Once the sweet heart of America’s candy empire, the Life Savers factory in Port Chester, New York was more than just a manufacturing site — it was the soul of a brand that defined how America tasted childhood for over a century.
From a 1,500-dollar bet on a mint with a hole to controlling 25% of the American roll candy market, Life Savers shaped neighborhoods, employed generations of families, and turned a simple five-cent promise into one of the most powerful brand identities in food history. But behind the success was a series of corporate takeovers, cost calculations, and decisions made thousands of miles away that slowly erased everything the factory stood for.
This video tells the story hidden inside the walls of the Port Chester plant — how 1,100 workers built something irreplaceable, and how 90 cents per thousand units of production cost was enough to end it all. A story of ambition, community, and the price of progress — told through the last wrapper left on the floor. Flint & Factory
