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Scott Paper Company Plant in Chester, Pennsylvania 1915 newspaper ad for the toilet paper made by the company. Scott Paper was founded in 1879 in Philadelphia by brothers E. Irvin and Clarence Scott, and is often credited as being the first to market toilet paper sold on a roll. They began marketing paper towels in 1907, and paper tissues in ...
In 1916 McCabe joined Scott Paper as a $15-a-week salesman [2] [12] when he was 23 years old. Scott Paper was then a small one-mill paper company. In 1917, McCabe left Scott temporarily to serve in World War I. He enlisted as a private and advanced to captain by 1919. McCabe returned to civilian life and to the Scott Paper Company at the age of 26.
They had two children, Arthur Hoyt Scott and Margaret, wife of Owen Moon. Around 1878, the paper commission failed, and the family lived in Camden, New Jersey, Irvin and brother Clarence Scott took the remaining proceeds and formed Scott Paper Company. Irvin reportedly borrowed $2,000 from his father-in-law and added the $300 the two brothers ...
Scott Paper company operated the S.D. Warren Company as a wholly owned subsidiary until 1994, when it sold this leading producer of light-weight and heavy-weight coated papers. [4] In 1995, SAPPI Limited, a paper company based in South Africa paid $300 million for the mill and outsourced most of the work in the mill to South Africa. The mill ...
A box of Scotties tissues. Scotties is a facial tissue brand originally owned by the Scott Paper Company, created in 1955. [citation needed]Kimberly-Clark, owner of the rival Kleenex brand, acquired Scott Paper in 1997.
During his three years at the company, Dunlap mentored James Packer. [18] In 1994, Dunlap became the CEO of Scott Paper after Philip E. Lippincott stepped down from the position. [19] In 1995, he sold Scott Paper to Kimberly-Clark for $9 billion, making $100 million from the deal via stock options and the appreciation of his holdings. [20] [21]
G. Willing Pepper (1909-April 21, 2001), known as “Wing” was a corporate executive, the former president of the Scott Paper Company, and a notable Philadelphia philanthropist. He combined active philanthropy with the use of commercial skills to improve public health. Pepper was a member of old Philadelphia family.
Michael Scott, Pam Beesly, and Ryan Howard are struggling to adjust to the work environment of the new Michael Scott Paper Company. The office space used to be a closet; water pipes run through the room, so they can hear the toilets flush from the Dunder Mifflin bathrooms above them.