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International Salt Company Records

National Museum of American History

Object Details

Creator
International Salt Company
Costain, Harold Haliday
Rittase, William M., 1894-1968
Topic
Salt
Salt workers
Salt mines and mining -- Michigan
Salt mines and mining -- New York
Salt industry and trade
Salt mines and mining -- Louisiana
advertising
Industrial photography -- 1990-2000 -- Texas
Mines and mineral resources -- Louisiana
Mines and mineral resources -- New York
Mines and mineral resources -- Michigan
Provenance
Tom Maeder donated the collection on June 13, 2009.
Creator
International Salt Company
Costain, Harold Haliday
Rittase, William M., 1894-1968
See more items in
International Salt Company Records
Summary
The collection contains business records and photographic materials documenting the International Salt Company. The business records include correspondence, account and ledger books, a payroll book, patent and trademark information, print advertising and marketing materials, and a salesman salt display kit. The photographic materials include a series of photographs by William M. Rittase, a series of photographs by Harold Haliday Costain, a small photograph album, snapshots, and slides. The images cover all facets of the salt manufacturing and packaging operations, and include photographs taken in New York State, Michigan, and Louisiana.
Biographical / Historical
The International Salt Company incorporated on August 22, 1901, and in 1902, the company purchased the stock and assets of the National Salt Company, which had failed. By 1934, International Salt was a holding company for six subsidiaries: Avery Salt Company (West Virginia), Detroit Rock Salt Company (Michigan), Eastern Salt Company (Massachusetts), Independent Salt Company (New York), International Salt Company, Inc. (New York), and Retsof Mining Company (New York). All of the subsidiaries operated rock salt mines and evaporated salt plants and distributed salt. In 1940, the International Salt Company decided to sell four of its subsidiaries--Avery Salt Company, Detroit Rock Salt Company, International Salt Company, Inc., and Retsof Mining Company. John M. Avery discovered rock salt at Petite Anse, Louisiana in 1862. Petite Anse Island was renamed Avery Island in the late 19th century. Ownership and mining of salt at Petite Anse involved numerous parties until 1886, when New Iberia Salt Company took over operations. In 1896, the Avery family began operating the mine, and they founded the Avery Rock Salt Mining Company. In 1899, the International Salt Company leased the mine. The Detroit Salt and Manufacturing Company was founded in 1906. The company quickly went bankrupt during construction of a shaft and was acquired in 1910 by the Watkins Salt Company, which incorporated the new organization under the name Detroit Rock Salt Company. The company experienced success and the International Salt Company purchased the mine circa 1914. In 1983, International Salt closed the mine's operations and in 1985, Crystal Mines, Inc., purchased the mine as a potential storage site. In 1885 the Empire Salt Company of New York was renamed the Retsof Mine Company, and the Village of Retsof was founded near the mine shaft. During the next 110 years, the mine grew to become the largest salt-producing mine in the United States and the second largest in the world. Before the initial collapse in March 1994, the mine encompassed an underground area of more than 6,000 acres, and the mine footprint (outer edge of mined area) extended over an area of nearly ten square miles. At the time of the collapse, the Retsof Mine was owned by Akzo-Nobel Salt Incorporated (ANSI) and, during the winter of 1993--994 operated at full capacity to meet demands for road salt throughout the northeastern United States. The Retsof Mine ceased operations on September 2, 1995, and by December, twenty-one months after the initial collapse, the mine was completely flooded.
Extent
3.5 Cubic feet (11 boxes, 1 oversize folder)
Date
1881-1993
bulk 1920-1929
Archival Repository
Archives Center, National Museum of American History
Identifier
NMAH.AC.1158
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Photograph albums
Slides (photographs)
Photographs
Transparencies
Time books
Scrapbooks
Cashbooks
Annual reports
Ledgers (account books)
Financial records
Patents
Letters
Newsletters
Citation
International Salt Company Records, 1881-1993, Archives Center, National Museum of American History.
Arrangement
The collection is divided into five series. Series 1, Business Records, 1894-1937 Series 2, Trademarks, 1881-1935 Series 3, Photographs, 1934-1993 Subseries 1, Harold Haliday Costain, circa 1934 Subseries 2, William Ritasse, circa 1934 Subseries 3, Loose Photographs, 1969-1993 Subseries 4, Slides, circa 1970s Subseries 5, Album (damaged mine), undated Series 4, Advertising and Marketing Materials, 1920-1948 Series 5, Posters, circa 1920s
Processing Information
Processed by Alison Oswald, archivist, 2012.
Rights
Collection items available for reproduction, but the Archives Center makes no guarantees concerning copyright restrictions. Other intellectual property rights may apply. Archives Center cost-recovery and use fees may apply when requesting reproductions.
Bibliography
