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Topic: William Kellogg


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In the News (Wed 16 Dec 09)

  
  John Harvey Kellogg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kellogg was born in Tyrone, New York in 1852 to John Preston Kellogg (1807-?) and Ann Janette Stanley (1824-?).
Kellogg died in 1943 and was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Battle Creek.
Kellogg also performed surgery when a patient was not cured by a vegetarian diet and would remove a small section of a patient's intestines.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Harvey_Kellogg   (717 words)

  
 William Pitt Kellogg
William Kellogg, William Pitt Kellogg and Abraham Lincoln were among the strong forces that reorganized the Whig Party into the current Republican Party from 1858 to 1860.
Kellogg was the object of an assassination attempt, and, to avoid yellow fever, spent most summers travelling in the North.
Kellogg had control of the City, but the local citizenry was allied with the White League, the militia of the Democratic Party.
home.comcast.net /~james.kellogg/ATT/WPK.html   (1516 words)

  
 Start your morning with William Keith Kellogg   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Kellogg's rise to the top of the cereal market came through the efforts of founder William Keith Kellogg.
Dr. Kellogg was called away on an emergency and when they returned the next day they ran the wheat through a roller, expecting it to come out in sheets.
In the beginning, Kellogg had to compete with 42 other cereal companies in Battle Creek alone, all of which were trying to capitalize on the popularity of the brother's inventions.
www.businessandindustryhalloffame.com /Kellogg_William.html   (495 words)

  
 Inventor of the Week: Archive
Kellogg was educated as far as the sixth grade.
His older brother John Harvey Kellogg was a doctor, rising to the rank of physician-in-chief at a world-famous local hospital and health spa called the Battle Creek Sanitarium.
Kellogg retired as the company's president in 1929 but stayed on as chairman of the board until 1946.
web.mit.edu /invent/iow/kellogg.html   (695 words)

  
 Snap, Crackle and Profit -- the story behind a cereal empire
Kellogg provided his patients with plans to readjust their diet and lifestyle in order to return to good health.
He followed the trail blazed by the feuding Kelloggs, but his genius for advertising made Postum a popular national drink in campaign that warned drinking coffee was dangerous to health.
Kellogg remains Battle Creek's biggest single employer and despite changes in the breakfast eating habits of Americans still retains 45 percent of the world cereal market.
info.detnews.com /history/story/index.cfm?id=146&category=business   (1695 words)

  
 William Pitt Kellogg
The McEnery party finally appealed to arms, alleging that the Kellogg administration was a usurpation, and after a conflict with the metropolitan police, in the streets of the city, seized the state and city buildings and property on 14 September, and compelled Governor Kellogg to take refuge in the custom-house.
On 25 February, 1876, Governor Kellogg was impeached by the lower house of the legislature, the principal accusation being that he had used for other purposes money that had been set apart for the payment of interest; but the case was dismissed by the senate.
Kellogg was chosen to the United States senate by the former, and admitted to his seat by vote of the senate on 30 November, 1877.
www.famousamericans.net /williampittkellogg   (669 words)

  
 16_WILFRED   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Moses Eastman Kellogg, Wilfred's uncle, was born in Salem, Massachusetts in 1802.
Wilfred's father, Charles Leonidas Sobeski Kellogg, served in the Civil War one year with the Vermont Volunteer Heavy Artillery, was an eye witness to Sheridan's ride from Winchester to Cedar Creek, and was present at the battles of Cedar Creek and Appomattox.
Kellogg might be observed occasionally passing by the door of the reader's sanctuary, but he never entered or indulged in frivolous conversation.
www.world-destiny.org /16_wilfred.html   (4881 words)

  
 AETV.com Classroom Study Guides
Kellogg's health programs included some of the most widely recognized practices today, along with some dubious practices that were, at best, eccentric.
Dr. Kellogg was part of a health craze that swept the nation in the late 19th century.
William Kellogg and Dr. John Kellogg fought each other in court for the use of the family name.
www.aetv.com /class/admin/study_guide/archives/aetv_guide.0115.html   (498 words)

