About the Factory.
The Sommer-Richardson Factory Building
Frank Lewis Sommer was born in Pennsylvania in 1852 and came to St. Joseph, Missouri in 1869. He began his career working as a clerk for Townsend & Wood, but left to start his own baking business. In 1876, F.L. Sommer & Co. invented a revolutionary product. Utilizing baking salt to leaven the cracker, they developed the wafer thin snack which became known as “Saltines.” Sommer presented the saltine crackers at the Buchanan County Fair where it won the premium blue ribbon. Sommer’s popularity soared and the business expanded by 1880 with factories across the Midwest.
Meanwhile, John D. Richardson, Jr., who was born in Virginia in 1849, came to St. Joseph in 1871. He was a clerk for wholesaler R.L. McDonald & Co. In 1876, Richardson joined F.L. Sommer to form Sommer, Richardson & Co. in 1884. The company expanded into the confectionery business, trademarking the “Red Cross Brand Candies” in 1886.
The cracker business became increasingly popular in the late nineteenth century. Chicago lawyer Adolphus Green, merged the largest conglomerate of midwestern biscuit factories, including Sommer-Richardson, into the American Biscuit Company. In 1898 the remaining biscuit companies merged with American Biscuit Company to form the National Biscuit Company later known as Nabisco. John D. Richardson, Jr. moved back to Chicago to become the first vice-president of the new company.
F.L. Sommer continued to work for the merging company until his retirement in 1900. His brother, William Sommer, operated the local factory at 202 Main Street from its construction in 1873 until 1912. Nabisco continued to operate the local plant until 1935. Its iconic smokestack has defined the downtown skyline for over a century. The Premium brand, so named for F.L. Sommer’s county fair award at the product's origin, remains the top selling brand of saltine crackers to this day.