Page 2 - HCC Final Version Products Catalog
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HARAM-CHRISTENSEN CORPORATION

                                    100 YEARS OF HISTORY


                                                   1919 – 2019




       In 1917 Carl Christensen immigrated to Seattle, Washington, from Norway. He worked as a newspaper reporter but after
       a short time on the West Coast moved to Brooklyn, New York. At the time Brooklyn had a large Norwegian immigrant
       community. In 1919 he started Carl Christensen & Co., Inc. and began importing and selling canned Norwegian fishballs
       – a popular item with the Norwegian immigrants. Sales were very good and he soon added more Scandinavian foods to
       his product line.

       Severin A. Haram was another Norwegian immigrant who saw an opportunity in New York for the importation of Norwe-
       gian foods. Mr. Haram came from the municipality of Haram on the coast of Norway near Alesund. The municipality got
       its name from an old farm where the first church was built.  The name was initially spelled Harhamarr and goes back to
       Old Norse meaning “rocky hill”.  Today the municipality of Haram includes an industrial area where many of the Norwe-
       gian fish products imported by Haram-Christensen are processed.

       In 1965 Carl Christensen & Co., Inc. merged with S. A. Haram &Co., Inc. and moved away from Brooklyn to the facilities
       of the latter in lower Manhattan. The new company was to be known as Haram-Christensen Corporation (HCC).


       In 1987 Walter Seifert joined HCC and introduced a new line of German products. This necessitated a move away from
       Manhattan where conditions were no longer favorable for an import company that needed space for increasingly larger
       containers. The company was moved across the Hudson River to New Jersey.  The 1990’s saw a significant growth period as
       more and more German products were added. The growth necessitated another move in 1993 to its current location and
       additional space was later added to that location.

       The first two decades of the 21st century have offered many challenges to importers: New technologies and a new genera-
       tion of online businesses with different needs and demands; one of the biggest recessions in US history; terrorism threats
       and major changes in regulations governing food safety.  Simultaneously, there is a renewed awareness and interest in the
       “new cuisines” of Northern Europe where food is grown, processed, packaged and transported according to the highest
       standards of the food industry. Food with flavors that are simultaneously unique and adaptable, healthy and nutritional.
       HCC continues to grow with the changing times and the changing influences that has taken place in a primarily borderless
       Europe. Our products today blend together the flavors of Germany, the Scandinavian countries, Austria, Switzerland and
       France.


                                                                         The HCC team
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