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Minute Maid
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| Industry | Beverage |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1945 (as Florida Foods, Inc.) |
Key people | J. Alexander M. Douglas Jr. (President of North America Group of Coca-Cola) |
| Products | Fruit juices, soft drinks |
Number of employees | 1,900[1] |
| Parent | The Coca-Cola Company |
| Subsidiaries | Simply Beverages |
| Website | minutemaid |
Minute Maid is an American brand of beverages, usually associated with lemonade or orange juice, but which now extends to soft drinks of different kinds, including Hi-C. Minute Maid was the first company to market frozen orange juice concentrate,[2] allowing it to be distributed throughout the United States and served year-round.
The Minute Maid Company is owned by The Coca-Cola Company, the world's largest marketer of fruit juices and drinks. The company was originally incorporated in 1945 as Florida Foods, Inc, then later became Vacuum Foods Corporation.[2] It employs over 1,900 people and has over $2 billion in sales (1997 est.).[3] Minute Maid is sold under the Cappy brand in Central Europe and under the brand "Моя Семья" (Moya sem'ya, "My Family") in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States.
History
[edit]In 1945, the National Research Corporation (NRC) of Boston, Massachusetts, developed a method of dehydrating medical products for use in the U.S. war effort. The US Army wanted to extend this process to nutritious food, so NRC created a new subsidiary, the Florida Foods Corporation. Led by John M. Fox,[4] Florida Foods Corporation won a government contract worth $750,000 for 500,000 lb (227,000 kg) of powdered orange juice for the war.[3] The war ended and the contract was canceled before the factory could be built, but with investment, the company moved forward with a product.[3]
Rather than selling powder to the public market, the company decided to create frozen orange juice concentrate, using a process that eliminated 80 percent of the water in orange juice. A Boston marketing firm H. A. Loudon Advertising came up with the name Minute Maid, implying the juice was quick and easy to prepare.[3]
The first shipment took place in April 1946. The same month, the company was renamed Vacuum Foods Corporation.[2] With limited funds for advertising, Fox himself went door to door giving free samples, until demand skyrocketed.[3] In October 1948, TIME magazine announced that entertainer Bing Crosby was to employ a five-day-a-week radio show to promote Minute Maid. The magazine article gave further details:
Minute Maid (retail price: 29¢ a pint and a half) got into the field first in 1945, at a new $2,300,000 plant in Plymouth, Fla. With little cash to advertise, it lost $450,262 the first two years. Last year it finally turned the corner. Says Vacuum’s President John M. Fox: "Why, this orange juice thing is the wonder of the grocery world. Ask anybody." Anybody in the frozen food industry agreed—and Birds Eye, Snow Crop and others began to put out their own concentrate. Nevertheless, Vacuum's sales increased so much that President Fox announced last week that the net profit for its last fiscal year was $179,865. Demand is so great, said Fox, that Vacuum has had to allocate shipments and is thinking of setting up a California plant. The shortage temporarily takes some of the bloom off the Crosby deal. But Vacuum hopes to step up output enough to fill the new orders Crosby will bring in. And in the scramble for the new market, Vacuum figures that Crosby is just the Pied Piper needed to lure customers away from the old brand names.[5]
The Crosby radio show ran until October 1950 and the ability to purchase fresh-tasting orange juice at any time of year, far from where oranges are grown, proved popular, and led to the company's national success.[3]
In October 1949, the company adopted the name Minute Maid Corp.[3] In late 1954, Minute Maid purchased rival Snow Crop.[6]
The Minute Maid company was purchased by Coca-Cola in 1960.[3]
In 1967, Minute Maid relocated to Houston, Texas, and joined with Duncan Foods to form the Coca-Cola Foods division.[7]
In 1970, the company was involved in a scandal in the United States about bad housing, often referred to as "slave quarters", and working conditions of Minute Maid farm laborers in Florida. The United Farm Workers stepped in to support the workers. NBC reported on the issue in a 1970 documentary called Chet Huntley's Migrant: An NBC White Paper.[8] In response to the bad press and a boycott in Florida, the company established a program that improved the workers' situation.[citation needed]
In 1973, the company released its first ready-to-drink, chilled orange juice product in the United States, entering an "orange juice war" with Tropicana.[3]
In 1996, the company's name was changed from Minute Maid Corp. to The Minute Maid Company.[3]
The Coca-Cola Company sold its Minute Maid orange groves in Florida in 1997. The United Farm Workers again took the side of the orange growers during this time.[9]
In 2001, the Minute Maid division of Coca-Cola launched the Simply Orange brand, which "uses a computer-modeled blending of citrus sources with the intent for the consumer to enjoy a uniform taste year-round".[4]

In 2002, Minute Maid bought the naming rights to re-brand the Houston Astros ballpark from Enron Field to Minute Maid Park.[7]
In 2003, Minute Maid's division fully merged with Coca-Cola North America.[7]
In September 2024, Coca-Cola issued a recall on an estimated 13,152 cases of mislabeled Minute Maid Zero Sugar Lemonade for containing sugar.[10]
In January 2026, Coca-Cola announced it would discontinue the Minute Maid frozen juice line in the US and Canada that quarter.[11]
Headquarters
[edit]Minute Maid original offices were located in New York. John M Fox, president of the company announced on October 20, 1957, that Minute Maid Headquarters would be moved to a new building located on the corner of US 441 and Hwy Route 50 in Orlando, Florida.
