In 1903 a British subsidiary of the Force Food Company was formed to import the cereal to Europe. A slightly modified version of Sunny Jim and his jingles caught the fancy of British consumers. A. C. Fincken, a former employee of the Force Food Company, set up an agency in 1910 to import American cereals to the UK. The cereal, and the Sunny Jim character achieved wide success in Britain, at its peak in 1930 selling 12.5 million packages. In 1932 the cereal was reintroduced into the United States by Herbert C. Rice, an Englishman involved in radio production in Buffalo. He introduced The H-Bar-O Rangers, a popular radio adventure serial for boys involving another permutation of the Sunny Jim character, and linked to an advertising campaign for the cereal. It didn't last. Since 1954 the cereal was manufactured in the UK for domestic sale. A.C. Fincken & Co., Ltd. was sold to
Rank Hovis McDougall, a subsidiary of the
Nestle Company, in 1985. An unusual marketing campaign in the 1970s was focussed on the
Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway: perhaps successful, but exposed to a very narrow market. A pre decimal coin collection was available with all 10 coins of ER2 including the farthing, circa 1986-88. Manufacture of Force cereal ceased in 2013,
Sunny Jim The
character on boxes of Force
cereal was created in the United States in 1902 by
writer Minnie Maud Hanff and
illustrator Dorothy Ficken (the mother of
Fred Gwynne), initially for an
advertising campaign. Rather than selling the benefits of eating
wheat, which Hanff assumed customers already knew, her copy for the original advertisements told stories in verse, such as this one: :Jim Dumps was a most unfriendly man, :Who lived his life on the hermit plan; :In his gloomy way he'd gone through life, :And made the most of woe and strife; :Till Force one day was served to him :Since then they've called him "Sunny Jim." The advertisements featured
slogans such as "Better than a Vacation" and "A Different Food for Indifferent Appetites." Other verses included: :Whatever you say, wherever you've been, :You can't beat the cereal, that raised Sunny Jim! and :High o'er the fence leaps Sunny Jim, :Force is the food that raises him This last rhyme became a familiar catchphrase. Also used was the slogan "When skies are grey and times are grim, wake up and smile with Sunny Jim", which appeared on advertising coins. The campaign was wildly successful at promoting the character of Sunny Jim. ''Printers' Ink'' stated September 17, 1902 that "No current novel or play is so universally popular. He is as well-known as
President Roosevelt or
J. Pierpont Morgan." However, the cereal company turned its advertising account over to a different firm, which did not approve of humor in advertising and more or less abandoned the campaign. The Sunny Jim wheat flakes character is referenced in the lyrics to the song 1000 Umbrellas by
XTC on the
Skylarking album. ==Further reading==