Topics
Category
Era
Gedney Foods Company
The official source of "the Minnesota Pickle" and creators of the State Fair pickle line, Gedney Foods is an iconic Minnesota company, with products distributed throughout the Midwest. Founded in 1880, Gedney continues to grow one of the more successful pickle brands in the United States.
Matthias Anderson Gedney founded the M.A. Gedney Company. He was born in Patterson, New Jersey on October 24, 1822. Gedney spent much of his youth and early adulthood at sea as a sailor on merchant and naval vessels. In 1849, he joined the California Gold Rush, making enough money to start a small trade business and marry Calista Jane Bailey.
Gedney first got involved in the pickle business in 1863. That year, Gedney and his family moved to Illinois. He began working for Northwestern Pickle Works near Evanston. While in Illinois, Gedney's wife Calista passed away in 1874 after having twelve children, three of whom died as infants. Gedney left Northwestern Pickle Works in 1876 to join S.M. Dingee and Co., a pickle company in Chicago. He was related to the Dingee family through his mother-in-law, Eliza Dingee Bailey. In 1877, Gedney was remarried, to Anne Kirk.
In 1879, after years in the pickle business, Gedney decided to found his own company. Moving to Minneapolis, Gedney searched for local Minnesota farmers willing to grow cucumbers, a semi-tropical vine fruit not yet introduced to the state. In 1880, he founded the M.A. Gedney Pickling Co. with two of his five sons, Charles Bailey Gedney and John Parker Gedney. The first factory opened in 1881 on Lowry Avenue in north Minneapolis. By 1888, the company was successful enough that two other sons, Isadore Vallier and Henry Edwin, joined. The company was incorporated on April 23, 1888.
By 1893, the Gedney Pickling Co. was expanding. Factories were already established in Minneapolis, St. Paul and Chaska; Omaha and Kearney, Nebraska; and Mauston, Wisconsin. Expanded railway service ended the need for these local branches by the early 1900s. All Gedney factories outside of Minnesota were closed. In 1958, the Chaska branch was expanded and all pickle processing moved to this location. The company went national in 1999 to better compete with larger corporations.
In 1905, Gedney Pickles celebrated its twenty-fifth anniversary. That same year, Matthias Gedney passed away. His youngest son, Isadore Vallier Gedney, succeeded him as head of the company. The company remained under the leadership of Gedney descendents. Isadore Gedney's son-in-law Harry Augustus Tuttle, II succeeded him in 1945. Harry Tuttle's son, Gedney Tuttle, took over in 1967, followed by his son, Jeffrey Tuttle in 1997. Other family members work in the factories or hold key positions.
When Gedney Pickles started in 1880, they offered only pickles. After opening a branch in Chaska in 1900, sauerkraut was added to the product line. The company soon added other vinegar-based products, such as mustard, relishes, olives, catsup (now commonly spelled ketchup), Worcestershire sauce, horseradish sauce and tobacco pepper sauce. Production has ceased on all except pickles and relishes. In 1940, bottled salad dressings were added, and in 1994, jams, both of which are still produced in the early twenty-first century. The company began its State Fair Pickle line in 1991 with two varieties. This line grew to five pickle types and four different jams in 1994. In 2002, Gedney began production of all pickles for the Del Monte and Target Archer Farms brands.

Bibliography
Burns, Christopher. "In the Hall of Minnesota's Pickle King: M.A. Gedney Co. Relishes the Pickle Business." Chanhassen Sailor, June 6, 1990.
Gedney Food Company. Company History.
http://www.gedneyfoods.com/Company/History
"Gedney Pickle Factory Will Locate Here." Chaska Weekly Valley Herald, February 7, 1901.
"M.A. Gedney Co. Announces New Pickle Processing Plant." Chaska Weekly Valley Herald, April 25, 1963.
"The Pickle Factory." Chaska Weekly Valley Herald, June 26, 1902.
Schettler, Joel. "Gedney's Makes Move- From 'Minnesota Pickle' to 'Minnesota Preserve. '" Chaska Herald, April 28, 1994.
Tuttle, Gedney. The Minnesota Pickle: A History of the M.A. Gedney Company. Edina, MN: Lily Pad Publishing, 2009.
Related Resources
Primary
"Charley Gedney Was Up From St. Paul." Chaska Weekly Valley Herald, April 24, 1902.
"Gedney Factory Has Fine Record of Production." Chaska Weekly Valley Herald, January 7, 1954.
"Pickle Professor." Waconia Patriot, May 15, 2008.
"To Get a Pickle Station." Lester Prairie Herald, December 31, 1908.
Secondary
Barac, LaVonne E. Chaska: A Minnesota River City. Vols. 1 and 2. Chaska, MN: Carver County Public Library, 1989.
Frank, Melvin Lynn. "In North Minneapolis: Sawmill City Boyhood." Minnesota History 47, no. 4 (Winter 1980): 141–153.
http://collections.mnhs.org/MNHistoryMagazine/articles/47/v47i04p141-153.pdf
Hoisington, Daniel John. Chanhassen: A Centennial History. Chanhassen, MN: The Press, Banta Corporation, July 1996.
Holcombe, Maj. R.I., and William H. Bingham eds. Compendium of History and Biography of Carver and Hennepin Counties, Minnesota. Chicago: Henry Taylor and Company, 1915.
M.A. Gedney Company. Picklicious : 125 Extraordinary Recipes; A Cookbook for People who are Passionate about Pickles. Chaska: M.A. Gedney Company, 2005.
Tremblay, Ruth and Lois Schulstad. Images of America: Carver County. Arcadia Publishing: Charleston, South Carolina, 2011.
Web
Gedney Food Company website.
http://www.gedneyfoods.com/
Related Images