Minute Maid has its headquarters in an office building in the Sugar Land Town Square development in First Colony,[12] Sugar Land, Texas.
In 1985, The Coca-Cola Company purchased the 2000 St. James Place in Houston from Bechtel Corporation for Minute Maid. Minute Maid moved into the new office building the following year.[7]
In 2007, Coca-Cola retained New York-based Corporate Realty Consultants and Boyd Commercial LLC of Houston to sell 2000 St. James Place. The company negotiated with Planned Community Developers to lease an office building in Sugar Land Town Square.[7] Then, in January 2008, Minute Maid announced plans to move its headquarters to Sugar Land.[13] The headquarters building is located at Sugar Land's town center and opened on February 16, 2009. The city of Sugar Land gave the company a $2.4 million tax incentive to move its headquarters there.[14]
On March 6, 2021, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Coca-Cola announced it was closing Minute Maid's office in Sugar Land and would join the operations with the company's base in Atlanta, Georgia.[15]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "The Minute Maid Company". Fundinguniverse.com. Retrieved 2011-05-27.
- ^ a b c "The Surprising Link Between World War II and Frozen Orange Juice". Time. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "The Minute Maid Company". Fundinguniverse.com. Retrieved 2011-05-27.
- ^ a b Davis, Ennis (27 December 2017). "Where your Florida orange juice comes from". Modern Cities. Retrieved 16 February 2026.
- ^ "Corporations: Minute Maid's Man". Time. 18 October 1948. Retrieved 16 February 2026.
- ^ "Minute Maid Buys Snow Crop, $39.8 Mil." Billboard. December 11, 1954. Retrieved on April 19, 2017.
- ^ a b c d e Dawson, Jennifer. "Big Firms Moving to Suburbs, part II." Houston Business Journal. Friday July 27, 2007. Retrieved on June 17, 2009.
- ^ Roberta (Robbie) Jaffe 1972–1975; UFW in Florida
- ^ "UFW: Coastal, Napa". Rural Migration News. 5 (4). October 1999. Archived from the original on 2011-06-05. Retrieved 2011-05-27.
- ^ "Coca-Cola recalls thousands of cases of mislabeled 'zero sugar' lemonade for containing sugar". NBC News. 2024-10-16. Retrieved 2024-10-16.
- ^ Das, Koyena (February 6, 2026). "Coca-Cola to discontinue frozen products in US and Canada". Reuters. Retrieved February 6, 2026.
- ^ Bivins, Ralph. "Sugar Land Town Square developers at jumping-off point in project". Houston Chronicle. Wednesday September 27, 2000. Business 1. Retrieved on May 15, 2010.
- ^ "Minute Maid Selects Sugar Land for Relocation". Business Wire via Reuters. Press release. Retrieved on May 14, 2010.
- ^ Dawson, Jennifer. "Minute Maid gets $2.4M incentive for move to Sugar Land". Houston Business Journal. January 21, 2008. Retrieved on May 14, 2010.
- ^ Schrade, Brad (March 6, 2021). "Coke to move Texas-based Minute Maid to Atlanta". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved March 7, 2021.