Potato Chip Entrepreneur Dies at 96

ByABC News
August 26, 2000, 4:14 PM

C H I C A G O, Aug. 26 -- One of the principle men behind the modern, corn oil-fried potato chip, hasdied.

Leonard Japp Sr. was 96.

Japp founded Jays Foods, whose slogan is Cant stop eatingem. The company rose to success because Japp couldnt stopthinking about em.

It was my baby, Japp said in a 1994 interview with theChicago Tribune.

He saw his company grow from a two-person operation deliveringnuts and pretzels to Al Capones speakeasies in 1927 to a businessthat currently employs 1,000 people and sells snacks in Illinois,Indiana, Wisconsin, Michigan, Missouri, Minnesota and Iowa.

According to the companys Web site, Jays Foods was one of the first companies to use the continuous fryer, which makes lighter, less oily chips than earlier methods.

Japp grew up in Wells, Minn. He left home at age 12 to work thegrain harvests in the Plains and was 17 when he hopped a freighttrain to Chicago in 1921. He worked as many as four jobs at a timefor the next few years.

In 1927, Japp and a friend put $5 down on an old Ford deliverytruck and managed to buy $22.50 worth of nuts and pretzels. Theyquickly parlayed that $27.50 investment into a snack deliverybusiness that soon included a fleet of delivery trucks and newfrying vats, all paid for with cash.

But the 1929 stock market crash swept away the growing company.

Japp and a new partner managed to rebuild the business, thenknown as Special Foods Co., by the mid-1930s. But thecompanys leading house brand, Mrs. Japps Chips, fell victim to anti-Japanese sentiment after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941and disappeared from grocery store shelves.

He Earned All Our Love

Japp quickly changed the companys name to Jays Foods and builta manufacturing plant on Chicagos South Side.

He always stopped to talk, said Ronald Young, a maintenanceworker there for 15 years. He didnt think he was better, andthat just blew our minds. He earned all our love that way.