Gedney's Pantry Pickles label
Gedney's Pantry Pickles label, c.1935.
All rights reserved
Holding Location
Articles
More Information

Gedney Pickle Plant
A side view of the exterior of the Chaska pickling factory showing the vats used to brine the pickles, undated.
All rights reserved
Holding Location
Articles

Matthias Gedney
Matthias Gedney, c.1900.
Public domain
Holding Location
Articles
More Information

Interior, M. A. Gedney Company
M. A. Gedney Compnay workers and vinegar barrels, c.1912.
Public domain
Holding Location
More Information

Interior, M. A. Gedney Company
M. A. Company workers constructing vinegar barrels, c.1912.
Public domain
Holding Location
Articles
More Information

M. A. Gedney Company workers
M. A. Gedney Company workers bottling product, c.1912.
Public domain
Holding Location
Articles
More Information

M. A. Gedney Company machinery
Bottling machinery at the M. A. Gedney Company, c.1912.
Public domain
Holding Location
Articles
More Information

Gedney's Zestive French Dressing label
Label for Gedney Company French Dressing, c.1935.
All rights reserved
Holding Location
Articles
More Information

Gedney's Tomato Catsup label
Gedney's Tomato Catsup label, c.1935.
All rights reserved
Holding Location
Articles
More Information

Sweet Midget Pickles label
Gedney Sweet Midget Pickles label, c.1958.
All rights reserved
Holding Location
Articles
More Information

Gedney Sign
A man standing to the left of the Gedney sign, outside the Chaska factory, c.1980s.
All rights reserved
Holding Location
Articles
Related Articles
Turning Point
In 1863, Matthias Gedney gets his first job in the pickle business with Northwestern Pickle Works, beginning a lifelong passion for and business in pickles.
Chronology
1822
1849
1863
1876
1879
1880
1881
1888
1893
1905
1958
1991
1999
2002
Bibliography
Burns, Christopher. "In the Hall of Minnesota's Pickle King: M.A. Gedney Co. Relishes the Pickle Business." Chanhassen Sailor, June 6, 1990.
Gedney Food Company. Company History.
http://www.gedneyfoods.com/Company/History
"Gedney Pickle Factory Will Locate Here." Chaska Weekly Valley Herald, February 7, 1901.
"M.A. Gedney Co. Announces New Pickle Processing Plant." Chaska Weekly Valley Herald, April 25, 1963.
"The Pickle Factory." Chaska Weekly Valley Herald, June 26, 1902.
Schettler, Joel. "Gedney's Makes Move- From 'Minnesota Pickle' to 'Minnesota Preserve. '" Chaska Herald, April 28, 1994.
Tuttle, Gedney. The Minnesota Pickle: A History of the M.A. Gedney Company. Edina, MN: Lily Pad Publishing, 2009.
Related Resources
Primary
"Charley Gedney Was Up From St. Paul." Chaska Weekly Valley Herald, April 24, 1902.
"Gedney Factory Has Fine Record of Production." Chaska Weekly Valley Herald, January 7, 1954.
"Pickle Professor." Waconia Patriot, May 15, 2008.
"To Get a Pickle Station." Lester Prairie Herald, December 31, 1908.
Secondary
Barac, LaVonne E. Chaska: A Minnesota River City. Vols. 1 and 2. Chaska, MN: Carver County Public Library, 1989.
Frank, Melvin Lynn. "In North Minneapolis: Sawmill City Boyhood." Minnesota History 47, no. 4 (Winter 1980): 141–153.
http://collections.mnhs.org/MNHistoryMagazine/articles/47/v47i04p141-153.pdf
Hoisington, Daniel John. Chanhassen: A Centennial History. Chanhassen, MN: The Press, Banta Corporation, July 1996.
Holcombe, Maj. R.I., and William H. Bingham eds. Compendium of History and Biography of Carver and Hennepin Counties, Minnesota. Chicago: Henry Taylor and Company, 1915.
M.A. Gedney Company. Picklicious : 125 Extraordinary Recipes; A Cookbook for People who are Passionate about Pickles. Chaska: M.A. Gedney Company, 2005.
Tremblay, Ruth and Lois Schulstad. Images of America: Carver County. Arcadia Publishing: Charleston, South Carolina, 2011.
Web
Gedney Food Company website.
http://www.gedneyfoods.com/