The Orford Soap Company.
The most widely known of Manchester's products, with the exception of the Cheney silks, is Bon Ami ("Good Friend"),
the cleanser manufactured by the Orford Soap Company. The founder of the business was the late J. T. Robertson,
who invented and began the manufacture of a "mineral soap" in Glastonbury in 1885, using a newly-hatched chick
as its emblem and "Hasn't scratched yet" as its slogan.
In order to obtain additional
capital Mr. Robertson formed the J. T. Robertson Company and moved to Manchester in 1891. He made his products,
which included shaving and toilet soaps, in an old grist mill owned by W. H. Childs near the corner of Oakland
and North Main Streets. Only three or four helpers were employed.
The expansion of the business in the past [since 1924] thirty years has been largely the result of an
aggressive advertising campaign and a good product making it widely known. In 1893 William H. Childs, a resident
of the north end who had become interested in the new product, undertook to market it, forming for the purpose a
partnership with W. H. H. Childs of New York. The J. T. Robertson Company gave to Childs & Childs, the selling
agency, a five-year option to purchase the manufacturing rights. The policy of consistent advertising having
proved successful, the option was taken up and the Bon Ami Company was organized as the distributing agency and
holding company, and the Orford Soap Company was formed as the manufacturing concern.
In 1899 the original factory on Oakland Street was destroyed by fire, and shortly thereafter the business
was transferred to the factory on Hilliard Street formerly occupied by the Mather Company. In 1903 the entire
Mather plant was occupied and since that time several additions to the plant have been constructed. Its present
[1924] assessed value is $622,000 and 150 persons employed.
The Bon Ami Company, a holding corporation and the marketing agency, is [1924]capitalized at $3,500,000. It
operates factories in the United States and in Canada. Eversly Childs of New York is the president of the Orford
Soap Company, and William H. Childs, formerly a resident of Manchester, is vice-president. It is largely owing
to the latter's vision of the possibilities of the product and his courage in carrying on the advertising
campaign that the business became a success. William W. Robertson has been factory superintendent since the
death of his father, the late J. T. Robertson, in 1922.
Webmaster Note: To see a short biography of John T. Robertson on this web site, for whom the
Robertson Elementary School is named, please click here.
The loss of the silk industry was the major economic calamity in post-World War II Manchester; and Bon Ami
was not immune, either. Since 1890 Bon Ami had been made at or near the former Mather plant on Hilliard Street.
In the 1950's, control of the company changed hands several times and in 1959 the Securities and Exchange
Commission suspended trading of its stock on the Exchange on the grounds that it had no longer sufficient sales
to qualify for listing. That same year the management announced that its Manchester factory had shown an
operating loss of $375,000 the preceding year and that it was to be closed.
Webmaster's Note: The short histories above tell you facts; however,
remembrances such as from "The Storytellers" give you a more personal flavor of the firm; it's also far more
entertaining and informative. The first one was related by Richard S. Childs, in June 1973. The title of the
first story is, appropriately, "A Soap Opera".
In Glastonbury, not far away was the J. B. Williams Soap Company, makers of Williams Shaving Soap -- its
leading item -- and a full line of other soaps. It made from locally mined ground quartz a scouring soap like
Sapolio, which was one of the greatest trademarks of that era. The quartz was crudely intertwined with its
chalkier and softer white cousin, feldspar. The latter was cobbed off the chunks of mineral by hand at the mine,
and it occurred to someone to grind up some of that pile of discarded feldspar and offer it as a gentler soap for
polishing rather than scouring, naming it "Brightness." But neither product was promoted effectively by Williams
and sales were negligible.
J. T. Robertson, their plant superintendent, quarreled with the management, resigned, and came to Manchester
to set up a parallel business of his own in an old idle mill with water power, which my grandfather Childs owned.
