ST. PAUL TRAVELERS

July 24, 2006

St. Paul Travelers Cos. is phasing out the “St. Paul” from its name.

“St. Paul” is already gone from the company’s marketing for consumer auto and home insurance, and it will be eliminated from advertising to business customers in the United States and Canada.

Spokesman Shane Boyd told the St. Paul Pioneer Press the company will keep its corporate name, logo, and the “St. Paul Travelers” sign atop its downtown headquarters in St. Paul, Minn.

The 2004 merger of The St. Paul Cos. and Hartford, Conn.-based Travelers Property Casualty Corp. created the nation’s second-largest business insurer.

According to the company, The St. Paul name dates to 1853 when St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co. began insuring individuals, steamboats and wooden buildings. It paid claims from the Great Chicago Fire in 1871 and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.

The Travelers’ name goes back to 1864, when it became the first U.S. company to insure against accidents. Travelers was the first to offer auto insurance in 1897; St. Paul was second.

The de-emphasizing of the St. Paul name is part of a national, multimillion-dollar advertising and marketing campaign. Company research showed that Travelers was a more recognizable name than St. Paul or St. Paul Travelers, Klein said.

John F. Byrnes, chief executive of Hartford-based insurance agency R.C. Knox & Co., had asked the company for a year to trim down to a single brand because, he said, St. Paul Travelers was “too wordy, too cumbersome.”

The St. Paul Travelers name will still be used for community and corporate activities, the company said. Business done through Lloyd’s in the United Kingdom and Ireland will continue under the St. Paul Travelers’ brand but could change to St. Paul.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.