Otis Elevator
How about Goya? I believe the founders are among the richest Hispanic people in the country, and I think everything they make has their own brand on it.
ETA - wait, isn’t Hallmark a private company?
Apple Computer?
Owned by United Technologies.
Motorola?
The Lego company is still owned by the founder’s grandson.
And Necco Wafers. There aren’t many smaller candy companies that are independently owned anymore.
The Bose Coropration is privately owned and ran by the same family since 1964.
Heinz is certainly a huge corporation, but what is this “Promark”?
Heinz isn’t a subdivision of any other company.
I used the link from the other thread http://www.findownersearch.com/ to find some examples for my OP. According to them, Heinz is owned by Promark Brands Inc, headquartered in Fair Lawn, New Jersey. But others have questioned the accuracy of the site.
That website says that it “allows you to:
* Find the owner of a brand name
* Find all the brands owned by an individual or company
* Find brands in a given area/category.”
The owner of a brand may be different from the owner of the company that produces a product under that brand. And based solely on the apparent inaccurate information about Heinz, I wouldn’t rely on it even for that much info.
Jiffy mix aka The Chelsea Milling Company
Been in the same family for 4 or 5 generations, and still located in Chelsea, MI.
That happened before I moved up here, but in retrospect, it makes sense. However, as your linked articles pointed out, Hershey is such an institution and major economic player here that there would be a lot of scrutiny by the state, if not the feds, which makes the company relatively undesirable now.
Robin
Tootsie Roll Industries. They’ve grown some and are publicly traded, and have picked up other second-tier candy manufacturers here and there, but they’re still a fairly small, niche candy company.
In-N-Out Burger. Privately-owned regional hamburger chain, but they’re pretty well-known throughout America. Similarly for White Castle.
Meijer. Privately-owned regional supercenter retail chain; probably the only successful privately-owned supercenter chain at this point.
PAAS Dye Company. Ever bought an Easter egg dye kit? You probably bought Paas brand. AFAICT, Easter egg dyes are all they really do.
Otis is part of United Technologies Corporation. They also own Pratt & Whitney, Carrier, Hamilton Sundstrand, and Sikorsky.
If your work or casual wardrobe involves some seriously rugged garments then you’ve probably heard of Carhartt’s. Still family-owned AFAICT.
Oh, mustn’t forget Singer sewing machines: they’re diversified and multinational now, but AFAIK they’re still just Singer.
Dell
BMW also operates MINI and Rolls Royce as separate brands and owned Rover for a number of years before it finally broke up and went under. Daimler Benz has a bunch of other stuff too - trucks, Maybach, Smart…
Not 10 years ago, Ford, so flush with cash from their highly profitable SUV line, was seriously considering buying BMW.