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A Family Business
The
J. M. Clayton Company was founded in 1890 by Captain John Morgan Clayton
(known as "Captain Johnnie") and has remained in the family
for over four generations. The oldest working crab processing plant in
the world, it began as a small oyster shucking and packing operation in
Hoopersville, Dorchester County, Maryland. Located at the end of a 1,000-foot
wooden causeway, the original Claytons facility packed seafood and
fresh vegetables for delivery by steamboat to Baltimore, the only market
for their products at the time.
Within a few years,
Captain Johnnie began picking and processing the delectable Chesapeake
Bay blue crab, packing their crabmeat under the label name, "Epicure."
Seeking better access
to supplies, telephone service, and multiple modes of transportation,
Captain Johnnie relocated his company in 1921 to its current Cambridge
setting off the Choptank River. Not wanting to leave his skilled labor
force behind, John Clayton moved entire families with him, including ancestors
of some workers who are still employed at the J. M. Clayton Company. Loading
everyone and everything onto Claytons large workboat, the Epicure,
John Clayton set sail for what remains today a legend in the seafood packing
business.
Over
the years, the entire Clayton family worked at the packing plant. Captain
Johnnie passed the business along to his son-in-law, who, along with several
other family members, ran the J. M. Clayton Company until grandson J.
Clayton Brooks took over as president in 1969.
Today, Clayton’s is operated by three brothers, Jack, Bill, and Joe Brooks, and Clay Brooks, the first of the fifth generation, who, following in the footsteps of their great grandfather Captain John Morgan Clayton, have made the J. M. Clayton Company an extraordinary Chesapeake Bay landmark.
Rich in History
The
J. M. Clayton Company was the first crabmeat processing plant in Dorchester
County and one of the first on the Chesapeake Bay to pick crabs and shed
soft crabs. In 1938 Claytons purchased Goose Creek Seafood in Toddville,
Maryland in order to obtain a steadier supply of crabmeat and oysters.
By the early 1940s, Claytons began picking and processing
crabs year-round, getting their off-season crabs from the warmer Virginia
and North Carolina waters. Providing work for employees throughout the
year allowed Claytons to better hold on to their experienced and
reliable crab pickers.
Crabs were in plentiful supply through the industrys peak in the
1930s and the 1940s, and also during World War II when crabmeat
was excluded from rationed food items. Immediately following the war,
Claytons was operating at the height of production, employing 125
crab pickers, 95 oyster shuckers, and a support crew of 30.
In 1957, the J. M. Clayton Company began using the pasteurizing process
to naturally preserve crabmeat. Employing the method invented by Louis
Pasteur, Claytons was able to extend the shelf life of crabmeat,
a revolution in the crab packing industry. Packing plants now processed
crabmeat year-round and inventoried it until the seasonal market arrived.
The same pasteurizing process is still widely used today. At Claytons
all our pasteurized crabmeat is prepared naturally without chemicals,
additives or preservatives.
The J.M. Clayton Company has survived over the years through sound management
combined with their efforts in establishing working relationships with
local watermen and recruiting the mainstay of their operation experienced
crab pickers. From the height of Marylands crab picking industry
when over 60 businesses were in operation, Claytons is currently
just one of 20 left and the only one remaining on the water in Cambridge.
Over the years we identified a need to supply our customers with imported crabmeat and researched product from many countries. After several trips abroad and many hours of meetings and evaluating hundreds of samples, in 2006 Clayton’s began importing the best of the crabmeat produced overseas. Imported under the brand CLAYTON’S, Indonesia’s best crabmeat is now available.
The "Quik Pik" crab picker
Responding
to a shortage of skilled crab pickers, J. Clayton Brooks, along with business
associates Calvert Tolley and Ted Reinke, invented the worlds first
automatic crab picking machine. Named the "Quik Pik", it was
patented in 1973 after 10 years of perfecting the mechanized picking process.
At one time, 25 businesses from Florida to Maryland were using the Quik
Pik to pick their crabs. Although the choice, high-prized lump or backfin
meat must still be picked by hand, the Quik Pik is still employed at Claytons
to efficiently remove crabmeat from the shell. This remarkable machine
picks at a speed of 100 pounds of crabmeat per hour. It would take 25
workers to hand pick at the same rate.
It’s a "Dirty Job"…but Someone’s Gotta Do It
The J. M. Clayton facility was recently featured on one of the first episodes of “Dirty Jobs”, a very popular TV show on the Discovery Channel. While many people don’t consider picking crabs a dirty job, the show’s host, Mike Rowe appreciated the hard work required to produce a clean pound of crabmeat.
©2007,
The J.M. Clayton Company
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