United States Patent and Trademark Office (http://www.uspto.gov/trademarks/index.jsp) last accessed on April 30, 2012. Dewing, Arthur S. -- Corporate Promotions and Reorganization -- s. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1914. Detroit Salt Company (http://www.detroitsalt.com/) last accessed on May 1, 2012 International Salt Company: Dividends out of Subsidiary Surplus at Date of Acquisition; Amortization of Bond Discount, -- Accounting Review -- , 16, No. 1 (1941): 97-102. Kappel, William M., Richard M. Yager, and Todd S. Miller. "The Retsof Salt Mine Collapse, Widespread subsidence occurred after a mine collapse in the Genesee Valley, New York." -- U.S. Geological Survey -- , Ithaca, New York (1995): 111-120. McNulty, John. "A Dash of Tabasco," -- New Yorker -- , June 13, 1953. Phalen, W.C. -- Technology of Salt Making in the United States -- , Bulletin 146. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, 1917. Werner, Charles Jolly. -- A History and Description of the Manufacture and Mining of Salt in New York -- . Huntington, Long Island, New York, 1917.
Genre/Form
Photograph albums
Slides (photographs) -- 20th century
Photographs -- 20th century
Transparencies
Time books
Scrapbooks
Cashbooks
Annual reports
Ledgers (account books)
Financial records
Patents
Letters
Newsletters
Scope and Contents
The collection contains business records and photographic materials documenting the International Salt Company. The business records include correspondence, account and ledger books, a payroll book, patent and trademark information, print advertising and marketing materials, and a salesman salt display kit. The photographic materials include a series of photographs by William M. Rittase, a series of photographs by Harold Haliday Costain, a small photograph album, snapshots, and slides. The images cover all facets of the salt manufacturing and packaging operations, and include photographs taken in New York State, Michigan, and Louisiana. The scrapbooks contain advertisements for the International Salt Company's Sterling Salt label and other leading salt companies, especially Morton's. Much of the ephemera consists of labels, but there are also small pamphlet cookbooks. The cookbooks, prepared and marketed by various salt companies, tout recipes for tasty dishes using specific salts and expound upon the merits of salt in general, especially the medical benefits. Other clever salt-related advertising appears in conjunction with maps, buttons, song books, calendars, and health exercises. Series 1, Business Records, 1894-1937, consists primarily of financial materials--ledgers, cash books, monthly statements, timekeeping and payroll information--for the Avery Rock Salt Mining Company (A.R.S.M.Co.), Detroit Rock Salt Company, Detroit Salt Company, International Salt Company, and the Restof Mining Company. Additionally, there is one annual report for the International Salt Company (1957) and the newsletter Saltmaker, 1964. There are two A.R.S.M.Co. ledgers, 1898-1907 and 1907-1922. The first ledger, 1898-1907, predates the founding of the International Salt Company, and it is likely that A.R.S.M.Co was absorbed by International Salt during a merger. Documentation recorded including inventories, merchandise, labor, surplus, insurance, office expenses, legal expenses, taxes, bills receivable, directors' committee fees, fuel, candles, oil, waste and packing, rental, repairs and maintenance, interest, labor, feed, outside salary account, Cuban consignment account, and loan account. Specific persons, such as superintendents F. Rundio and Sidney Bradford, are mentioned and specific companies including Restof Mining, Joy Morton Company, Havana Mill, G. Lawton Childs & Company, International Salt of New York and various others (pages 193-212), are listed with expenses. The Detroit Salt Company (general ledger), 1911-1913, consists of one bound volume documenting the company's assets, liabilities, expenses, earnings, advance accounts, and old accounts. Detroit Rock Salt Company (cash record), 1912 October-1913 January, consists of one bound volume documenting cash received and cash disbursed. International Salt Company, Inc., Independent Salt Company Division (monthly statements), 1933 October-1937 December, consists of one bound volume of general ledger trial balance sheets organized chronologically. Detailed documentation includes general expenses, assets, capital assets, liabilities, special reserves, net worth, profit and loss statements, warehousing costs and tonnage purchased. Restof Mining Company (time and payroll), 1894 July 1-1895 March 31, consists of one bound volume of 400 pages, documenting the time and payroll for employees. The volume contains the name of the employee, the number of days worked, hourly wage earned per day, the amount earned, advances, board due, store (supplies due), rent, and any balances due. A portion of the volume is severely water-damaged. Series 2, Trademarks, 1881-1935, consists of copies of issued trademark declarations from the United States Patent Office. The trademarks are for company names, logos, salt containers and packages, and various salt products. The trademarks are arranged alphabetically by the name of the trademark. For example, Amaessa, a trademark for baking powder and salt is filed with other trademarks beginning with the letter "A." Additional materials consist of one file folder of correspondence and printed materials about patents, trademarks and copyright laws. The correspondence relates specifically to the ownership of certain trademarks by International Salt Company, and there is correspondence from John L. Ryon, assistant sales manager and W.T. Chisolm, vice-president of International Salt Company. There are compiled lists of brand names, trademarks, and package designs for which International Salt registered at the United States Patent Office, 1926-1927. There are two examples of small cloth bags branded with "Ideal Salt" and some packaging, such as "White Lily High Grade Salt" and labels such as "Purex Free Running Table Salt." The Peter J.L. Searing trademark for salt (No. 52,963) and Chicago Sawed Salt-Block Company (No. 15,174) provide examples of ethnic imagery. A trademark is a brand name. A trademark or service mark includes any word, name, symbol, device, or any combination used or intended to be used to