  
 In the Libertarian Labyrinth: Edward Kellogg, 1790-1858
Edward Kellogg's Labor and Other Capital (1849) was one of the major sources, along with the works of Proudhon and William Beck's Money and Banking (1839), from which William Batchelder Greene drew portions of his mutual bank theory.
He differed from all of his sources in the measures he proposed, but, as was the case with his theological writings and the influence of Orestes Brownson, sometimes he appropriated large sections of the works he was reading, if only to turn them aside from their author's trajectories.
Kellogg's "Remarks on the Repeal of the Usury Laws," reflects debates that had been taking place in journals such as the Merchants Magazine and Commercial Review of New York, and was in turn reflected in Greene's discussions of those same usury laws.
libertarian-labyrinth.blogspot.com /2005/10/edward-kellogg-1790-1858.html   (1238 words)

  
 Kellogg's No-Sugar Cereal
Not only have Kellogg researchers figured out a way to flake whole grains for the first time, they say, but the product is made without sugar—and the company says it doesn't need the sweetener added at breakfast time to make it taste good.
Kellogg thinks it has licked the taste problem, but nonetheless its promotional efforts will be aimed primarily at nutrition-conscious adults.
Kellogg discovered that fact earlier when it test-marketed a flaked natural cereal, which customers found too much like one of the industry's usual sugary, highly processed concoctions.
www.barryyeoman.com /articles/kelloggs.html   (533 words)

  
 Who We Are - Our Founder   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Will Kellogg was bookkeeper and manager of the world-famous hospital, which put virtually any task outside of medicine under his purview.
Kellogg also donated nearly $3 million to hometown causes, such as the Ann J. Kellogg School for handicapped children, a civic auditorium, a junior high school, and a youth recreation center.
Kellogg demonstrated great compassion and caring and acted on his belief that the most good came from helping people to help themselves--giving them the opportunity to do what is important to them.
www.wkkf.org /WhoWeAre/Founder.aspx   (752 words)

  
 JS Online: Kohl's gives lesson in success
Kellogg, 58, has been with the Menomonee Falls department store chain for 34 of its 40 years in business.
Kellogg, along with now-retired Chief Operating Officer John Herma, led a management buyout of the then 10-store chain from BATUS Corp. in 1986.
Kellogg and Herma were joined in the buyout by Jay Baker, a now-retired president of Kohl's who presided over merchandising.
www.jsonline.com /bym/news/may02/44100.asp?format=print   (417 words)

  
 Kellogg Canada Inc. - Newsroom
The Kellogg's* All-Bran* Two Week Challenge is a national challenge designed to increase awareness about the overall benefits of fibre and encourage Canadians to improve their overall health by increasing their daily fibre intake with just a ½ cup of All-Bran Original* cereal a day.
On behalf of the winning team, Kellogg's donated $5,000 locally to the Ross Tilley Burn Centre in Toronto and matched that with a national donation of $5,000 to the Colorectal Cancer Association of Canada to underscore the importance of a high-fibre diet in preventing this deadly disease.
In addition to providing nutritious, high-quality foods, Kellogg Canada is committed to educating consumers about nutrition through responsible packaging, brochures, advertising and symposia developed with the scientific and medical communities.
www.kelloggs.ca /newsroom/news8.htm   (685 words)

  
 Inventor Will Keith Kellogg
Kellogg was fiercely competitive, but also quiet, reserved, somber—an introvert.
Keith Kellogg remembers his grandfather as a stern man with firm notions about childrearing, a man who valued the rare commodity of common sense and passed his values on to his progeny.
Kellogg's Cereal City USA™ is a themed family attraction celebrating the cereal industry in an educational, historical and, most importantly, entertaining manner.
www.ideafinder.com /history/inventors/kellogg.htm   (1260 words)

  
 Ancestors of Narcissa Cook
Kellogg, born 1733 in West Hartford, Connecticut; died November 05, 1806.
Kellogg, born December 05, 1774 in Litchfield, Connecticut.
Children of Lois Kellogg and William Benton are:
home.comcast.net /~chadcarv/Ancestors_of_NarcissaCook_LoisBenton_LoisKellogg.htm   (386 words)

