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Richard K. Ransom, Founder of Hickory Farms, Dies at 96
By MARY WILLIAMS WALSHAPRIL 16, 2016 Continue reading the main story Share This Page Photo Richard Ransom, right, and Earl Ransom, his cousin, in 1959. Credit Lloyd Ransom, via The Blade In 1951, finding specialty meats and cheeses could take some doing if you lived in small-town America and had no neighborhood deli. For Richard K. Ransom, this was an opportunity. In his early 30s, recently returned from fighting in the Pacific, Mr. Ransom was tired of driving a vegetable truck around rural Ohio for his parents wholesale produce business. So he started selling hand-cut cheeses at flower shows and boat shows. Soon he added summer sausage, then expanded to county fairs around the Midwest. He named his company Hickory Farms. By the time he sold it in 1980, Hickory Farms was a $164-million-a-year specialty food business, with outlets in every state but Mississippi. Mr. Ransom died on April 11 in Toledo at 96, his son, Robert, said. He had Alzheimers disease, the son said. Hickory Farms grew explosively in the early years, thanks to what was then a novelty: free samples. It is almost impossible to enter a Hickory Farms store without tasting something, Forbes magazine observed in a 1983 business profile, describing the ranks of smiling, apron-clad women positioned at store doorways and in the aisles with trays of food. The women did not bother asking customers if they wanted a taste they just cut off bite-size pieces and held them out to people, Robert Ransom recalled. Shoppers felt obligated to take and eat what they were offered, and after tasting meats and cheeses every few steps around the store, they felt obligated to buy something. It seems so simple now, Robert Ransom said. The elder Mr. Ransom also wrote an instruction manual for sales personnel, explaining how to cut blocks or wheels of cheese in a way that ensured that shoppers would always get a little more than they asked for. If you magnify that over thousands of customers in 600 stores every day of the year, its an enormous amount of money, the son said. Mr. Ransom sold Hickory Farms for $41 million in 1980 to the General Host Corporation of Connecticut. Analysts thought the price was steep and attributed it to Hickory Farms shrewd marketing. The company has since changed hands more than once and has shifted to catalog sales. After selling Hickory Farms, Mr. Ransom formed a family business that invested in commercial real estate in the Toledo area. He served on corporate and nonprofit boards and founded what is now the Adopt America Network, which works to find permanent adoptive families for children in foster care. Mr. Ransom was born on Sept. 13, 1919, to Beatrice and Chick Ransom, the owners of a business that bought vegetables from farmers in northern Ohio and southern Michigan and delivered them by truck to grocers. His wife, Elizabeth Meinert Ransom, died in 2009. In addition to his son, he is survived by three daughters, Carol Batdorf, Lynn Connolly and Janet Sarieh; nine grandchildren; and 12 great-grandchildren. |
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