Dad's Root Beer
Type | Soft drink |
---|---|
Manufacturer | The Dad's Root Beer Company LLC |
Country of origin | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Introduced | 1937 |
Color | Brown/copper |
Flavor | Root beer |
Related products | Hires Root Beer, Mug Root Beer, A&W Root Beer, Barq's, IBC Root Beer |
Website | www |
Industry | Beverages |
---|---|
Headquarters | , |
Key people | Keith Hedinger, president and CEO Andrea Hedinger, vice president of sales and marketing [1] |
Products | Dad's Root Beer, Sun Crest, Dr. Wells, Bubble Up[1] |
Owner | Hedinger Brands, LLC.[1] |
Website | DadsRootBeer.com |
Dad's Root Beer is a root beer created in Chicago in 1937 by Ely Klapman and Barney Berns. It is currently owned by Hedinger Brands, LLC, and sold and marketed by the Dad's Root Beer Company LLC.[1]
History[]
Dad's Root Beer was developed in the 1930s by partners Barney Berns and Ely Klapman in the basement of Klapman's Chicago-area home. The first trademark registration was filed on September 24, 1938, granted on February 14, 1939, to the Dad's Root Beer Company of Chicago, with the product name in use since February 1937. Dad's Root Beer brand was famous throughout the Midwest, and by the late 1940s was one of the most consumed brands of root beer throughout the United States.[citation needed] Jules Klapman, son of co-founder Ely, successfully took the Dad's brand international. The name Dad's Old Fashioned Root Beer was selected in honor of Ely Klapman's father.
Dad's Root Beer was the first product to use the six pack format invented by the in the 1940s.[citation needed] Dad's also introduced the half-gallon bottle, becoming the first brand to market this size. Dad's was marketed as a family: the "Junior" bottle size was the smallest, 7, 10 or 12 ounces. "Mama" was a quart bottle, and "Papa" was a half gallon. (The image of the young boy featured on the "Junior" size bottle is Barney Berns' son, Gene.) A common promotion in the 1940s was the 1 cent sale - purchase the Papa half gallon at regular price and get the Mama quart for 1 cent.
The Klapman and Berns families sold rights to the Dad's name and logo to IC Industries of Chicago in the 1970s.
The Monarch Beverage Company of Atlanta acquired Dad's from IC Industries in 1986. At that time Dad's was distributed by the Coca-Cola bottler network, sold 12 million cases annually, and held the second largest share of the root beer category behind A & W.[1]
In 2007 Dad's Root Beer was purchased, along with the Bubble Up, Dr. Wells, and Sun Crest brands, by Hedinger Brands, LLC and licensed to the Dad's Root Beer Company, LLC.[2] The company headquarters is now located in Jasper, Indiana.
Flavors[]
Dad's makes the following brands/flavors:[3]
- Dad's Old Fashioned Root Beer
- Diet Dad's Old Fashioned Root Beer
- Dad's Old Fashioned Cream Soda
- Dad's Old Fashioned Orange Cream Soda
- Dad's Old Fashioned Red Cream Soda
- Dad's Old Fashioned Blue Cream Soda
- Bubble Up
- Sun Crest Orange
- Dr. Wells
Advertising[]
The company's signs on the Edens Expressway (I-94) and one near Lake Shore Drive asked "Have you had it lately?" became fixtures on the Chicago landscape.[citation needed]
The product's jingle was a simple line sung several times, to a conga beat, with the "kick" coming on "Beer":[4]
In the mid-1950s, Dad's sponsored on a regional basis the syndicated TV adventure series Sheena, Queen of the Jungle.
During the 1970s, Chicago-based television advertising for Dad's featured a different jingle sung by an ensemble with the following lyrics:
If it foams up to meet you
It's gotta be Dad's, it's gotta be Dad's
If it foams up to treat you
It's gotta be Dad's, it's gotta be Dad's
(Announcer would read the ad copy while a short instrumental section of the jingle played, then the song continued)
So ask for Dad's, it's good old-fashioned
With the taste of yesteryear
If you don't ask for Dad's
All you're gonna get is,
All you're gonna get is,
All you're gonna get is,
...root beer!
IndyCar sponsorship[]
Dad's Root Beer became an IZOD Indycar associate sponsor in 2007.[citation needed] It evidently continued the relationship at least as far as 2011.[5]
References[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dad's Root Beer. |
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "The Dad's Root Beer Co., LLC". Beverage World. Ideal Media. November 15, 2007. Archived from the original on June 12, 2008. Retrieved June 20, 2008.
- ^ "Hedinger Brands, LLC purchases Dad's Root Beer®". BevNET. March 2, 2007. Retrieved March 23, 2018.
- ^ [1] Archived February 5, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ [2] YouTube video retrieved August 2016
- ^ "Dad's Root Beer Returns to Dreyer & Reinbold Racing for the 2011 Season". BevNET. March 4, 2011. Retrieved March 23, 2018.
External links[]
- Root beer
- Dad's Root Beer brands
- 2007 mergers and acquisitions