Brigham's Ice Cream

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Brigham's Ice Cream
TypePrivate
Industryfood manufacturer
Founded1914; 107 years ago (1914) in Newton Highlands, Massachusetts
Defunct2013; 8 years ago (2013) (as restaurant chain)
HeadquartersLynnfield, Massachusetts, United States
Productsice cream
ParentHP Hood LLC
Websitebrighams.com
Former location in Arlington Heights

Brigham's Ice Cream is an ice cream manufacturer and was formerly a restaurant franchise. Brigham's is sold in quart cartons throughout New England, and was served at franchised restaurants located in Massachusetts until 2013. It was founded in Newton Highlands, Massachusetts.[1] Since the purchase by HP Hood, its offices are located at Kimball Lane, Lynnfield, Massachusetts.[2] The company maintains a strong regional identity, using regional terms such as "wicked" (extremely) and "frappe" (milkshake with ice cream), and makes reference to events with special significance to New Englanders, such as the Big Dig and the 2004 World Series.[1] At one time there were 100 Brigham's restaurant locations with the last holdout in Arlington, Massachusetts,[3] when it finally changed its name in August 2015.[4] The ice cream is currently owned and manufactured by Hood.

History[]

Brigham's was founded in 1914 by Edward L. Brigham in Newton Highlands, Massachusetts.[1] In 1914, Brigham opened a shop selling ice cream and candy which he made in the back of the store. Originally, ice cream was sold for five cents and sundaes for 20 cents. Brigham's ice cream became so popular that the local police were called upon to control weekend crowds. In 1929, Brigham's merged with Symmes' Durand Company, establishing the basis of today's Brigham's with the opening of three additional stores and an ice cream manufacturing plant. Throughout the 1930s and 1940s business flourished and 20 new stores opened.

In 1961, Brigham's was acquired by Star Markets.[5] Forty new stores opened, offering sandwiches and ice cream in a new colonial-style setting. Brigham's was acquired by Jewel Companies in 1964 when Jewel acquired Brigham's parent, Star Markets.[6] In 1968, Brigham's acquired Buttrick's, a small chain of colonial-style restaurants based in Arlington, Massachusetts.[citation needed] This location became the Brigham's new home office until its sale to HP Hood, at which time this location was closed. At its height, Brigham's had 100 restaurants in the New England area. In 1982, Jewel Companies sold Brigham's to privately held owners.[7][8] Responding to consumer demands, Brigham's debuted quarts of its ice cream in supermarkets in 1983 and today boasts distribution in every major supermarket in New England.

Brigham's bought Élan Frozen Yogurt in 1993, to expand and improve the menu towards the ever-growing frozen-dessert industry.[9] The purchase enabled Brigham's to enter the New York region as well as additional demographic markets. In 2003, Brigham's launched its first novelty, the Brigham's Ice Cream Bar.[10]

On June 27, 2008, in a secured creditor transaction led by the company's senior debt holder, Cambridge Savings Bank, Brigham's was split into two companies and sold to HP Hood LLC and Luke Cooper of Deal Metrics, LLC.[11] [12] Hood acquired the Brigham's brand name and all products, proprietary, flavors and recipes. In a separate deal, Brigham's agreed to sell its 28 retail outlets and restaurants to Baltimore-based Deal Metrics LLC, through its holding company, New England Food Service, LLC. The manufacturing of Brigham's Ice Cream for sale in supermarkets was sold to Hood.[citation needed] At that time there were about 21 locations.

Brigham's restaurants did not survive the merger and in 2009, the company filed for bankruptcy and eventually closed all company-owned restaurants.[13] The Brigham's in Andover, MA became Bertucci's. Franchised locations continued to operate until 2013, when the four remaining franchise locations (Arlington Heights, Hingham, North Andover, and Quincy) were forced to drop the brand from their store names.[14] The Arlington Heights location became Digumms[4] in August 2015 (closed in December 2016),[15] the Hingham location became Patti's Place (since closed), Quincy became The Ice Cream Parlour, and the North Andover location is now called Fari's Diner.[16]

Hood, identified as BIC Acquisitions, LLC, continues to market Brigham's ice cream in stores and owns the trademarks and official website.

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Brigham's History
  2. ^ "Contact Us". Brigham's Ice Cream. Archived from the original on May 5, 2009.
  3. ^ Chesto, Jon (May 27, 2014). "Owners of Brigham's ice cream bank on nostalgia with latest promotion". Boston Business Journal.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "Um ... can you dig 'em?". Your Arlington. August 30, 2015.
  5. ^ "Star Market Co. To Make Exchange Offer to Brigham's". The Boston Globe. November 8, 1961. p. 12. ProQuest 275786063.
  6. ^ "Star Market Merger Voted By Jewel Tea". Chicago Tribune. January 31, 1964. p. C7. ProQuest 179343705.
  7. ^ Mohl, Bruce A. (March 11, 1982). "Brigham's is sold by Jewel Cos". The Boston Globe. p. 30. ProQuest 1466640122.
  8. ^ "Jewel selling Brigham's unit". Chicago Tribune. March 11, 1982. p. f1. ProQuest 172622530.
  9. ^ "Brigham's to Buy Elan Foods, Maker Of Yogurt Desserts". The New York Times. May 11, 1993.
  10. ^ "Title Annotation: Brigham's Ice Cream Bar". Frozen Food Digest. February 1, 2003 – via The Free Library.
  11. ^ Metzger, Andy (August 21, 2008). "Bank buys back Brigham's". The Arlington Advocate.
  12. ^ Krasner, Jeffrey (June 28, 2008). "Brigham's can't beat the heat; assets go to 2 buyers". The Boston Globe. ProQuest 405119511.
  13. ^ Woolhouse, Megan (November 20, 2009). "To outcry, Brigham's heads to bankruptcy". The Boston Globe.
  14. ^ Luna, Taryn (July 17, 2013). "Last two Brigham's stores must change name: Ice cream parlors bear iconic brand's name". The Boston Globe.
  15. ^ Berkowitz, Bram. "Arlington Heights' Diggums seized for not paying taxes". The Arlington Advocate. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  16. ^ Kagan, Aaron (May 28, 2013). "99 Years Later, The End of Brigham's Ice Cream Shops". Eater.

External links[]

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