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KRISPY KREME DOUGHNUT CORPORATION
RECORDS, ca. 1937-1997
#594
[16.5 cu.ft.: 22 DB, 2 (.5) DB, 3
shbx, 9 flat, 1 flat o/s, 3 RB, 2 o/s fldrs]
by: Juliette Arai, October 1998
History
The Krispy Kreme Doughnut Corporation
started with a recipe, a Pontiac, a pack of cigarettes, and a dream. Add
in hard work and a commitment to quality and consistency and what
emerges is a company that is at the top of its field and beloved by its
customers. It is an organization that has been innovative over the
years, but has also remained true to its belief in making top quality
products and ensuring excellent customer service. All of this has made
Krispy Kreme doughnuts and its company a Southern icon.
The story of Krispy Kreme is the story of one man: Vernon
Rudolph. Vernon Rudolph opened his first Krispy Kreme shop in the
1930s and from there built a corporation which he led until his death in
the early 1970s. There is another part of the story and that is the
continuation of the dream by Joseph McAleer. It was after some years
under corporate food giant, Beatrice Foods, that McAleer, beginning in
1982, steered Krispy Kreme back to its traditional emphasis on excellent
doughnuts as well as on a family atmosphere within the entire
corporation.
The story begins on June 30, 1915 in Marshall County, Kentucky with
the birth of Vernon Carver Rudolph. He was the eldest son of Rethie
Nimmo Rudolph (mother) and Plumie Harrison Rudolph (father) and had a
strict, but loving, upbringing. Vernon Rudolph did well in school, both
academically and athletically. He also found time to work in his
father's general store as well as helping his neighbors with odd jobs.
After graduating from high school, Rudolph then began his life's work
when he went to work for his uncle, Ishmael Armstrong. It seems
Armstrong bought a doughnut shop -- along with the assets, name, and
recipe -- from a Frenchman from New Orleans, Joe LeBeau. So in 1933,
Rudolph began selling the yeast-based doughnuts door to door for the
Krispy Kreme Doughnut shop in Paducah, Kentucky. Not only did Rudolph
sell doughnuts, he took part in producing them, thereby giving him an
all-around experience in the doughnut business.
The economic depression that rocked the country also affected the
shop. Armstrong decided to move from Paducah to the much bigger
Nashville, Tennessee, hoping that business would be better there. Vernon
Rudolph went with him to the new location, hoping for the same. But
after trying, Armstrong, in 1935, decided to sell the shop and return to
Kentucky. Rudolph wanted to buy it, but unfortunately did not have the
money. However, his father -- whose general store had closed and who was
working for the doughnut shop as a salesman -- stepped in. He borrowed
the money and soon after Krispy Kreme was operating under new ownership.
It was also at this time that one of Rudolph's younger brothers, Lewis,
joined the family business.
The shop was doing well, enough so that in 1936 Rudolph's father
opened another shop in Charleston, West Virginia. Awhile later, a third
shop opened in Atlanta, Georgia. While this growth was occurring, Vernon
Rudolph still wanted to own his own Krispy Kreme store. In the summer of
1937, he left Nashville with two friends in their new 1936 Pontiac and
$200. Carrying start-up doughnut equipment the three young men set out
towards an unknown destination, but with a known dream.
Louise Skillman Joyner, Krispy Kreme News editor, recounts how
Rudolph and his friends settled on Winston-Salem, North Carolina as the
location for their shop.
After some disappointments in looking for a suitable location, Vernon
Rudolph, standing on a street corner in Peoria, [Illinois], one evening,
wondered what the next move should be. Rents were quite high in that
section of the country and the trio was running out of money. He took a
pack of Camel cigarettes from his pocket and noticed that they were
manufactured in Winston-Salem, N.C. "Why not Winston-Salem?"
he thought, "A town with a company producing a nationally
advertised product has to be a good bet." So off across the
mountains to North Carolina they went.
