to imagine how difficult it was for a mother
to make breakfast, frying up bacon and making eggs. You had wood-burning
stoves, so you had to stoke the fire. After 1906, you could just pour breakfast
out of a box. Even Dad could make breakfast. It was just utterly incredible. It
was one of the great modern inventions of the early 20th century.
Knowledge@Wharton: It
wasn’t only the effort that went into making a traditional breakfast, but what
was being consumed went against the healthy philosophy that John had.
Markel: You were eating a
lot of cured, salted meats or potatoes fried in the congealed fat from last
night’s meal. It wasn’t what we would call a healthy breakfast by any stretch,
and this was — it was sold that way. It was sold directly to mothers and their
children. Will came up with the first [idea of putting a] toy in the box. It
was a coloring book. That came out in 1909. He found that the coloring book
took up a lot of space in the box, and it was a lot cheaper than adding the
extra corn flakes. It was just a brilliant idea all around.
Knowledge@Wharton: When
did they start to develop the other types of cereals that ultimately made this
company famous?
Markel: Right away, Will
developed not only Corn Flakes, but a few years later Rice Krispies. He learned
how to pop rice the way we now know it as “snap, crackle and pop.” He actually
stole the recipe for shredded wheat and came up with Kellogg’s Shredded Wheat.
That was a different lawsuit, by the way. Of course, the doctor came up with
all these [recipes for] bran cereals that Will stole. It was very easy to steal
a cereal recipe, even if it was patented. All you had to do is change one tiny
little step. So Will sold All-Bran and Bran Crumbles and things like that. The
other cereals that we know Kellogg’s for — Frosted Flakes, Sugar Pops and Sugar
Smacks — those all came to be after Will retired and after he died.
Knowledge@Wharton: Battle
Creek was important to the cereal industry for quite some time. You note that
there were dozens of cereal companies there at one period of time?
“Will [Kellogg] …
had an inferiority complex the size of Rhode Island.”
Markel: At one point in the
early 1900s, there were over 100 different companies. A lot of them were
fly-by-night companies or were successful only for a few years. And unless
you’re a historian like me, you would never know the names of these cereals.
One my favorites was called Maple Flakes. Even in the early 1900s, they had
maple syrup-impregnated flakes. There was C.W. Post. Charlie Post was a patient
at the doctor’s Battle Creek Sanitarium. He couldn’t pay his room and board, so
he worked it off by working in the kitchen and stole some of their most famous
recipes.
Knowledge@Wharton: How
did the rest of the Kellogg family react to this battle between John and Will?
Markel: It was very toxic.
The other family members, particularly their sisters and brothers, didn’t know
which way to turn. These were both very powerful men, and they did not want to
curry their disfavor in any way.
John Harvey [Kellogg] and his wife, Ella, had 42 adopted
children. They never had their own children. In fact, many people believe they
never even consummated their marriage. Will had three children — two boys and a
girl. While he was quiet about his complaints about his brother, they knew very
well about this battle, and it did not have a good effect.
Will, of course, had an inferiority complex the size of Rhode
Island. Despite his great success, he was the Bill Gates of processed food. I
use that name not just because of his success as an industrialist, but also
because of his success as a philanthropist. The W.K. Kellogg Foundation is
about a $9 billion foundation and does remarkable work to this day. But he had
a great inferiority complex and was never terribly happy. He was very
domineering. When he died, his grandson wrote, “Nobody really shed a tear.” To
me, this was one of the saddest stories ever to come out of Battle Creek.
Knowledge@Wharton: It
wasn’t a surprise that John would want to get into the business after Will had
early success. When Will won the court case, he was allowed to have a small
notification on the cereal boxes?
Markel: Yes, the settlement
was almost like a commentary from the Talmud. You could put it in tiny little
writing on the back flap, on the bottom of the box. The doctor still invented
many health foods beyond flaked cereal. He was one of the early users of psyllium.
We know it now as Metamucil. He was one of the early developers of soy milk,
probiotics and acidophilus. Bran cereals were a big deal for him because it
wasn’t just digestive health per se. He was a big fan of regularity and wanted
not only himself but his patients to have four to five bowel movements a day,
just like the gorillas he studied in the zoos that ate a high-bran diet.
Knowledge@Wharton: What
was the relationship of the brothers after the court case?
Markel: It was never good
to begin with. They rarely spoke to one another. Their last face-to-face
meeting was a terrible argument, and John died only a few months later. It’s
really quite sad. John did try to make amends, but Will would have none of it.
They both went to their graves very sad about how acidic this relationship
became.
Knowledge@Wharton: What
happened to the sanitarium after Will left to start the cereal company?
Markel: For a while, it did
not run nearly as well. But then it got back on its feet and ran rather well
until the Great Depression. By that time, Dr. Kellogg was near retirement and
those who took over over-extended themselves by building a 15-story patient
tower and [added] a lot of luxurious amenities. The Depression struck and they
couldn’t pay their mortgage. The sanitarium went into receivership, and the
physical plant of the Battle Creek Sanitarium was sold to the federal
government in 1943. It became a rehab hospital for vets who were injured. It
was called the Percy Jones Hospital. Sen. Bob Dole recuperated there. It’s
still there in Battle Creek, but it’s a federal center filled with bureaucrats
rather than ailing patients.
Knowledge@Wharton: How
is John viewed now in medical history?
“It was very easy
to steal a cereal recipe, even if it was patented. All you had to do is change
one tiny little step.”
Markel: His ideas about
preventive medicine and diet, nutrition — even though he wasn’t always right
with the science — history has proven him correct. He took a couple of bad
turns along the way that are problematic. He believed in eugenics, like a lot
of white Anglo-Saxon Protestant men and women in the United States of that era.
He actively funded it and participated in many conferences and the like. He
also was a very chaste man and was very opposed to sex outside the marriage and
even masturbation, so a lot of people made fun of him. But you have to
remember, sexuality at the turn of the last century was looked upon very
differently and spoken about very differently than today.
Knowledge@Wharton: How
long did his cereal company last?
Markel: The Battle Creek
Food Company, which sold 60 different products, lasted until his death in 1943.
The whole estate was put into his foundation, which was called the Foundation
for Race Betterment. It was a eugenics foundation, which sputtered along and
was actually raided by the people who were the trustees and [the funds were]
misused. All the money was squandered by the early 1960s.
Knowledge@Wharton: What
would have played out if these two gentlemen were running the company today?
Markel: John Harvey sold
out his interests in what became Kellogg’s right off the bat. He may still have
sniped and bothered Will, but Will became very good at lawsuits and winning. He
became quite the billionaire.
I think one of the things Will might have been upset with was
the amount of sugar and snack food-ization of the processed food industry. He
was always [adamant] about [good] nutrition, convenience and [paying] a good
price for a good meal. He might have a few problems with sugar Frosted Flakes
and the like.
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/the-bitter-feud-behind-an-iconic-brand/?utm_source=kw_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2017-09-28
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