Brock Candy Companyย
The businesses that employ members of your family. The scenic spots where you bring your out of town relatives. The route you ride your bike on Saturdays. The hospital that helped your kids get well. What these aspects of our daily lives have in common is that they were all made possible by people who founded not only some of Chattanoogaโs most enduring businesses, but a large part of the makeup of our city as we know it today.
The men and women featured here didnโt just create profitable, lasting companies and institutions. They shaped the history, infrastructure, and culture of our city, overcoming challenges such as the Great Depression, personal illness, and shifting economies, to make a positive impact on the lives around them. They might not have known in the early years and the lean years if their businesses would survive, much less change the fate of the little boom town on the river. But by daring to start new business ventures, creating charitable organizations, opening tourist attractions, preserving land, and building iconic buildings, they became not just a part of Chattanoogaโs history, but integral to its future.
By Meghan O’Dea
If ever there were pioneering businessmen and civic and community leaders in Chattanooga,
they were William Emerson Brock Sr. and his son William Emerson Brock Jr. W.E. Brock Sr. was born in Davie County, North Carolina. When his father passed away, he had to leave school after the fourth grade and run the farm to support his mother and siblings. When he came to Chattanooga in his twenties, he borrowed $4,000 to buy a candy wholesaler and started making candy in the back room. Three years later, it became the Brock Candy Company.
W.E. Brock Sr. not only grew the company, but he became a leader in Chattanoogaโs business, community, and public activities. His involvements culminated in his being appointedย as a U.S. Senator in 1928.
At that time W. E. Brock Jr. took the reins of the candy company, leading it throughย the tumultuous years of the Great Depression, World War II, and beyond. When theย Great Depression made it impossible to make payroll, he borrowed the payroll cash fromย the Hamilton National Bank. (The loan was fi nally paid off in full some 14 years later, aย cause for great celebration.) By 1950, Brock Candy had become one of the largest candyย manufacturers in the U.S.
Like his father, W.E. Brock Jr. constantly worked for Chattanoogaโs improvement.ย One of the founders of what is now United Way of Greater Chattanooga,ย he served as Chairman of the Board of the University of Chattanooga, guidingย it through its transformation to become the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.ย He also was a leader in the peaceful desegregation of our city, and laterย received national recognition for his work.
It is important to note the contributions of the extraordinary wives of theseย two men. Miriam Acree Brock, wife of W.E. Brock Sr., helped found a numberย of churches in the cityโs minority community, for many years taught the cityโsย largest menโs bible class at Trinity Methodist Church, and with Dr. J.P. McCallieย helped bring bible teaching to Chattanoogaโs public schools. Myra (Peggy)ย Kruesi Brock, wife of W.E. Brock Jr., wasย active in countless community service activitiesย throughout her life, and was even a volunteerย with Hospice at the time of her passing.
W.E. Brock Jr.โs sons Bill, Pat, and Frankย have continued the Brock legacy, Bill Brockย as a U.S. Senator and as a member of Ronaldย Reaganโs Cabinet; Pat Brock leading the candyย company to national success; and Frank Brockย becoming the president of our own Covenantย College.
Each has found a way to make a differenceย โ a determination which may have first takenย root in the hard clay soil of Davie Countyย North Carolina.
To Read About More of Chattanoogaโs Founding Fathers, click the following links:
Thomas Hooke McCallie and Descendants
Harry S. Probasco & Descendants
William Emerson Brock & William Emerson Brock Jr.