With only $25 left, they arrived in Winston-Salem. Using that money
to rent a space on Main Street and then getting the ingredients and some
equipment on credit (which they paid back promptly), the three men began
making yeast doughnuts. That day was July 13, 1937. Vernon Rudolph
believed in producing only doughnuts of high quality and those were the
only ones that were ever sold. That belief (as well as the
mouth-watering doughnuts) endeared them to the people of Winston-Salem.
What also caught their eye (and their taste buds) was the doughnut
production that occurred in the store's front window and the free
samples given away in the evenings.
Krispy Kreme at this time was primarily a wholesale enterprise. Using
trucks to deliver the products, Rudolph was able to sell doughnuts
throughout the area. But soon the wonderful aroma that came from the
shop caused passersby to ask for doughnuts right there on the spot. This
led to the beginning of Krispy Kreme's retail operations.
In the midst of all this, Rudolph met and married an Atlanta woman,
Ruth Ayers, in 1939. This family increased by one in 1943 when the
Rudolphs adopted a baby girl, whom they named Patricia Ann. Sadly, Ruth
Ayers Rudolph was killed in an automobile accident in Orangeburg, South
Carolina in 1944.
The number of Krispy Kreme stores continued to grow in the years that
followed. But instead of Rudolph owning all of them outright, he entered
into partnerships or into associate (franchise) relationships. The
arrangements gave the operators of these particular shops that use of
the Krispy Kreme name, recipe, and later the ingredients. But more
importantly, they had to agree to adhere to the Krispy Kreme philosophy
of producing only the highest quality doughnuts. In those early years,
the business was truly family-oriented. This atmosphere continued with
these associate owners.
In 1946, Rudolph began thinking about consolidating all the Krispy
Kreme resources together under a corporation. This umbrella, he
believed, would enable Krispy Kreme to grow further and also give the
shops a sense of uniformity. So on October 1, 1946 a corporation named
the Krispy Kreme Doughnut Company was formed. Less than a year later, on
June 3, 1947, a new corporation, the Krispy Kreme Corporation, was
incorporated. The Company concerned itself with individual store
operations, while the corporation took care of producing dry mixes used
by the shops. Vernon Rudolph served as President and Chairman of the
Board.
It was also in 1946 that Rudolph married again -- to Lorraine Flynt
of Winston-Salem. Their family of three grew over the years to include
Vernon Carver Jr., Sanford, Curtis, and Beverly.
The formation of the corporation was followed by the creation of
three important departments within Krispy Kreme: the Mix Department, the
Laboratory, and the Equipment Department. Each had an essential role in
the overall success of the company. The Mix Department has grown since
its creation in 1948. Its primary mission: to mix, in bulk, the key
ingredients needed by the shops to make doughnuts -- both yeast- and
cake-doughnuts -- but also newly added products -- fried pies and
honeybuns. By providing these mixes, Krispy Kreme was able to ensure
that all stores made the same excellent products.
The Laboratory was created in 1949. Vernon Rudolph's beliefs in top
quality and uniformity were put in action. The Laboratory tested
ingredients that were in the prepared mixes and experimented with others
to see if perhaps a new ingredient would make a great product better.
Rudolph started the Equipment Department because Krispy Kreme's main
supplier of yeast doughnut machines, the Doughnut Corporation of
America, decided to enter the retail doughnut business itself. So with
the help of consultants and staffed with engineers and machinists, the
Equipment Department began manufacturing its own equipment in 1949.
The push towards automation that swept the nation also affected
Krispy Kreme. One piece of equipment that illustrates this is the
Ring King Junior. Designed for cake doughnut production and taking
up only seven square feet, the Ring King Junior cut, fried, turned, and
cooled about 30 to 75 dozen per hour. How different from the early days
of Krispy Kreme when everything had to be done by hand -- measuring,
cutting, frying. The Ring King not only saved space and time, but also
ingredients used. And it gave a uniformity to the doughnuts produced --
something Vernon Rudolph liked very much.
Over the years, Krispy Kreme has followed a philosophy of excellent
quality and customer service. It recognizes the importance of the
customer -- because without him or her there would be no reason to be in
business. Along with giving their customers the best, getting involved
in the community is another way Krispy Kreme has endeared itself to
them. They do this by primarily helping area schools raise money for
equipment, uniforms, trips, etc. In order to accomplish its goals, the
company needs hard-working and dependable people. Krispy Kreme
recognizes the value of its employees. The family atmosphere of those
early days has continued.