identify and distinguish the goods/services of one seller or provider from those of others, and to indicate the source of the goods/services. Although federal registration of a mark is not mandatory, it has several advantages, including notice to the public of the registrant's claim of ownership of the mark, legal presumption of ownership nationwide, and exclusive right to use the mark on or in connection with the goods/services listed in the registration. Series 3, Photographs, 1934-1993, is divided into five subseries: Subseries 1, Harold Haliday Costain, 1934; Subseries 2, William Ritasse, circa 1934; Subseries 3, Loose Photographs, 1969-1993; Subseries 4, Slides, circa 1970s; and Subseries 5, Album (unidentified), undated. Subseries 1, Harold Haliday Costain, circa 1934, consists of three photographs (approximately 10 1/2" x 13") black-and-white prints mounted to 16" x 20" boards. The prints are numbered #6, #42, and #44 and depict a salt mine and equipment used in salt manufacturing located in Avery Island, Louisiana. Subseries 2, William Ritasse, circa 1934, consists of black-and-white prints (10" x 14") signed by Ritasse which are mounted on 18 1/2" x 20" boards. The photographs are arranged numerically from #350 to #480. Many of the photographs are captioned. American photographer William Rittase (1887-1968), active in the 1920s-1930s, is known for his industrial photography. Rittase's images provide insight into International Salt Company activities such as salt manufacturing, packaging operations, general factory processes, printing salt bags, can labeling, brine storage, exteriors of buildings, crushing salt, men in the salt mines, machine shop views, and equipment. Subseries 3, Loose Photographs, 1969-1993, consists of black-and-white and color prints, as well as transparencies depicting salt mines and related activities. Some of the photographs document a visit by International Salt Company executives to the Jefferson Island, Louisiana salt plant. Subseries 4, Slides, circa 1970s, consists of seventeen color slides documenting salt plants, equipment and salt miners. Subseries 5, Album (damaged mine), undated, consists of twenty-two 4" x 6 1/2" black-and-white photographs documenting the damage to a salt manufacturing plant. The photographs are captioned, but there is no indication of the geographic location of the salt plant. Series 4, Advertising and Marketing Materials, 1920-1948, consists of two scrapbooks (14" x 17" and 11" x 16") that contain primarily tear sheets, unbound periodical pages showing an advertisement as printed, or as a proof, newspaper clippings, magazine clippings, correspondence, pamphlets, price lists, recipes, labels, periodicals, and other ephemera. The scrapbook, 1920-1931, consists primarily of advertisements and newspaper clippings related to advertising salt products, especially for Morton's Salt and Diamond Crystal Salt. Other companies represented include Colonial Salt Company, Carey Salt Company, Jefferson Island Salt Company, Kerr Salt Company, Mulkey Salt Company, Myles Salt Company, Ohio Salt Company, Pennsylvania Salt Manufacturing Company, Remington Salt Company, Star Salt Corporation, Union Salt Company, Worcester Salt Company, and Watkins Salt Company. The scrapbook from 1945-1948 is devoted to advertisements for the International Salt Company and Sterling Salt, which promoted salt uses for the home (table salt, curing meats, and brines), industry (rock salt for winter weather) and agriculture (killing weeds). Many of the advertisements were part of the "Pass the Salt" campaign and were featured in publications such as Woman's Day, National Provisioner, Food Industries, Hide, Leather and Shoes, Chemical Previews, and Public Works. The scrapbook is divided into three sections: institutional, weed prevention, and Lixate, a process developed by the International Salt Research Laboratory for making brine. Many of the advertisements were prepared by J.M. Mathes Incorporated. Also included is a traveling salt kit for Sterling Salt Company salesmen, undated, featuring small glass vials of sterling salt from mines in Detroit, Avery Island, Louisiana, and Restof, New York. Each vial notes the types of salts--purified, softener, iodized, medium flake, coarse flake, granular flour, and meat. Series 5, Posters, circa 1920s, consists of oversize advertising posters for Worcester Salt Company. There is one set of labels from an exhibit titled "I Eat Rocks! Salt of the Earth."
Restrictions
Collection is open for research but is stored off-site and special arrangements must be made to work with it. Contact the Archives Center for information at [email protected] or 202-633-3270.
Related Materials
Materials held at the Smithsonian Institution Smithsonian Institution Libraries, National Museum of American History Trade catalogs from International Salt Company Inc., 1900s Materials held at Other Organizations Harvard University Archives Ritasse, William M., 1894-1968. Photographs of Hardvard University campus and environs taken by William M. Ritasse, circa 1930. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Avery Rock Salt Mining Company, Plan. June 16, 1924 (AKZO No. 7-77-02) - Avery Island Salt Works, Akzo Salt Incorporated, Avery Island, Iberia Parish, LA Salt Mine Village, Salt Workers' Houses No. 6, Avery Island, Iberia Parish, LA Avery Island Sugarhouse, Avery Island, Iberia Parish, LA State Library of Louisiana Historic Photograph Collection contains images of salt mining at Avery Island, Louisiana. University of North Carolina, Southern Historical Collection at the Louis Round Wilson Library Papers for the Avery Family of Louisiana, 1796-1951
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1503513664587-1503513664601-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep8fb5589f8-c9ba-4e1d-ac7d-1ce2b4585c34

