Herb Lotman (October 9, 1933 – May 8, 2014) was a food industry magnate who started out as a truck driver and grew his business, Keystone Foods, to one of the largest worldwide beef and chicken suppliers in the world. He is best known for developing products and processes for
McDonald's (including
Chicken McNuggets), and for his extensive involvement in charitable and philanthropic activities in Philadelphia and other parts of the United States.
Personal life
Lotman was born in
Philadelphia on October 9, 1933, the son of a butcher.
Lotman had two children with his wife Karen.
He died in Philadelphia at age 80 following complications from heart failure.
Business career
Lotman began his working career in his family's beef wholesale business.
He established
Keystone Foods
Tyson Foods, Inc. is an American multinational corporation, based in Springdale, Arkansas, that operates in the food industry. The company is the world's second-largest processor and marketer of chicken, beef, and pork after JBS S.A. It annually ...
, which was instrumental in developing the use of mass-produced frozen burgers in the late 1960s, and supplied these as well as chicken and fish products to
McDonald's.
In the 1980s he was the inventor of the
Chicken McNugget
Chicken McNuggets are a type of chicken nuggets sold by the international fast food restaurant chain McDonald's. They consist of small pieces of reconstituted boneless chicken meat that have been battered and deep fried. Chicken McNuggets ...
.
Lotman's biggest moment in popular culture came some fifteen years after this, when a scene on the second episode of the
HBO
Home Box Office (HBO) is an American premium television network, which is the flagship property of namesake parent subsidiary Home Box Office, Inc., itself a unit owned by Warner Bros. Discovery. The overall Home Box Office business unit is ba ...
television series ''
The Wire'' (entitled "
The Detail") had three characters argue over Lotman's wealth as a result of his creation. They were in dispute over whether the inventor of the Chicken McNugget (unbeknown to them) became extremely wealthy, or received nothing for the invention and is today "working in the basement for regular wage, thinking of some shit to make the fries taste better." The former statement was the one that was incidentally truthful, as Lotman did very well.
On the McDonalds website, they call their partnership with Keystone Foods "one of the greatest restaurant success stories in history."
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In 1984 over 97% of Keystone's business involved supplying the fast food industry. The business eventually achieved yearly sales of over five billion dollars.
Lotman and his business partners sold Keystone to Brazilian company
Marfrig in June 2010, in a deal valued at over a billion dollars.
Smaller business ventures for Lotman and his wife in his later years included the establishment of the Peppercorn restaurant in the small Pennsylvania town of
Wayne in 2013. This closed a few months after his death.
Philanthropy
Lotman was co-founder of the
McDonald's Championship on the
LPGA Tour, which raised money for
Ronald McDonald House Charities and became the largest single golf fundraising event in the world,
and a board member of the Children's Cancer Research Foundation. Together with his wife, he also founded the Macula Vision Research Foundation,
which aims to find cures for
macular degeneration and related illnesses.
Throughout his life he was active in fund-raising for a variety of events and organizations, including the
Aberdeen Dad Vail Regatta
The Dad Vail Regatta is the largest regular intercollegiate rowing event in the United States, drawing over a hundred colleges and universities from North America. The regatta has been held annually on the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia, Pennsyl ...
and the
Prince Music Theater,
which he and his wife had been involved in bringing back into action after its bankruptcy in 2010.
References
10. The Keystone Foods Story https://www.mcdonalds.com/us/en-us/about-our-food/meet-our-suppliers/keystone-foods.html
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lotman, Herb
Businesspeople from Philadelphia
Philanthropists from Pennsylvania
1933 births
2014 deaths
20th-century American businesspeople
20th-century American philanthropists
21st-century American businesspeople
21st-century American philanthropists