Vernon Rudolph believed in that philosophy and always strove to make
Krispy Kreme the best in the doughnut business. His death on August 16,
1973, left a large void and the years immediately afterwards were tough.
Then, in 1976, Krispy Kreme merged with corporate giant Beatrice Foods
Company of Chicago. It was still headquartered in Winston-Salem and
continued its operations, but as a subsidiary.
For Beatrice, showing a profit was extremely important. To help its
Krispy Kreme division, Beatrice encouraged additions to the menu and
substitutions of ingredients in the doughnut mixes. This did not appeal
to long-time Krispy Kreme associates, but unfortunately there was not
much that could be done at that time.
Beatrice's association with Krispy Kreme was not as profitable as it
had hoped it would be. So in 1981, the food corporation decided to sell
its subsidiary. One Krispy Kreme associate saw this as an opportunity to
bring the doughnut company back to the basic traditions upon which it
had built a successful enterprise. The associate, Joseph A. McAleer,
Sr., had been with the company for almost thirty years when this
situation arose. An Alabama native, he went to work for the company in
1951 after he saw an advertisement in the Mobile Press Register
for qualified people to join a profitable organization -- the Krispy
Kreme Doughnut Corporation. After meeting with Vernon Rudolph, McAleer
worked at the Pensacola, Florida store for $1 per hour in order to learn
all aspects of a shop's operations. Rudolph had initially wanted McAleer
to work for no pay, but with a family to care for, McAleer could not do
this and so the $1 an hour agreement was arranged.
McAleer worked 120 hour weeks for over a year. This experience
enabled him, in 1953, to start a shop of his own, in Pritchard, Alabama,
a suburb of Mobile. His first effort there was not a success -- due to a
poor location. He opened another shop in 1956 -- this time off of a busy
street in Mobile -- and this time was successful. Over the next 17
years, McAleer opened up other Krispy Kreme shops in Alabama and
Mississippi and all promised to provide the highest quality product and
the best service. And continuing the family-oriented tradition, members
of his immediate family worked in the different shops.
The death of Vernon Rudolph and Beatrice's purchase of Krispy Kreme
seemed to send the doughnut company in a new direction -- one not
everyone, including McAleer, liked. When Beatrice wanted to sell Krispy
Kreme, McAleer talked with his fellow associates and those with ties to
the company -- people, like him, who had a stake in Krispy Kreme's
success -- and through his efforts was able to form a group of
investors. In 1982, the Krispy Kreme Doughnut Corporation had new
owners.
These new owners, though, saw Krispy Kreme as a specialty-type of
operation with a certain uniqueness and familial closeness and one which
needed to concentrate on its basic foundation. That is, going to back to
Vernon Rudolph's philosophy of top quality and top service as well as
focusing on people, both customers and employees. They are beliefs and
values that have proven successful and have helped Krispy Kreme grow
from a small doughnut shop in Winston-Salem to a large corporation that
still makes the same much-loved doughnut.
Series 1, HISTORY OF KRISPY
KREME, includes records and materials which document the
history of Krispy Kreme Doughnut Company and Corporation. Included are
stories about the company and its founder, Vernon Rudolph ("A Man
and an Enterprise" is in booklet form while "Brief Outline of
the History of Krispy Kreme" is 115 pages) and also a story about
the employees and facilities of the Corporation; a report that includes
the organization's history and brief biographies of the management team;
and overall operating reports from 1948 and 1950. There is also
information pertaining to Krispy Kreme's association with Beatrice Foods
Company as well as a biography of William Lewis Rudolph, brother of
Vernon. This series also contains a draft (from 1952) of a report to the
Government Purchasing Agencies about Krispy Kreme's mix plant
operations, comprising a detailed list of equipment, cost controls, and
a chronology of Krispy Kreme store openings. These are located in a
folder marked "Historical Data." There is also a folder
entitled "Vernon Rudolph" which contains a photocopy of two
photographs -- one is of the front of a house while the other is of a
family -- and a funeral tribute, dated 1973, to Vernon Rudolph.
