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Mogen David
American wine-producing company
American wine-producing company
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Mogen David Wine Corporation |
| logo | File:Mogen David logo.png |
| type | Private |
| predecessor | Wine Corporation of America |
| founded | Chicago, United States () |
| founder | |
| location_city | Westfield, New York |
| location_country | United States |
| key_people | E. Schwartz, President |
| industry | Winemaking |
| revenue | $75 to $149.99 million |
| num_employees | 100 to 250 |
| parent | The Wine Group, LLC |
| homepage |
Mogen David Wine Co. is a company based in Westfield, New York that makes wines, including the fortified wine MD 20/20. Mogen David Wine Co. is a trademark held by their parent company The Wine Group in Livermore, California.
Mogen David is the Ashkenazic pronunciation of the Hebrew Magen David, which literally means "shield of David", but is used metaphorically to refer to the six-pointed Star of David.
Products
Mogen David wine is sold in 750mL, 1.5L, and 3L bottles. It is also Kosher for Passover.
Mogen David Concord Red wine is made from must of no less than 51% Concord grapes, an American grape variety, which is typically used for grape juices, jellies, and preserves, but also used for Kosher wines. This makes the wine less expensive, averaging $5 per bottle. In addition to Concord red, Mogen David also markets Blackberry and Pomegranate wines.
History
Founded months before the Repeal of Prohibition by Max Cohen and Henry Markus in Chicago, the California Wine Company bottled medicinal and sacramental wines, changing its name to Wine Corporation of America in 1941 when it began making wine from Concord grape juice (or concentrate) shipped from growers in New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and later Michigan.{{cite journal | access-date= 7 May 2016
Chicago winery
Following World War II the company purchased a 50000 sqfoot building at 3737 South Sacramento Ave in Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood which was converted into one of the largest wineries in the Midwestern United States. The entire winery was allocated to a single product, Mogen David, a kosher wine originally marketed for the Passover Seder that turned out to be popular year-round with the general public. Annual production of Mogen David was 75000 USgal in 1946. Wine Corporation of America began advertising Mogen David nationally in 1947; by the early 1950s the advertising budget for Mogen David was the fourth or fifth largest for wines. Max Cohen, company President and founder, noted in 1952 that 98 percent of Mogen David's customers were not Jewish.
Annual production of Mogen David increased to more than 3000000 USgal of wine in 1949 and to nearly 5000000 USgal for 1953, and in that year Wine Corporation of America took the name of its most important product, becoming the Mogen David Wine Corporation.
In 1955 Mogen David announced the purchase of new plant facilities at 3700 South Kedzie Ave, about 2000 ft from the main plant on Sacramento Ave, designed to triple its capacity and enable production of two additional wines. The company launched a new line of wines under a different brand name, Key, in 1957. This marketing campaign was unsuccessful, and the new line was dropped after three years.
In the early 1960s, concord wine was still the biggest seller in the Mogen David line, along with a rosé, a blackberry wine, a cherry wine and a dry red wine.
Company founder and chairman Max Cohen announced his resignation on 8 January 1962, citing friction with his brother-in-law, Henry A. Markus who was president of the company. Cohen sold all of his stock to Markus, saying that "I am no longer connected with the firm and I have no interest in it."[[File:MD 2020.jpg|thumb|A selection of several flavors from the MD 20/20 line|alt=4 colorful MD 20/20 drink bottles on a shelf|190x190px]]
The sale of a controlling interest in Mogen David to Richard T. Schofield of Westfield, New York was announced on 9 May 1963, with Schofield taking over as president of the company and Markus appointed chairman. Some operations were moved to Westfield in 1967; Mogen David's Westfield winery was closer to the vineyards in the Northeast that grow Concord grapes for its wines, the Chicago plants remained open.
By 1968, Mogen David was producing a dozen different wines and two kinds of champagne. The company broke away from its conventional Mogen David line with the introduction of the MD 20/20 brand of flavored fortified wines that were well received by younger consumers, especially college students. The MD 20/20 line included unusual flavors such as pink grapefruit, wild berry, and Hawaiian blue.
Acquisition by Coke-New York
In 1970 the Coca-Cola Bottling Company of New York was the largest soft drink bottler in the world, having merged with the Coca-Cola Bottling Company of New Haven (acquired in 1969) but its growth prospects were limited by the franchise boundaries. When Coke-New York was approached by an investment banking firm to let them know that Mogen David was for sale, they saw an opportunity to become a major competitor in a new industry (Mogen David was the sixth largest winery and the largest Concord grape wine producer in the country) and to pick up a national sales and distribution network. Coke-New York acquired Mogen David on 1 November 1970 by paying $16,750,000 in cash. J. Myron "Mike" Bay was an officer in both companies: President of Mogen David as well as a VP of Coke-New York.
By 1972 Mogen David was producing 27000 USgal a day in Westfield, NY and 80000 USgal a day from the two plants in Chicago, for an estimated annual output of 13000000 USgal. Mogen David company introduced a "pop wine" product line, Cold Bear (Concord) and Black Bear (blackberry), leading to overall growth in sales of 32 percent for 1972. Mogen David had a staff of over 45 salesmen. Mogen David wines and Tribuno vermouths were marketed nationally through over 300 independent distributors in 1972, in order to strengthen their market position, New York Coca-Cola began consolidating Tribuno and Mogen David distribution networks.