Local men, including Father, took shares in the enterprise, and the J. T. Robertson Soap Company began to make a
line of a dozen soaps like Williams, including "Brightness." A minister named Burgess on the board of directors,
being of a literary turn, was assigned to coin the new trademarks, and the soft mineral soap was baptized Bon
Ami. It was not an ideal trademark, for soon there were at least five useages of its pronunciation, and how many
grocers called it Bonamy turned away customers asking for Bon Am-Eye will never be known.
Robertson knew nothing of selling or promotion methods and consumer advertixing ventures foreign to his
character. Father spotted opportunity in Bon Ami -- it was different from Sapolio -- housewives liked it for
windows and mirrors for which Sapolio was too gritty and sharp. It could go its own way without being affected
by Sapolio's big advertising. But the Robertson Company's Board had no funds or nerve for trying that long road;
Father could try it with his own money if he wanted to, and they would make it for him.
My Father took the opportunity to his Cousin William H. H. Childs in New York. His cousin was 17 years older
and a millionaire who had already found him "good for his undertakings." So the firm of Childs and Childs
obtained the Sole Rights to sell Bon Ami and we moved to New York. Housewives liked Bon Ami. The sales grew. The
samplings gangs distributed small samples of the cake from house to house in expanding areas and repeated every
three years -- a "still hunt" that gained ground but did not alert other soap companies to bring out a
competitive product.
Bon Ami continued in family hands and became one of the great national trademarks without ever encountering
a prime competitor. The trademark, a little yellow chick just out of the eggshell with the slogan, "Hasn't
scratched yet," is still remembered. The stock was put on the New York Stock Market while the family retained
enough for some years to elect a Board of Directors, and the sales expandd to profitable millions. The controlled
stock descended by interitance into the hands of grandchildren of no pertinent experience and was finally sold to
a Philadelphia wholesaler of good repute, who, however, accepted an offer within a year from a new group
originating in Las Vegas. They provedto be a group of crooks who turned every asset of the company into cash,
stopped all advertising and promotion, and left it a dismantled wreck. For that, two respectable-looking
principals went to Atlanta penitentiary after which the imperishable trademark was picked up by individuals and
corporations in a succession of ownerships, and is now in the ambitious hands of the Faultless Starch Company of
Kansas City. It has begun a studious attempt to restore the sales with modernized forms of production, including
the original cake, the powder form in the sifter can, and a trigger-canned spray.
Webmaster's Note: The web site for Faultless Starch / Bon Ami is:
www.faultless.com/.
Webmaster's Note: The second item, part of a much longer remembrance,
was related by Henry "Bud" Brooks, on July 18, 1888. The title of this segment of Mr. Brooks' story is,
"Working at Bon Ami".
The Bon Ami Company, what I first recall, was the place to work in town. People thought they were great in
the North End of town because they gave big, they gave Christmas bonuses, and it supposedly was a very solid
company.
Somewhere during the Depression, or shortly after, I think they went into financial hard times. But as a kid,
we used to go down to Bon Ami, had showers. We were allowed to go in and use the showers after we played
baseball, things of that sort. And it was a community kind of thing. And I always felt Bon Ami did have that kind
spirit, community spirit.
The image of the chick was created by noted artist Ben Austrian (1870-1921), whose paintings specialized in
chickens, ducks and other poultry associated with farm work. The use of the chick and the saying itself was
doubly warming, not only since young chickens are arguably among the cutest fowl, but also because -- for the
first couple of days of their lives -- they haven't yet begun to scratch the dirt. And since Bon Ami, unlike
other cleansers, could not scratch glass, the mating of the two was a natural.
As noted in an biography on Austrian (at
Please click
Austrian works to see Google-searched sampling of images of his work.
Please click
Bon Ami ads to see a Google-searched sampling of ads for Bon Ami over the years.
The former Bon Ami building is now the home of the Time Machine Hobby company. The building retains much of its former structure, and is one of a number of tour locations which are periodically given by the Manchester Historical Society. Check our Events page to find the next tour there. Meanwhile, click each of the photos below of prior tours at the Building. Exterior photos are by Susan Barlow.