Series 2, ADMINISTRATIVE
RECORDS,
contains those records which deal with the overall operation of the
Krispy Kreme Doughnut Company and Corporation. This series is arranged
into the following subseries:
Subseries A, Correspondence, contains
copies of letters to and from Vernon Rudolph and vendors, banks,
Krispy Kreme stores and office personnel, local organizations,
government agencies. The dates range from the 1930s through 1972.
There is one original letter and its accompanying envelope from 1939.
Subseries B, Executive Records, contains
the articles of incorporation, bylaws, minutes, and resolutions of the
Board of Directors. The dates range from 1946-1977. This subseries
also includes an organizational chart from the mid-1970s as well as an
article of incorporation for Frozen Products, Inc., a subsidiary of
the Krispy Kreme Doughnut Corporation. There is also an Incorporation
Plan from 1946 that includes a plan of organization, bills of sale,
and a balance sheet. The folder marked "Miscellaneous,"
contains minutes from the first meeting of the incorporators in 1946
and a short note from 1952 concerning floor space at the Ivy Street
plant.
Subseries C, Financial Records, ca.
1940-1996, includes annual and audit reports, gross sales statements
for the company and the corporation as well as for doughnut mix. This
subseries also contains balance sheets, a general accounting ledger,
and operating reports. In the folder "Canceled Checks,"
there are signed checks by Vernon Rudolph as well as a handwritten
listing of expenses that is titled "Personal Bank Records."
There is also a prospectus dated from 1975 which is one year before
the merger with Beatrice.
Subseries D, Legal Records, 1947-1982,
deals mostly with trademark issues. It contains the correspondence and
registration applications pertaining to trademark laws. Also included
are the actual trademark registrations from all 50 states (since
expired) as well as a list of expiration dates for the registrations.
This subseries also contains correspondence between Krispy Kreme and
Prudential Insurance Company concerning loans. There is also a folder
"Miscellaneous Agreements and Contracts" that contains a
lease agreement from 1957 and an accident claims agreement from 1955.
Subseries E, Personnel Records, dates range
from the 1950s-1985. It includes information concerning employee
benefits and manuals on selling doughnuts and running doughnut
machines. Female employees are provided with guidelines in both a
booklet, ca. 1963, titled "Salesgirl," and a plaque from the
early 1960s that instructs them on appearance, retail manner, and
attitude. Also contained in this subseries are award certificates
given for years of service and a photograph of service award pins,
jewelry, watches, and a clock. Other certificates were those for
Associates and store operators certifying that they are fully capable
and properly trained to operate a Krispy Kreme store. In the
"Miscellaneous" folder, there are memorandums to employees,
want-ad clippings, and a thank you card from the Corporation to its
employees for 50 years of success.
Subseries F, Professional Associations,
contains a certificate of membership into the US Chamber of Commerce,
1955.
Subseries G, Stock Records, deals with the
purchase and sale of stocks from 1947-1975. There are copies of two
agreements -- one regarding Krispy Kreme selling an employee stocks
and the other concerning Krispy Kreme buying stocks in the Pinebrook
Real Estate and Development Corporation. The folder
"Stockholders," contains a 1950 end of year letter to
stockholders and a brief report on a court case entitled "How Not
to Sell Company Stock to Key Employees" from a 1949 newsletter,
"Estate and Tax Letter." There is a stockholders ledger
dated 1947-1975 which also has a list of stockholders attached to one
page.
Subseries H, Testimonial Letters, are from
customers and date from 1994-1997. In some cases, Krispy Kreme
responses were attached with the original, in others they were not.
All the letters are copies of the originals and are on acid-free
paper.
Subseries I, Miscellaneous, contains
drawings and pictures of the Corporation headquarters in
Winston-Salem, NC, and of exterior store signage. It also includes
logo designs from the 1960s through 1989, samples of stationery, a
brochure for and a photograph of the Krispy Kreme plane, and a program
for the 1994 Krispy Kreme Annual Conference. There is also a folder
containing Holiday greeting cards from Krispy Kreme management and a
program from their 1990 Christmas party.
