Maintaining this website (which you are enjoying for free!) takes a lot of time and resources.
Please show your support for all our hard work by telling your friends about Sarah's books —and by buying them yourself, too, of course!
Historical Article
Origin of Ice-Cream Soda Water
Editorial. The Western Druggist: A Journal of Pharmacy, Chemistry, and Allied Sciences. Volume 14. 1892. page 185.
The now quite general custom of serving ice cream with soda water is not of so recent origin as is commonly assumed. The American Carbonator is our authority for this history of the practice:
Mr. Eugene Rouselle, who kept an elegant establishment on Chestnut street, below Fourth, Philadelphia, and who first introduced bottled soda in the United States, used to dispense from his soda fountains what he called ice-cream soda. This was some thirty-five years ago. It was concocted as follows: He had arranged a carpenter's plane, bottom up. On this he shaved his ice. In a large glass he would put the desired syrup and a little plain cream. The glass was then treated to a liberal quantity of the shaven ice, and upon these the soda water was drawn. His syrups, cream and soda fountain were all kept buried in ice; consequently the beverage was as cold as the ice itself, and formed a most delicious and cooling drink in hot weather. Rouselle did a great soda business. Soon others took up his plan, but many of them found much trouble in it. Their cream was often sour; more ice was consumed than they liked. Then the fancy drug stores, all of which had soda fountains, adopted the plan of putting a spoonful of ice cream into the glass instead of plain cream and shaven ice. Some of them sweetened and drew the soda, and put a spoonful of ice cream on top. It is not known what druggist first followed the example, but ice-cream soda water did make its first appearance in Philadelphia at least thirty years ago.
In the late nineteenth-century, before photographs became the standard images used in advertising, illustrators frequently made the figures in their advertising artwork look as much like celebrities as was possible while still avoiding outright libel. The lady in this Hires' Root beer ad resembles First Lady Frances Cleveland, and is even wearing the same dress Mrs. Cleveland wore in official portraits!
Get this image on a canvas tote bag
Get it on a greeting card
More Victorian advertisements
Other soda articles:
The American Drink (1897)
Evils of Encouraging the Ice Cream Soda Trade (1897)
How to Draw A Glass of Ice Cream Soda (1893)
Serving Ice Cream Soda (1901)
Soda Water (1896)
Evils of Encouraging the Ice Cream Soda Trade (1897)
How to Draw A Glass of Ice Cream Soda (1893)
Serving Ice Cream Soda (1901)
Soda Water (1896)
Back to Historical Articles Index
Soda resources:
Acid Phosphate (for adding to sodas): Extinct Chemical Company http://www.artofdrink.com/shop
Tonic (for adding to sodas): Bradley's Tonic Co. http://kinatonic.com/about-us/
***
In a seaport town in the late 19th-century Pacific Northwest, a group of friends find themselves drawn together —by chance, by love, and by the marvelous changes their world is undergoing. In the process, they learn that the family we choose can be just as important as the ones we're born into. Join their adventures in
The Tales of Chetzemoka
To read about the exhaustive research that goes into each book, click on their "Learn More" buttons!
***
Anthologies
True Ladies and
Proper Gentlemen
***
Non-fiction
Victorian Secrets
|
This Victorian Life
|
Sarah's author profile on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/ThisVictorianLife
Search this website:
***