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Flowers Foods
Bakeries of the United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Flowers Foods, headquartered in Thomasville, Georgia, is a producer and marketer of packaged bakery foods in the United States. The company operates 44 bakeries across 19 states that produce a variety of products, including bread, buns, rolls, snack cakes, pastries, and tortillas.[3] As of February 2013, Flowers Foods had grown to be the "second-largest baking company in the United States."[4]
Flowers Foods owns several well-known bread and baked goods brands, including Nature's Own, Dave's Killer Bread, Canyon Bakehouse, Simple Mills, Wonder, Tastykake, Mrs. Freshley's, and more.[5] The company continues to expand its market reach through acquisitions and by extending its existing territory.
Flowers Foods distributes its products through two main channels: Direct Store Delivery (DSD) and Warehouse. The DSD segment handles the regional distribution of products through a network of independent distributors. The DSD segment encompasses almost 6,000 independent distributor territories across the East, South, Southwest, West, and Northwest regions of the United States.[6][2] Flowers' Warehouse segment manages the national distribution of frozen products, which are shipped directly to customers' warehouses throughout the continental United States.[7]
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History
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1914–1942
In 1914, brothers William Howard and Joseph Hampton Flowers founded the Flowers Ice Cream Company in Thomasville, Georgia. Recognizing a growing local demand for fresh bread, they expanded their business and, in 1919, established the Flowers Baking Company.[8][9] The morning after its launch, 500 loaves of "Flowers Quality Bread" were sold in Thomasville. At the time, the bakery was considered the most modern in Georgia and had the capacity to produce 30,000 loaves of bread per day.[10] Throughout the 1920s, Flowers Baking Company distributed bread, rolls, and cakes by rail across southern Georgia and into parts of Alabama and Florida.[9]
During this period, Howard managed the bakery while his brother Joseph oversaw the ice cream business.[9] In 1929, the company made its first divestiture by selling its ice cream operations to Foremost Dairies.[8] After the death of founder William Howard Flowers in 1934, his 20-year-old son, William Howard Flowers Jr., assumed leadership of the bakery.[10]
The company made its first acquisition in 1937, purchasing Tally Maid Bakery of Tallahassee, Florida. With the onset of World War II, the Flowers bakery operated 24 hours a day, seven days a week to supply bread to U.S. military camps across the southeastern United States.[11][9] In 1942, Flowers became the sixth bakery in the U.S. to franchise Quality Bakers of America's Sunbeam brand and use the Little Miss Sunbeam mascot on its bread wrappers.[12]
1960s–1980s
During the 1960s, Flowers expanded by acquiring bakeries in Opelika, Alabama, and Panama City, Florida. In 1965, Flowers constructed a new bakery in Jacksonville, Florida. Two years later, the company entered the metropolitan Atlanta market by acquiring the Atlanta Baking Company.[9]
In 1968, the company made an initial public offering, changed its name to Flowers Industries Inc., and began trading over-the-counter.[4] Less than a year later, Flowers was listed on the American Stock Exchange. The stock offering raised over $2 million, sparking a wave of acquisitions.[9] The company expanded by purchasing bakeries in Alabama, Louisiana, Virginia, and the Carolinas. In 1976, the company entered the frozen foods market by acquiring Stilwell Foods, a frozen vegetable producer.[4][13]
The company's growth also prompted the need for a larger headquarters, leading to a move in 1975 to a new 15-acre corporate complex south of Thomasville. In 1982, the company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol FLO, and the following year was listed for the first time on the Fortune 500 list of the largest U.S. Industrial corporations, at number 470.[14] During the 1980s, Flowers diversified into the sale of cookies and sandwiches, though it quickly exited those ventures by the end of the decade. Throughout this period, the company continued acquiring bakeries across the southeast and southwest United States.[4][9]
1990s–present
Beginning in the 1990s, Flowers Industries underwent a series of changes. In 1996, when the company acquired the national Mrs. Smith’s frozen dessert brand and entered a joint venture to acquire Keebler, a major cookies and crackers company. By the early 2000s, Flowers had shifted its focus back to bread and snack cakes. In 2001, the company sold its stake in Keebler, generating $1.2 billion for shareholders.[8] Following this transaction, Flowers Industries restructured and rebranded itself as Flowers Foods. In 2003, Flowers Foods sold Mrs. Smith’s Bakery.[4][9]
Flowers Foods continues to pursue acquisitions with the stated goal of expanding into growing product categories. This includes targeting the Hispanic market with its Mi Casa line of tortillas, and appealing to health- and budget-conscious consumers through its organic offerings like Dave’s Killer Bread and Alpine Valley Bread, as well as Keto-friendly products and smaller loaf options under the Nature’s Own brand.[15][16]
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Acquisitions
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Flowers Foods has continued to acquire bakeries and food companies throughout its history, while also divesting from others.
In 1976, the company entered the frozen foods market by acquiring Stilwell Foods of Stilwell, Oklahoma, along with its Rio Grande Foods unit in McAllen, Texas.[4][13] In 1996, Flowers acquired both the Keebler Company and Mrs. Smith's Pies. However, in 2001 it sold its investment in Keebler to the Kellogg Company. Its remaining business units, Flowers Bakeries and Mrs. Smith's Bakeries, were spun off into a new company called Flowers Foods. In 2002, the company restructured into three divisions: Flowers Bakeries, Flowers Snack, and Mrs. Smith's Bakeries.[4]
In late 2002, Flowers purchased Ideal Baking Company and acquired Bishop Baking Company from Kellogg, expanding its presence into north Arkansas, southern Missouri, and parts of Tennessee, including Memphis.[17][18] In 2003, Flowers sold its Mrs. Smith's frozen dessert business to the Schwan Food Company and renamed the Flowers Snack division, resulting in two divisions: Flowers Bakeries and Flowers Specialty.[4]
In 2005, Flowers acquired Royal Cake Company and continued operating its bakery in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.[19] In February 2006, Flowers purchased Derst Baking Co. of Savannah, Georgia, which retained its name under the Flowers Foods Bakeries Group.[20] In 2008, Flowers acquired ButterKrust Bakery in Lakeland, Florida and Holsum Bakery in Phoenix.[14][21] In 2009, the company purchased Leo's Foods, a tortilla manufacturer.[22]
Acquisitions continued into the 2010s. In 2011, Flowers acquired Philadelphia-based snack cake maker Tastykake, expanding into the mid-Atlantic region.[4][23] In 2012, it purchased Lepage Bakeries in Maine and acquired assets and licenses from Bimbo Bakeries for the Sara Lee and Earthgrains brands in California and Oklahoma City.[4][24] In 2013, the company purchased most of the bread brands of Hostess Brands, including Wonder Bread, along with 20 closed Hostess bakeries.[25][26]
Flowers Foods made three acquisitions in 2015: Dave's Killer Bread of Milwaukie, Oregon, for $275 million in cash;[27] Alpine Valley Bread Co., an organic bakery in Mesa, Arizona;[28] and the North American rights to the Roman Meal trademark for bread, buns, and rolls.[29] At the end of 2018, Flowers Foods acquired Canyon Bakehouse, a privately held gluten-free bread company based in Johnstown, Colorado. With that purchase, the company had acquired 16 companies since 2003.[30]
Flowers Foods bought Papa Pita for an undisclosed amount in 2023.[31] Most recently, in the first quarter of 2025, Flowers Foods acquired Simple Mills for $795 million in cash.[32]
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