Series 3, OPERATIONAL RECORDS,
contains those records which pertain to all aspects of the production
and sale of Krispy Kreme doughnuts. This series has the following
subseries:
Subseries A, Advertising and Promotions,
ca. 1947-1993, contains small and full page newspaper advertisements
from 1947 through 1993 (including some undated advertisements), the
mats and layouts that the retail stores used in their own in-store
advertising, and information and correspondence concerning billboard
advertising. This subseries also includes television commercial
storyboards and an audience pre-test report for three of them. There
is also materials on the different promotions Krispy Kreme used. The
"Miscellaneous" folder contains a variety of indoor and
outdoor advertisements.
Subseries B, Equipment and Engineering,
is itself broken down into three categories: American Gas Association
(AGA), Equipment Design, and Equipment Information. The "American
Gas Association" section contains correspondence between the AGA
and Krispy Kreme regarding AGA inspection of and seal of approval for
Krispy Kreme-made equipment. "Equipment Design" contains the
notes, sketches, test results, and photographs of various pieces of
equipment designed and made by Krispy Kreme. "Equipment"
information includes equipment brochures and booklets and more
detailed information on the use of the equipment.
Subseries C, Franchises/Associates, ca. 1940s-1990s,
contains literature to attract potential new franchisees as well as
samples of franchise agreements. This subseries also includes
photographs and press releases concerning store openings. These are
located in three folders: "Grand Opening Summary,"
"Knoxville Grand Opening," and "Krispy Kreme
Locations." There is also a videocassette that highlights Krispy
Kreme's foray into New York City in 1996.
Subseries D, Fundraising, includes a
variety of materials that concern Krispy Kreme's program of assisting
local organizations in their fundraising efforts. The dates range from
the 1940s-1990s. It contains brochures, ca. 1940s-1990s, which explain
the fundraising plan and its benefits. There are also guides geared
towards Krispy Kreme salespersons to help them present the plan to
potential clients. In the "Miscellaneous" folder, there is a
newspaper advertisement from September 1988 promoting the fundraising
plan. There is also a photo collage done by Krispy Kreme Fundraising
Representative, Sharon Craig, to commemorate a local parade in
Memphis, TN (at the Elvis Presley Boulevard plant).
Subseries E, Marketing, contains a 1996 marketing
standards manual and press kits from 1997. The marketing manual was
directed to store operators to assist them in promoting and selling
their products. The press kits were given to the Smithsonian when
discussions concerning Krispy Kreme's donation to the museum began in
the spring of 1997.
Subseries F, Packaging, ca. 1930s-1992, contains
examples of the different packaging used by Krispy Kreme to market
their food products and mixes. Also included are designs for new
packaging. One example is for doughnuts done by Comet Products Inc.
(of MA) in 1979. Four samples of pie packaging designs were created by
Pike & Cassels, Inc. (of NC) in late 1991 and early 1992. In the
"Miscellaneous" folder there are examples of other Krispy
Kreme packaging.
Subseries G, Quality Control Laboratory, ca.
1959-1976, consists of two items. The first one, which was originally
housed in a binder, is a notebook of information on lab procedures and
on the chemical consistency and test concerning doughnut ingredients.
This belonged to David Downs, Chief Chemist at Krispy Kreme. The
second item is a "pictorial" prospectus of the entire Krispy
Kreme operation -- departments, individual stores, products and
packaging -- which belonged to the Laboratory.
Subseries H, Sales Records, ca. 1950s-1980s, contains
materials that would assist both franchise managers and operators
(with in-store sales) and route salespeople (in selling wholesale
Krispy Kreme products to groceries, etc). It includes a Route Book,
ca. late 1950s, that contained order information and belonged to Robah
G. Hendrick, a Krispy Kreme salesman. There is also a sales order pad,
ca. 1950s-early 1960s, used by a Krispy Kreme store in Memphis, TN.
