
IOWA WOMEN’S ARCHIVES
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA LIBRARIES
IOWA CITY, IOWA
ETHEL REAMES (1926- )
PAPERS, 1954-1999
2.5 linear inches
|
ACQUISITION: |
The papers (donor no.
724) were donated by Ethel M. Reames in 2000. |
|
ACCESS: |
The papers are open
for research. |
|
COPYRIGHT: |
Copyright has been retained by the donor. |
|
PROCESSED BY: |
Doris Malkmus, 2000.
[ReamesEthel.doc]. |
Biography
Ethel May Pitts Reames, Des Moines area
businesswoman, was born August 3, 1926 on a farm near Maxwell, Iowa to Cornelia
Kaldenberg and Joseph “Park” Pitts. She
and her brother and sister were raised on a series of rented farms northeast of
Des Moines. She attended several rural
schools and high school in Madrid, Iowa.
Her parents had moved to Monroe, Iowa in March of 1943, leaving their
sixteen-year old daughter to board in Madrid in order to finish high school
there in June. After graduating, she
worked at a grocery and in her parents’ bakery in Monroe before moving to Des
Moines to attend Capitol City Commercial College in 1944. In Des Moines, she lived in inexpensive
rooms near a working class African-American neighborhood and worked part time
at a bakery. She felt confident about her
ability to make her way in the city. At
the bakery, she met co-worker William Reames.
Their difficult childhoods gave them a bond and they dated even after
she left the commercial college and got a job at the telephone company. They married in June of 1945.
Three Reames daughters were born: Lucinda in 1948,
Chris in 1949, and Joellen in 1952. In
November of 1949, Ethel Reames made her first batch of peanut brittle in her
kitchen. Her husband sold it to
co-workers at the factory where he worked.
She made fifty-four two-pound batches at a time. In 1950, she made 1200 pounds of added
peanut brittle, divinity, and fudge for the Christmas season and used the money
to buy a sewing machine to sew diapers for their third daughter.
They expanded steadily. She began making egg noodles to use the left over yolks from the
divinity. Her husband marked the candy
and noodles at corner grocery stores across Des Moines. The noodles required refrigeration and kept
poorly. They experimented with
different methods of freezing noodles and became the first company to market
frozen homemade noodles. They expanded
the kitchen at their home, adding a rolling machine, a mechanical noodle
cutter, and a tumbler to separate the cut noodles. Hiring neighborhood ladies
as needed, they made noodles Monday, Wednesday, and Friday and froze and
wrapped them on Tuesday and Thursday.
In 1958, William Reames quit his factory job and began marketing noodles
across the state and country full-time.
Ethel Reames noted that a conveyor system to freeze noodles and wrapping
machine to replace hand labor provided the dramatic difference in the speed and
quantity of production. They now bought
flour dough by the semi-truck load and egg yolks by the fifty-gallon drum.
In 1963, they sought legal advice about a business
mortgage. Up to this time, they had
considered the business an equal partnership.
Their attorney, however, insisted that one member have a sixty percent
controlling interest. Ethel Reames had
done all the jobs from janitor, painting, delivery, marketing, office
management, cooking, billing, banking, and planning and felt that fifty-one
percent interest would have been enough to establish controlling interest for
mortgage purposes, but the lawyer insisted.
William Reames became the legal owner of sixty percent of the business
and during disputes with Ethel Reames, he used his controlling interest to his
advantage. After this, Ethel retired
from the business. She began divorce
proceedings that became deadlocked over her forty-percent interest in the
business. When the divorce was
finalized in 1975, Ethel Reames considered hers a poor settlement. William bought the company as part of the
divorce and sold it in 1989 for twelve million dollars. After the divorce, Ethel Reames began a
successful restaurant business that closed after losing its lease in the second
year. She is now retired and enjoys
writing family and personal histories.
Scope and
Content Note
The Ethel Reames papers date from 1954 to 2000 and
measure 2.5 linear inches. The
collection consists primarily of photocopies of a disassembled scrapbook of the
Reames’ Noodle Company from its beginning in 1954 until it was sold in
1989. The scrapbook details the
significant changes in scale, production, and marketing as the business grew
from her kitchen into a twelve million dollar corporation.
The collection also contains Ethel Reames’ family
histories that recount in a straightforward way her childhood with alcoholic
parents. Her ambition and talent are
demonstrated throughout the scrapbook, while her reminiscences reveal the
personal dimensions of her youthful years.
Box no. Description
1954-1957
1957-1963
1964-1969
1969-1971
1973-1989
Photographs, undated
Family history, 1990s