  
 Kellogg's interactive - The re-branding of a corporate image
When William Kellogg accidentally invented a new breakfast food, he didn't realise how famous his name would become.
When William Kellogg accidentally invented a new breakfast food in Battle Creek, Michigan in 1894, he did not realise that his name was on the threshold of becoming one of the most instantly recognised throughout the world.
Today, Kellogg's is American owned with our main divisions covering the USA, South and Central America, South East Asia and the Pacific and finally Europe, Africa, Canada and the Middle East.
www.kelloggs.co.uk /company/brand.asp   (233 words)

  
 Kellogg - TheBestLinks.com - Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged, Battle Creek, Michigan, ...
Kellogg, Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged, Battle Creek, Michigan, Kellogg-Briand Pact...
Francis William Kellogg, U.S. Representative from Michigan and Alabama
Kellogg, Brown and Root, a military contractor and subsidiary of Haliburton
www.thebestlinks.com /Kellogg.html   (193 words)

  
 Kellogg Company --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
Kellogg's Corn Flakes was one of the earliest and remains one of the most popular breakfast cereals in the United States.
U.S. breakfast cereal company, based in Battle Creek., Mich.; founded by William K. Kellogg in 1906 as Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company to produce and market the grain flakes accidentally made in 1894 by his brother, John H. Kellogg; company prospered through aggressive advertising and marketing; reincorporated as Kellogg Company 1921; major overseas expansion...
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation was founded in 1930 to support efforts in social improvement.
www.britannica.com /ebi/article-9328098?tocId=9328098   (653 words)

  
 Kyle Busch - No. 5 Kellogg's Team - Hendrick Motorsports   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
William Kellogg’s accidental discovery of cereal in 1894 marked the beginning of a multi-national food empire.
Prompted by William Kellogg’s belief that diet played an important role in a healthy lifestyle and that breakfast was the most important meal of the day, he spent the next eight years further developing the newly invented cereal, culminating in its first production in 1906.
Kellogg products are manufactured in 17 countries and marketed in more than 180 countries around the world.
www.hendrickmotorsports.com /teams.asp?team=1   (588 words)

  
 A Study of Sadler "the Editor"
A few years later (in 1893) when William Kellogg began manufacturing his soon to be very successful line of health foods, Sadler became a salesman for the new products.
Then in 1897, Sadler married Lena Kellogg, William's daughter, also the niece of Dr. John Harvey Kellogg, the famous founder of the Battle Creek sanitarium.
Everyone who met William Sadler was impressed by his gigantic intellectual abilities, his memory, his sheer command of information such as the medical history of his patients.
www.ubfellowship.org /archive/readers/sadler_the_editor.htm   (2071 words)

  
 W.K. Kellogg Foundation Africa   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation is a non-profit organisation that was founded in 1930 by the American cereal industry pioneer William Keith Kellogg.
Since its first investments in the southern African region in 1986, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation has demonstrated an enduring interest in the development of African people, their communities and institutions.
The mission of the Kellogg Foundation’s program in southern Africa is to promote changes through its grant making in the social and economic systems that contribute to the health, viability and sustainability of rural communities in southern Africa.
www.wkkfafrica.org   (431 words)

  
 Amherst College Biographical Record: Index of names -- Kellogg
Kellogg, Emery Campbell ex 1902 (not yet entered)
Kellogg, Henry Kirke White 1899 (not yet entered)
Please consult the Frequently Asked Questions list if you'd like an entry typed in, would like to obtain a photocopy, or would like more information about a specific graduate.
www.amherst.edu /~rjyanco/genealogy/acbiorecord/index/byname/k/kellogg.html   (203 words)

  
 W.K. Kellogg Foundation
W.K. Kellogg Foundation 2004 Annual Report - A Legacy of Innovation
W.K. Kellogg Foundation 2005 Calendar - A Legacy of Innovation
Kellogg Foundation names new CEO Sterling Speirn of San Mateo, California, has been named as the new president and CEO of the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
www.wkkf.org   (146 words)