There are also two in-house catalogs -- in folders "Posters,
inserts, cards..." and "Shelf talkers catalog" -- that
contain items that can be ordered by managers and that are used to
sell store products. Shelf talkers are signs posted near the
merchandise or on grocery display shelves. They, like the posters,
inserts, cards, are used to attract customers with specials and
promotions. Samples of shelf talkers are included in this subseries.
There is also a "Miscellaneous" folder which contains a
Krispy Kreme coupon, a book of gift certificates, another example of a
shelf talker sign, and brochures of different store displays.
Subseries I, Store Operations, ca. 1960s-1970s, deals
primarily with items that are meant for store operators and mangers to
help them in running a Krispy Kreme store. Two manuals -- Production
and Extruded Doughnut manuals -- instruct managers in producing high
quality products. Two other manuals -- Associates Operations and
Branch Plant Managers' Manual -- discuss doughnut production, but also
give directives and policies on other store issues, such as safety,
sanitation, and personnel. The Branch Plant Managers' Manual also
delves into the natural gas crisis in January 1977 and deals with
advertising, security, and photo requests. This subseries also
includes five 8"x6" laminated cards that contain doughnut
recipe information and checklists of cleanup and sanitation
procedures. There is also a plaque entitled "What is a
Customer?" which explains to employees why a Krispy Kreme
customer is so important. In the "Miscellaneous" folder
there are two guides that advise on how to promote and sell items and
a store/production area sign containing the store mission statement.
[Also see Series 2: Administrative Records, Subseries E: Personnel,
for a guide entitled "Salesgirl" which instructs the female
Krispy Kreme employee on matters pertaining to dress and attitude.]
Series 4,NEWSLETTERS,
1957-1998, includes, Krispy Kreme News, Krispy Kreme
Management Circle, and Hot Doughnut News.
Krispy Kreme News, 1957-1998, is geared towards all members
of the Krispy Kreme community -- management, operators and managers,
and employees. Its articles discuss new store openings, Corporation
news, community (or news-related) events, and provides instructions
and reminders concerning store upkeep and sanitation. There are
sections announcing upcoming retirements, congratulating outstanding
employees, and honoring long service to Krispy Kreme. Also included
are articles that do not necessarily pertain to Krispy Kreme, but,
rather, add a human element to the newsletters, such as humorous
stories, articles on birds, and tips on highway safety. Some articles
of interest are a history of chocolate (September 1963), "You Can
Improve Your Memory" (May 1967), "A Communist is a Rich
Marxist" (July 1967), and a discussion on skirt lengths and their
relation to economics (February 1970). [In addition, there are two
early issues of Krispy Kreme News (May 9 and May 15, 1951) in a folder
entitled "Brief Outline of the History of Krispy Kreme,
1977" which is located in Series 1: History of Krispy Kreme.]
Also included in this subseries and relating to Krispy Kreme
News are a subject index, a questionnaire form, and signed release
letters.
Krispy Kreme Management Circle, 1995-1997, is a quarterly
newsletter geared towards Krispy Kreme management and leadership. The
articles focus on product quality, marketing and promotions, and
training. At the end of each issue, there is a ranking of stores in
different sales categories, i.e., average customer purchases (in
dollars), highest percentages of customers buying beverages with their
food or buying a second dozen doughnuts.
Hot Doughnut News, 1997, caters primarily to Krispy Kreme
store operators, providing reports on stores and ideas for marketing.
Series 5,PRESS CLIPPINGS,
1949-1998, contains articles and stories that cover the Corporation, its
history, its founder and subsequent leaders, and its community programs
and promotions. The bulk of the clippings are from newspapers with a
scattering of magazine articles. The largest number clippings come from
the Winston-Salem Journal of Winston-Salem, NC, where Krispy
Kreme is based. All articles have been copied onto acid-free paper.
