Calgary Herald

N.B. Liquor Corp. pulls Old Sam Rum

Product joins list of brands with racist origins

- HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. •Thenew Brunswick Liquor Corp. says Old Sam Rum, whose logo appears to depict a laughing Black man, will no longer have a place on its shelves.

A statement from the corporatio­n said that as of Friday, it “has delisted this product and is pulling it from our shelves,” along with a “thorough review” of other products in its catalogue.

The Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Liquor Corp. said it is reviewing the locally bottled brand of rum.

In a carefully worded statement from the Crown corporatio­n Friday, the NLC said the Old Sam Rum brand was flagged by staff as problemati­c under the company’s objective to foster a respectful, safe environmen­t that values diversity and inclusion.

It said the corporatio­n “identified a potential issue with the Old Sam branding” following these concerns and the broader public discussion about depictions of Black people in brands.

Pepsico-owned Quaker Oats announced this week it would retire the 131-year-old Aunt Jemima pancake and syrup brand, acknowledg­ing the character was based on a racist stereotype.

Old Sam Rum is being reviewed through a process that will look at “the history of the product,” the NLC said, before the corporatio­n decides whether to make a change.

The Crown corporatio­ns join a number of high-profile companies reckoning with the racist origins of images presented by their products, as the global Black Lives Matter movement prompts renewed, widespread criticism of systemic racism against Black people.

Mars Inc. has committed to reviewing the Uncle Ben’s rice brand, and Colgate-palmolive Co. has announced it is working on changes to the Darlie brand toothpaste, along with its Chinese partner Hawley & Hazel Chemical Co.

There are two Old Sam Rum products in the collection of spirits produced by Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Liquor Corp.’s manufactur­ing division.

The rum is imported from Guyana and blended and bottled in St. John’s, according to the company’s website. It has been sold in other Canadian provinces including Alberta, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.

The Old Sam figure appears in black and white illustrati­ons on product labels. The corporatio­n’s website says the recipe originates from 1797, when Edward Young & Co. first imported barrels marked “Old Sam” from Guyana to London, England.

A vague descriptio­n of the character’s backstory appears on the Old Sam Rum website, saying he was based on the Demerara River in Guyana in the 1700s. “Sam was a man who demanded much of himself, his workers and his rums, but brimmed with generosity for guests and friends,” the web page reads.

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