[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 92 (Wednesday, June 10, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S4019]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ADDITIONAL STATEMENTS
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CONGRATULATING B. GREEN & COMPANY ON ITS 100TH ANNIVERSARY
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I wish to take this opportunity to
recognize a special Baltimore company--B. Green & Company--on its 100th
anniversary, which will be celebrated this Saturday, June 13. Benjamin
Green founded this great Baltimore company one century ago. He was an
immigrant from Lithuania who worked as a street peddler before starting
a wholesale grocery business in 1915 in a rowhouse located at 828 West
Baltimore Street. He made deliveries to Baltimore-area grocery stores
by horse-drawn carts and later by ``tin lizzy'' type trucks.
One hundred years ago, warehouses were multistoried buildings,
record-keeping, inventories, and billing were done by hand, and most
items--even commodities like butter--were sold in bulk. Today, we have
sprawling one-story warehouses accessible by tractor-trailer trucks.
``Just in time'' inventories are tracked by barcode. Computer software
has automated much of the book-keeping and billing. And products of all
types are sold in more convenient packages.
B. Green & Company was--and remains--a family business. All of
Benjamin Green's children--his sons Sam and Bernie and his daughters
Rose, Anna, Sarah, and Dora ``Duckye'' and their spouses joined in
supporting the business, learning it from the ground up. As they
developed their own areas of expertise, the size and nature and status
of the company grew. The third generation of the family joined their
parents in the business in the 1960s and 1970s. Today, the remaining
family members in the business are chief executive officer Benjamin
``Benjy'' Green and his cousins Ben Sigman, chairman emeritus; and
Bernice Sigman, a retired physician and board member.
For a company to survive and prosper for 100 years, it needs to
evolve and change with the times. During World War II, the company
started supplying food to military bases and grew into the largest
military commissary supplier on the east coast. In 1948, B. Green &
Company was one of the first food wholesalers to use data processing
equipment. Also, that year, the company relocated to the first single-
story warehouse in the area at 2200 Winchester Street. A catastrophic
fire destroyed the entire warehouse and most of the corporate offices
in 1959, but the company had such strong relations with its suppliers
and customers that it was able to resume delivering groceries from a
rented warehouse within a few days.
In 1966, B. Green & Company purchased Capital Wholesale Grocery
Company, which allowed it to add the Cash & Carry business. The
corporate offices were moved to 400 West Conway Street where the Cash &
Carry was located. In 1968, the company acquired Colonial Foods
Distributing Company to add gourmet and specialty foods and snack items
to the main grocery products, and to add some national chains as
customers. In 1972, the company acquired property at 3601 Washington
Boulevard from Westinghouse to expand warehousing capacity, and the
corporate offices relocated there in 1975. Three years later, the
company acquired Southern Beef Company to expand its line of meat
products.
B. Green & Company eventually became the largest grocery wholesaler
on the east coast. In 1979, it helped pioneer warehouse-style, low-
price, no-frills supermarkets by opening the York Warehouse Food
Market. In 1983, using state-of-the-art technology, it became one of
the first wholesalers to use a mechanized warehouse system. In 1989,
the Maryland Stadium Authority, by the ``right of eminent domain'',
condemned the 400 West Conway location to build Oriole Park at Camden
Yards. Cash & Carry moved to its current location at 1300 South Monroe
Street.
By 1991, with annual sales of $675 million, B. Green & Company ranked
263d on Forbes magazine's list of the Nation's largest private
companies. But the company continued to evolve, shifting its focus from
wholesaling to retailing. In 1992, it sold its military distribution
business to Nash Finch, a Minnesota-based wholesale grocery
distributer. In 1993, it sold its civilian distribution business to
Richfood of Richmond, VA.
Today, B. Green & Company runs several different food operations. It
still distributes groceries to food retailers who are too small for the
big wholesalers. It continues to run Cash & Carry from the warehouse at
1300 South Monroe Street and another one located at 2401 Belair Road.
Cash & Carry is a members-only warehouse where many corner grocers in
the area can shop for goods. And it operates two ``everyday-low-price''
Food Depot stores in Baltimore at the Belair Road site, which opened in
1996, and at 2495 Frederick Avenue, which opened in 2008. These stores
ushered in a new generation of urban full-service supermarkets,
featuring a fresh seafood and fish department, one of the largest and
most diversified produce departments in Baltimore City, a full-service
deli and bakery, and a meat department with a great variety of products
and cuts of meat. The stores succeed as independent grocers by
customizing their products and services to the neighborhoods they
serve. Store managers and associates are encouraged to suggest products
and merchandising strategies. In 2011, the company expanded into Howard
County with a new format, the Green Valley Marketplace at 7280
Montgomery Road in Elkridge, MD. Green Valley Marketplace is a new
suburban supermarket.
I am proud that B. Green & Company launched a campaign to expand
healthy food choices in the city's poorest neighborhoods in a
partnership with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
that encourages shoppers to buy healthier items and fewer highly
processed foods. Many Food Depot customers rely on the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program. The stores have licensed dieticians
onsite who teach customers how to shop for and prepare healthy meals on
a budget.
Today, B. Green & Company employs nearly 500 associates, who are
considered extended family. Benjy Green knows most of them by name and
can recount their backgrounds. The company thrives 100 years after its
creation because, as Benjy put it, ``we know the neighborhood we serve
better than the other guy''. It thrives because it treats its employees
and its customers with respect. It thrives because it fulfills a vital
function in communities across Baltimore and the surrounding area. I
would ask my colleagues to join me in congratulating B. Green & Company
on its 100th anniversary and sending best wishes for the next 100
years.
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