Some clippings have been separated from the rest. One folder,
"Davey Allison," contains clippings concerning the sudden
death of this popular NASCAR driver and Krispy Kreme spokesman, in
1993. The folder titled "Ralph Simpson & Associates,
July-Sept 1995" contains articles and news briefs on Krispy Kreme
and its competitors collected by a Winston-Salem public relations
firm. Two other folders with clippings from the Simpson PR firm
concern Krispy Kreme's donation into the Smithsonian in July 1997. The
contents of these two folders are not on acid-free paper. "School
Computers" documents the efforts of the Krispy Kreme Corporation
to help distribute computers to schools across North Carolina. The
"TV Monitoring Report, July 1997" folder does not contain
any clippings, but includes a listing of news stories that appeared on
television about the Krispy Kreme donation to the Smithsonian.
Series 6, PHOTOGRAPHS, ca.
late 1930s through the mid 1990s, consists of black-and-white and color
photographs and some negatives and transparencies. This series is
divided into the following subseries:
Subseries A, Corporate Staff, Associates, and Store Managers,
ca. 1940s-early 1990s, is broken down into the following two
categories: "Corporate Staff" and "Associates and Store
Managers." Corporate Staff contains photographs of the officers
of the corporation as well as members of the staff at the headquarters
in Winston-Salem. Most are portrait shots with some group photos,
e.g., the Board of Directors. There are also photographs of a 1974
retirement party for Mike Harding (Chairman of the Board and CEO) and
Louise Joyner (editor of the Krispy Kreme News) and of a wedding cake
made in 1990 for the wedding of headquarters accountant Cathy Rogers.
The cake and the wedding were featured in the winter 1991 issue of
Krispy Kreme News. [Also of interest are two photocopies of
photographs -- of a house and a family -- located in Series 1: History
of Krispy Kreme, Folder: "Vernon Rudolph."]
The Associates and Store Managers photographs consist mostly of
group portraits taken at their respective annual meetings: Associate
Operators' Meeting and Store Managers' Conference. Also included are
scenes of store manager training, which was mandatory for all new
Krispy Kreme managers.
Subseries B, Corporate Headquarters, date from the
late 1940s through the late 1980s. This subseries contains photographs
of the General Offices, Equipment Department, Laboratory, Mix
Department, and Warehouse. [Other photographs pertaining to these
areas can be found in Series 6: Photographs, Subseries H: "Tour
Given to Smithsonian Staff."]
The General Offices photographs include exterior and interior views
of the headquarters on Ivy Avenue. The Equipment Department
photographs show various pieces of doughnut equipment as well as the
designing, manufacturing, and assembling of said equipment by Krispy
Kreme. [For more technical information on the different equipment,
please refer to Series 3: Operational Records, Subseries B:
"Equipment and Engineering."]
The Quality Control Laboratory photographs consist of views that
show the interior of the laboratory and of the chemists at work. There
are also some images of test results of the doughnut mixes for quality
and consistency. In addition, there are pictures of lab results of
tests on glaze made with and without stabilizers.
The Mix Department photographs contain views of the different
stages of department operations. They also show the equipment used to
prepare the dry doughnut mixes, which later are sent to the Krispy
Kreme stores. The Warehouse photographs show bags of Krispy Kreme
prepared mixes stacked in a large warehouse at the headquarters and
waiting to be shipped.
Subseries C, Retail Shops and Plants, ca. 1937-1994,
contains photographs of specific Krispy Kreme stores. They show the
exterior and interior views of the shops including storefront,
signage, retail, and production areas, as well as employees and
customers. The bulk of the photos range from the 1950s through the
1970s. They are arranged by state, by city within the state, and then
by street name within the city.
Subseries D, General Photographs, ca. 1940s-mid
1990s, concern unspecified Krispy Kreme shops and plants. They include
views of store exteriors (storefront and signage) and interiors
(production and retail areas and signage). The production area
photographs show the various stages of the production of doughnuts,
pies, and honeybuns. There are also photographs of customers,
employees, and of students participating in the Krispy Kreme
fundraising plan. The employee photographs consist of general in-store
action and posed shots as well as views of employees receiving service
awards for years of service. The fundraising photographs show students
picking up boxes of doughnuts from Krispy Kreme shops or selling those
boxes in an effort to raise money.