The Jug line of strawberry and apple pop wines, packaged in country-style brown and white jugs, was introduced in 1973. Mogen David had the fourth largest winery and the third largest advertising budget in the wine industry in 1973.
With its 1973 acquisitions of Tribuno Wines (previously Vermouth Industries of America) and later the well established California winery Franzia, Coke-New York was, in all, the third largest US wine producer. Franzia also shipped wine, grape concentrates and brandy in bulk to the Mogen David winery in Westfield, New York, for use in Mogen David products.
Jerome W. "Jerry" Alder joined Mogen David as President and COO in September 1976; former President Mike Bay moved into the new position of Chairman, and continued as Mogen David's CEO. In 1977, the company's administrative and marketing offices moved from the original winery at 3737 South Sacramento Ave, and into space in a new building at 444 Michigan Ave in downtown Chicago.
A study of wine marketing in 1980 found that Mogen David consumers apparently had the strongest brand loyalty in the varietal table wine category.
Acquisition by The Wine Group
Discussions between The Coca-Cola Company and The Coca-Cola Bottling Company of New York about a possible acquisition of the latter began in 1974, to little effect.
When merger discussions resumed in 1980, The Coca-Cola Company had already entered the alcoholic beverage market; their Wine Spectrum subsidiary consisting of wineries in California and New York. As part of the proposed merger, The Coca-Cola Company agreed to sell the wine business of Coke-New York to a partnership formed by First Boston and top-level managers of the New York bottler's wine business. Coke-New York divested itself of its three wineries, which were bought in 1981 by The Wine Group, a limited partnership headed by Arthur A. Ciocca,{{Citation
In 1998, 1.5 million adults were drinking Mogen David, putting it just ahead of its chief competitor Manischewitz. By 2005, Manischewitz was again dominant with more than half of kosher wine sales, Mogen David was second with 33 percent of the market.
Notes
References
References
- (9 September 1972). "Markus, 73, Ex-Winery Owner, Dies". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- "MOGEN DAVID WINE CORP".
- "Mogen David Wine Corporation". [[Bloomberg L.P.]].
- "Legal & Privacy".
- "Mogen David Wines".
- (14 April 2011). "The 11th Plague? Why People Drink Sweet Wine on Passover". [[The Atlantic]].
- (2005). "A History of Wine in America: From Prohibition to the Present, Volume 2". University of California Press.
- . (5 September 1948). ["WINE CORPORATION PURCHASES BUILDING ON S. SACRAMENTO"](http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1948/09/05/page/117/article/wine-corporation-purchases-building-on-s-sacramento). *[[Chicago Tribune]]*.
- (1 May 1954). "From the American Scene: Wine Like Mother Used to Make". [[Commentary (magazine).
- (7 February 1953). "Radio, TV Cost Winery 400G".
- (5 December 1952). "'Wine That Grandma Used to Make' To Issue New, Kosher Recipe Booklet". The National Jewish Post.
- (21 October 1949). "Tower Ticker". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (1 February 2016). "What Happened to the Original Midwest Wineries?".
- (24 July 1953). "Chicago Takes Corking Role In Wine Trade". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (7 December 1955). "Mogen David Buys Plant to Hike Capacity". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (6 December 1963). "The Only Winery in Chicago Is One of the World's Biggest". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (9 January 1962). "Mogen David's Chairman Resigns; Bares Friction". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- . (10 May 1963). ["SELL MOGEN DAVID WINE COMPANY TO N.Y. BUSINESS MAN"](http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1963/05/10/page/69/article/sell-mogen-david-wine-company-to-n-y-business-man). *[[Chicago Tribune]]*.
- "History of The Wine Group, Inc.".
- (27 June 1974). "Let's learn about wines". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (8 March 1968). "Champagne Toasts to Brides Becoming More Popular". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (22 March 1968). "Champagne Ad Is a Corker". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (February 1971). "1970 Annual Report". The Coca-Cola Bottling Company of New York, Inc.
- . (12 November 1970). ["Coca-Cola Acquires Mogen David Wine"](http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1970/11/12/page/106/article/coca-cola-acquires-mogen-david-wine). *[[Chicago Tribune]]*.
- (5 November 1972). "Home of Mogen David - Kedzie Av. 'Wine Country'". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (2 April 1973). "Mogen David goes to jugs". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (21 January 1974). "Mogen David Jug ripples wine market". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (22 July 1979). "Italy takes Ist place in U.S. wine imports". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (14 September 1976). "Alder wine firm president". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (23 March 1977). "Mogen David aims for Tribuno build-up".
- (12 June 1977). "Design firm aids bottled up winery". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (1980). "Marketing to the Wine Consumer--An Overview". Association for Consumer Research.
- (28 January 1974). "Things go better with wine". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- (4 March 1981). "Annual Report 1980". The Coca-Cola Company.
- (16 July 1981). "COCA-COLA TO SELL 3 WINE CONCERNS". [[New York Times]].
- (28 January 1988). "$14.1-Million Deal Takes Distiller From Wine Market : S.F. Firm to Buy Glenmore Distilleries Winery". [[Los Angeles Times]].
- (3 April 1982). "GALLO, BIGGEST IN WINE, GREW EVEN BIGGER IN 1981". [[New York Times]].
- "Background Information on The Wine Group, Inc.". Advameg, Inc.
- (14 April 2005). "Concord giants face off". [[Hearst Communications]].
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