In the Collection

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  • Morton's Salt / The leader in the kitchen color photomechanical print

  • Trademarks

  • Harold Haliday Costain

  • Photographs

  • Women packing cases of 24-ounce salt packages, silver gelatin photoprint.

  • Union Pacific / Salt Co. / Anchor / Brand / Liverpool / Dairy Salt, trademark.

  • Advertising/Marketing Materials

  • William Ritasse

  • #366, Casing the "International" 24 ounce packages

  • #44, Avery Island, Louisiana vacuum pan plant (?)

  • "W"

  • #6, Avery Island, Louisiana railroad tracks in mine

  • "D"

  • #369, Printing of large bags in two colors. "Perfection" salt

  • #42, Avery Island, Louisiana pumps (?)

  • 1920-1931

  • #478, Detroit Rock Salt Company of New York. The hoist house

  • Worcester Salt Company. Worcester brand salt. Backed by the American housewife for table, kitchen, and dairy

  • #420, Picture showing mechanism for loading bulk salt into box cars

  • #357, Sewing the pockets, sizes 2 pound to 14 pound at the rate of about 10,000 per day by each machine

  • Worcester Salt Company. Worcester Salt. Best for Meat-Curing

  • #413, 100 pound sacks of salt on conveyor belt. Retsof Mining Company of New York

  • #362, Filling round cans of "Purity" salt at Watkins Glen, New York

  • #409, This depicts the standard grades of salt produced at the mine. Same picture as photo 396.

  • #476, Detroit Rock Salt Company. Battrice. This is a wall built of rock salt to close in an old chamber, and is peculiar to this mine

  • Unidentified

  • #425, Showing a mine chamber, but picture is spoiled by lack of animation and uncertainty as to what it means. The picture would have been good had we placed one or two men in the background

  • Avery Rock Salt Mining Company, Ledger 1

  • #407, Picture of the 1050 H.P. hoist used for bringing the salt from the mine to the surface. The depth is 1063 feet and the load lifted at each operation six tons

  • "T"

  • Slides

  • #388, Office building, Retsof Mining Company, Retsof, New York. Note New Deal Era NRA eagle on sign in window. Torn down, circa 1995, after mine collapsed.

  • #378, Pocket printing with a capacity of 40,000 pockets per day. Cloth is fed from rolls through an automatic press which not only prints two pockets at one time in two colors, but runs the cloth through a splitting and folding device

  • #402, Typical picture of filling and sewing bags of rock salt. Retsof Mining Company of New York

  • #379, Automatic casing machine at Watkins Glen. This machine automatically, mechanically places the round cans in the case

  • #398, This is a good picture but meaningless so far as our operation is concerned. Understand Rittase probably intends to use this for some magazine cover

  • "A"

  • #411, Inserting dynamite into drilled hole.