This subseries also contains photographs of the trucks used by the
Krispy Kreme stores throughout the years to deliver their products to
groceries and other food stores. [A a set of press clippings that
detail the use of Kripsy Kreme trucks in delivering school computers
to North Carolina schools. These can be found in SERIES 5: Press
Clippings, in the folder titled "School Computers, May-June
1993."]
Subseries E, Trade Shows, range in date from the
1950s through 1970s. This subseries includes photographs of Krispy
Kreme displays at trade shows in the United States (Atlanta and St.
Louis) and in Greece, Indonesia, Japan, and Pakistan.
Subseries F, Products and Packaging, ca. late
1940s-early 1990s, shows samples of various grocery store displays as
well as photographs of doughnuts, fried pies, and honeybuns -- with
and without packaging. There is also a folder that contains shots of
Krispy Kreme coffee cups.
Subseries G, Advertising and Promotions, dates from
1965-1990s. The bulk of the photographs centers around shots of Davey
Allison's race car. Allison was a Krispy Kreme spokesman for their
Race to Daytona Sweepstakes in 1991. The other photographs consist of
views of various advertising posters used in shops and grocery stores.
There are also photographs that show Krispy Kreme advertising displays
in airports.
Subseries H, Photo Albums, consist of six albums, all
falling within the date range of the 1950s through the mid 1980s. The
first album, "Exterior and Interior shots of Unspecified Retail
Shops," contains photographs that date from the late 1970s-mid
1980s; these consist of exterior and interior views of various stores.
The second album, entitled "Krispy Kreme Album," dates
from 1962. A Christmas gift to Vernon Rudolph from the Corporate staff
and associates, it contains photographs of the individual staff
members and associates as well as group shots of the associates at
annual meetings. There are also photographs of various shop
storefronts. This album also includes exterior and interior views of
the corporate headquarters.
"Krispy Kreme Doughnut Co.," ca. 1950s-1960s, is the
third album. It served as a pictorial marketing tool used to attract
new associates and franchisees. It shows exterior views of the
corporate headquarters, various storefronts, and views of a typical
Krispy Kreme trade show display. There are also photographs showing
retail doughnut production as well as images of packaging and final
products. In addition, there is a price list of equipment and mixes.
The "Plant and Production" album dates from the 1960s. It
consists of photographs showing the different stages of doughnut
production and the preceding steps involving the equipment and mix
departments and laboratory. There are also exterior views of various
retail shops and of the headquarters in Winston-Salem.
The "Production Equipment Album," ca. 1960s-early 1970s,
is similar to the "Krispy Kreme Doughnut Co." album with
regards to the subject of the photographs. Additionally, there are
photographs of the officers of the Corporation as well as images of
advertising posters used in grocery stores.
The sixth album, entitled "Social Gatherings Album,"
dates from 1951-1971. It contains photographs of female corporate
staff members at various social gatherings, such as bridal and baby
showers, picnics, birthdays, and Christmas parties.
Subseries I, Tour Given to Smithsonian Staff,
contains photographs that were taken on May 28, 1997. The photos,
taken by Smithsonian photographer Rich Strauss, depict a tour of the
Corporation headquarters in Winston-Salem, NC. One highlight of
interest is a view of the safe where the secret Krispy Kreme recipe is
kept (located in the "Quality Control Laboratory" section of
this subseries). The photographs are arranged according to the order
of the tour.
Series 7, AUDIOVISUAL
MATERIALS,
remains unprocessed as of the date of this finding aid. This series
consists of training films, videotapes, TV and radio commercials, and
slide presentations. A rough inventory of these materials is provided in
the container list.
This collection was donated to the National Museum of American
History, Archives Center on July 17, 1997, by the Krispy Kreme Doughnut
Corporation. Additional items were donated on July 17, 1997, by V.
Carver Rudolph and on August 6, 1997, by Steve Cochran.
There is a folder of duplicate Krispy Kreme material in Archives
Center collection #439, the Sally L. Steinberg Collection of Doughnut
Ephemera. The Archives Center also contains collection #662, two
scrapbooks from the Doughnut Corporation of America. Artifacts donated
by the Krispy Kreme Doughnut Corporation to the National Museum of
American History are located in the Division of Cultural History and the
Division of the History of Technology.
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