  
 Kellogg, John H. --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
Established as a prospecting camp in 1893 and originally called Milo, it was renamed (1894) to honour Noah S. Kellogg, discoverer of the Bunker Hill Mine.
Kellogg, John H. physician and health-food pioneer, born in Tyrone, Mich.; his development of dry breakfast cereals was largely responsible for the creation of the flaked-cereal industry; received M.D. from Bellevue Hospital Medical College 1875; became superintendent of Seventh-day Adventist Western Health Reform Institute 1876 (later Battle Creek Sanitarium); developed...
Brief biography of William H. Taft, the twenty-seventh President of the United States of America.
www.britannica.com /ebi/article-9311963?tocId=9311963   (755 words)

  
 Rogers Ancestry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
William died 10 Feb 1894 Cornwall, CT, at 83 years of age.
She married Augustus William Kellogg Connecticut, May 6, 1867.
She married Augustus W. Kellogg Cornwall, CT, 5 May 1868.
home.att.net /~rogersgenealogy/d1/i0002111.htm   (256 words)

  
 1906: Corn Flakes (New Inventors magazine)
William Keith Kellogg was a vegetarian Seventh-Day Adventist, who revolutionised breakfast by accident.
While working at the Battle Creek sanatorium in Michigan (where Kellogg’s brother was physicianin-chief), William accidentally left a pot of boiled wheat out to stand.
Soon Corn Flakes were packaged to meet hundreds of mail-order requests, and William Kellogg founded the Kellogg’s packaged food empire, one that revolutionised the breakfast eating habits of the Western world.
www.abc.net.au /newinventors/txt/s1230978.htm   (174 words)

  
 Kellogg, John Harvey - Definition - Mr Breakfast
Kellogg, John Harvey - Definition - Mr Breakfast
Inventor of the corn flake and the wheat flake.
His brother, William K. Kellogg founded the W.K. Kellogg Company.
www.mrbreakfast.com /glossary_term.asp?glossaryID=48   (76 words)

  
 William Warren - The Info Page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
William Robertson Warren (1879-1927) was a Newfoundland lawyer, politician and judge who served as the dominions Prime Minister from July 1923 to April 1924.Warren was first elected to the Newfoundland House of Assembly in 1903 as a Liberal and served as Speaker of the House from 1909-1913.
In 1919 he became minister of justice in the Cabinet of Sir Richard Squires.The Squires government became embroiled in a scandal over allegations of corruption and misspending of government funds and Squires resigned in protest along with three other ministers in 1923.
This artikel Albert_Hickman is licensed under the GNU free Documentation License.
www.saleofbooks.com /1002454_william-wegman_0786801034123bookonlinesale.html   (571 words)

  
 Scudder   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
At about the time of their marriage Lyman and Helen Moore Scudder adopted Miss Mary Collins, born 3 April 1859 in Jefferson County, Iowa, daughter of William and Susan Turner Collins.
Mary Collins Scudder grew up and married William Kellogg of New Boston.
Both William and Mary Kellogg were of the spiritualist faith.
www.geocities.com /Heartland/Shores/2731/Scudder.html   (416 words)

  
 AIP International Catalog of Sources   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Kellogg, William W. (William Welch), 1917- -- Interviews.
Oral history interview with Will Kellogg, 1987 February 10.
Kellogg describes events that led to his arrival at NCAR as Director, Laboratory of Atmospheric Science, the Laboratory retreats, the development of an interdisciplinary approach to atmospheric research with examples of research at NCAR.
www.aip.org /history/catalog/988.html   (90 words)

  
 Cousins J-O   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Anson JONES (1798-1858), 4th Republic of Texas President (1841-1846), Texas Senator and Congressman, Minister to the United States, Judge Advocate and Surgeon in the War for Texas Independence, MD 1827, married in 1840 to Mary (SMITH) McCRORY.
Clara Louise KELLOGG (1842-1916) [autograph], opera soprano, toured America and Europe in concert for over 20 years, performed before Pres.
Son William MASON (1829-1908) was a concert pianist, teacher, author and composer.
kinnexions.com /kinnexions/cousinsj.htm   (1784 words)

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