  • #480, Detroit Rock Salt Company (?). Conveyor belt carrying finished salt.

  • I Eat Rocks! Salt of the Earth. An exhibit about sodium chloride (labels)

  • #350, Laboratory at Watkins Glen, New York

  • #470, Detroit Rock Salt Company. The enormous air duct that takes fresh air into the mine

  • Shaker Salt. Pkg. 10 cents

  • #421, Close-up of one of the electric screens used for the preparation of salt

  • #362, Filling round cans of "Purity" salt at Watkins Glen, New York second print

  • #360, The process of turning the pockets. The girls pull the pockets over a form which places the printing on the outside and the sewing on the inside. "Purity" salt, Watkins Glen

  • Unidentified (#1-#69)

  • #359, Carton filling and sealing machine at Ludlowville, New York. The machine has a capacity of 80 packages per minute

  • #417, Rotary dump at Shaft Bottom for unloading mine cars

  • #479, Detroit Rock Salt Company of New York. This is a view from across the river, of the salt dock

  • #377, Automatic can labeling at Watkins Glen, New York

  • #423, Drilling holes for dynamite in rock face

  • Loose

  • #467, Detroit Rock Salt Company. View of how the salt is unloaded from cars onto the dock

  • #365, Unidentified

  • "C"

  • Posters

  • #355, Vacuum pan plant at Ludlowville, New York

  • #401, Electric vibrating screens used for the preparation of finished grades. Same room as photo 404 but different view

  • "Y"

  • #406, Master Mechanic's office in the mine. Hanging calendar is open to March 1934.

  • #381, Brine storage tanks at Watkins Glen, New York

  • #424, Conveyors in breaker building (?)

  • Salesman Salt Kit

  • "M"

  • #469, Detroit Rock Salt Company of New York. The mining foreman's office is built out of rock salt. Notice the luminous corner stone. No plaster whatever was used in this house -- it is all salt

  • #450, Brine tanks (?). Watkin's Glen.

  • #370, Salt catchers located in the bottom of the vacuum pans at Watkins Glen, New York

  • #356, Shipping department, showing barrel runway and hand sewing of large bags at Watkins Glen, New York

  • #368, Sewing of large bags

  • Business Records

  • "K-L"

  • #465, Detroit Rock Salt Company of New York. View of the loading dock, which at present is under construction, and this picture was taken against the advice of the company. No ships were in that day

  • #392, Due to modern methods calling for complete mechanization of the different operations in the mine, maintenance of mechanical equipment is a very important factor. This picture shows one of our machinists turning a driving wheel for one of the twelve electric locomotives used for mine transportation. Same machine and machinist as photo 391. Larger view of machine shop, with same machinist, is shown in photo 405.

  • Avery Rock Salt Mining Company, Ledger 2

  • #399, Picture showing a battery of crushers for crushing salt to graded sizes. Same place as photo 400 but different view

  • #427, One of the belt conveyors in the mill building for transporting the salt from the electric screens to the storage bins

  • 1945-1948

  • #412, Mechanical loader loading newly-blasted salt into mine cars. Also see photo 419.

  • International Salt and Avery Island

  • Jefferson Island, Louisiana

  • "G"

  • #373, Bag filling at Watkins Glen

  • Album (damaged mine), unidentified

  • #376, Dryers at Watkins Glen, New York

  • #396, This depicts the standard grades of salt produced at the mine. Same picture as photo 409

  • International Salt Company (monthly statements)

  • Worcester Salt Company. Ivory Salt

  • Unidentified

  • Detroit Salt Company (general ledger)

  • #386, Breaker building, Retsof Mining Company, Retsof, New York. Torn down, ca. 1995, after mine collapse

  • "B"

  • The Saltmaker (newsletter)

  • #390, This is a picture of a cage load of men at the bottom of the mine ready to ascend to the surface. Retsof Mining Company of New York.

  • #394, Picture of revolving pulleys at the top of the head frame

  • #466, Detroit Rock Salt Company

  • #375, Tube winding machine in the can factory at Watkins Glen

  • General

  • #404, A picture of the screen room in the mill, showing the electric vibrating screens for the preparation of finished grades. Would not advise using this picture as there are others of the same subject later which show more animation. Same room as photo 401 but different view

  • #371, Volumetric salt filling device at Ludlowville, New York

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