“If history were taught in the form of stories, it would never be forgotten.” Rudyard Kipling
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Post
-
1. General Leonard Wright COLBY was born on 5 Aug 1846 in Ashtabula County, Ohio. He appeared in the census in 1850 in Silver Creek, Stephe...
-
In 1892 John Nurse , a descendant of Rebecca Nurse who was executed for witchcraft in the Salem Witch Hysteria 1692 gave an address on th...
-
Photo from "The Ancient Ferry ways to the Merrimack" by William D Lowell Read at the Annual Meeting of the Historical Society of O...
-
Brother Bannon, baseball legends born in Amesbury, Massachusetts to Robert J Bannon and Ethel Evanson . Thomas Edward Bannon born in Ames...
-
Document in private collection. Receipts submitted for payment by Jonathan Tuttle. Date October 8 1789. Seeking Research support to verify t...
This reminds me of watching the old Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Those were the days when real sugar was used in candy, sodas and chocolate instead of corn syrup. Hmmmm, I can taste the ice cream floats now! Very cool to hear how it came about. I cannot imagine puting straight cream in soda- gross. I'm sure an ice cream float was just the thing children wanted to give them a boost after a long morning in church.
ReplyDeleteI loved reading the progression of doing "good business," and the start of businesses being open on Sundays. Its great to see such great documentation. Keep it coming!
This is just a fascinating story! Only if my Grandma was still around, she was a true Sanders fan. She always served us grandkids ice cream with Sanders chocolate fudge sundae and sometimes caramel too. My mom grew up with various chocolates. Every Sunday she and her family arrive at her grandparents' house and she'd run to the buffet and open the drawer to find some Sanders candy waiting for her to eat!
ReplyDelete