Beginnings The company was registered as Thomas Ross Ltd in 1920 in Grimsby. In 1929, Carl Ross became chairman and managing director when his father retired. By the outbreak of World War II, Thomas Ross Ltd operated fish merchanting branches in
Leeds,
Leicester, and
Fleetwood as well as its
Grimsby base.
Trawling Starting with a small fleet of four fishing vessels in the 1930s, Ross diversified into trawling from 1934. The acquisition of a major shareholding in Trawlers Grimsby in 1944 was followed by several other fishing fleets such as the Queen Steam Fishing Company. In 1956 Carl Ross took over GF Sleight Ltd, which employed 20 of the best trawler skippers in Britain, and began building trawlers in his latest acquisition – the Cochrane Shipyards of Selby. These were the famous 'Cat' and 'Bird' class trawlers. In 1960/1, the Ross Group took over the
Rinovia Steam Fishing Company Ltd. At its peak the Group owned the largest fishing fleet in Europe, with eight
trawler fleets. The company also acquired its own shipyard, which began building the company's vessels. In 1960, in England there were around 600 fishing trawlers. In the mid-1960s it had 65 vessels, the second largest fleet in England, after Associated Fisheries.
Fishing fleet Ships in the Ross fleet included: •
Ross Tiger (February 1957 – Cat Class), first of the 'Cat Class' and preserved as a trawler at Grimsby's
National Fishing Heritage Centre. •
Ross Leopard (October 1957 – Cat Class), in later years moored in the Thames and recently dismantled in Ostend, Belgium •
Ross Jaguar (December 1957 – Cat Class), converted into a three masted schooner with her name contracted to 'Jaguar' •
Ross Kashmir (1957 – K Class), later acquired much greater worldwide fame as a replacement for
Greenpeace's 1955-built
Rainbow Warrior, and became the
Rainbow Warrior II in 1989. •
Ross Revenge (1960), later converted to a radio ship operated by
Radio Caroline •
Ross Cleveland, involved in the
Hull triple trawler tragedy •
Ross Cheater •
Ross Renown •
Ross Hawk •
Reperio •
Reboundo Fish processing In October 1953,
George Dawson began importing Icelandic fish, when the
Ingólfr Arnarson trawler landed; this was opposed by the company and the Grimsby Fish Merchants' Association. Imports of Icelandic fish had been officially banned. In October 1954, the company chartered the Norwegian steamer
Norfrost to import £40,000 worth of
Halibut (150 tonnes), which was claimed to be the world's largest catch of
deep sea fish; it would be enough fish for one million meals. By the end of the 1950s it was landing 100 million lbs of fish per year; at this time, Ross Group was a subsidiary of Trawlers Grimsby – in March 1959, the company changed its name to Ross Group, and all food was now branded under this name. In October 1965, it opened a division in the Netherlands with Eurofrost NV called Ross Diepvries in
Breda, to distribute and make its products in the Dutch market.
Diversification By the early 1960s, Ross's holdings included poultry, frozen and fresh foods, including fish, as well as its fish trawling, merchanting, and other operations. Yet the company's trawling operations, which by then represented just 5 percent of group sales, had become perennial money-losers. Ross also had a factory at
Westwick, Norfolk from 1948, where they had fruit and vegetables – garden
peas; it was bought completely by Ross in 1954, bought by
United Biscuits in 1999, and was acquired by its present owners
Heinz in 2000.
Potato chips were introduced in 1962. It bought Grimsby Motors in June 1959, Sterling Poultry (broiler chicken) in May 1961, and Waterworth Brothers (fruitshops) in August 1964. In the mid-1960s, its businesses were, in order of turnover: poultry; frozen foods; fish trawling and distribution; fresh foods other than fish; motors, transport, and vessel construction; chemicals and agricultural services; and overseas business. They were the largest fish distributors in the UK and worth £27 million in 1965. In the mid-1960s, a new £430,000 11-storey headquarters was built in Grimsby by Myton, a division of
Taylor Woodrow. The building, still in use as the head offices of
Young's Bluecrest and known as 'Ross House', dominates the southern wall of the town's once thriving fish docks.
Takeover Carl Ross left the Ross Group after an acrimonious board room struggle in 1965 and, as a direct result of this,
Imperial Tobacco gained control in September 1969; the company had offered £47.5 million for Ross on 6 August 1969. While Carl Ross was in control Ross Group had diversified into non-fish foodstuffs such as Ross
frozen food. While the non-fish food companies were subject to several further takeovers, the Ross fishing fleet was acquired by
British United Trawlers by a merger with
Associated Fisheries organised by the
Industrial Reorganisation Corporation on 2 April 1969; Ross had tried to buy this company in 1961, then bid £15.5 million in December 1965, and £17 million in January 1966. The bid was referred to the
Monopolies Commission, and rejected in May 1966. By the 1970s, the three largest UK producers of frozen food were
Birds Eye (UK),
Findus (who opened a plant in Grimsby in June 1960) and Ross Group. By 1973, Findus and Ross were selling £41 million of goods per year, and Birds Eye sold £109 million. Ross Poultry was producing around £4 million per year, with its
Buxted (now based in
Suffolk) and
Premier Farm brands. On 16 March 1988 the company was bought by
United Biscuits for £335 million. in Grimsby ==References==