Pharmacist, teetotaler, and entrepreneur Charles Elmer Hires.
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and this little pop stand at the far end of the cul de sac.
Root beer is fading
fast. Once one of America’s favorite soft drinks it is in danger of joining other 19th
Century concoctions in obscurity. Sarsaparilla
has already virtually disappeared except
for Western theme parks and roadside tourist attractions. Ginger
ale survives mostly as a cocktail mixer. Cream
Soda, both clear and tawny, lingers in some isolated regional niches. Sure, you can still get root beer in bottles and cans at the local store
and fill an enormous cup at a gas
station/convenience store pop machine, but it has been largely eclipsed
by ubiquitous colas, super sweet sodas, and more recently iced teas and energy drinks. The soda fountains and root beer stand drive-ins that once fueled its popularity have virtually vanished.
The once
popular beverage originated with Charles Elmer Hires, a Philadelphia Quaker druggist on May 16,
1866 according to several sources.
But that year Hires, who was born in 1851, was only 15 years old and
while he was working as a clerk in a local drug store, had not yet opened his own shop and certainly was not on a honeymoon in New Jersey where, according to the tale, he was inspired
by the female proprietor of the hotel who served a hot drink she called root tea.
The
information on the inspiration may, or may not, be accurate, but the date is
clearly wrong, yet persists across multiple sources. Hires was an enterprising youngster, however and raised the money to open his
own store before he was 20 by the sale fuller’s
earth—a pharmacy staple—he obtained, you should excuse the
expression, dirt cheap from the potter’s clay dug up in the excavation of foundations near his employer’s shop. He married shortly after and was soon marketing
an early version of his invention around 1871.
No
surprise there. Pharmacists concocted most of the classic American soft drinks in the post-Civil War era and peddled them as miraculous health elixirs.
They took off because they tasted better than most patent medicine and did not have the high alcohol content of those bottled remedies. In fact, Hires, like
other druggists, was a teetotaler and
Temperance advocate who promoted his
beverage as a booze alternative. Most druggists also continued to make money
on the high proof patent medicines
which they could piously claim as medically beneficial. It was the best of both worlds and
for several decades made the local drug store one of the most lucrative of
Main Street businesses—and a social center.
An early ad for Hires' Root Beer--for just a quarter the box could make 5 gallons of root beer at home when mixed with water, sugar and yeast.
The
root in his root tea inspiration was sassafras,
long regarded as having medicinal
benefits. He was soon selling his
more concentrated powdered version in packages for home use. Water,
sugar, and yeast need to be
added. But you could still not buy a
glass in his shop.
It
wasn’t until 1875 that he began to market a syrup to other pharmacies, some of whom had opened the latest fad—the soda fountain. These were
the first to mix soda water and sell
it by the glass.
A classic drug store soda fountain circa 1890. They were already using paper cone cup inserts. The young man ad boy were not yet called soda jerks or wearing iconic white paper caps--both of those arrived with the Jazz Age 1920's and by then the charging fountain had been moved below the counter with beer-tap like lever handles on the bar. Fountains grew from three or four stools to as many as twenty in large urban drug stores.
The
next year the 1876 Centennial Exposition
in his own hometown, Philadelphia,
represented a golden marketing
opportunity to expand his
business. Somewhat reluctantly he was persuaded
by the Reverend Dr. Russell
Conwell, a prominent temperance leader, to open up a refreshment kiosk at the fair
where he sold “the temperance drink and the greatest health-giving beverage in
the world.” He was also now selling
his product as root beer, not root tea.
Fellow temperance advocates had convinced him that the name would
attract hard drinking Pennsylvania working men and offer them an alternative to the stuff from breweries. When heavily
charged with soda, the drink even raised a lager-like head of foam to complete the illusion.
Needless
to say, the exposure from the fair helped Hires’ product take off and he was
soon shipping his extract syrup far
beyond the City of Brotherly Love
just in time for the explosion of popularity of soda fountains.
As late as the 1920's Hires was still marketing his root beer in the home mix box along side of bottled and soda fountain versions.
In
1886 Hires followed the lead of other pharmacy-created soft drinks like Coca-Cola and Dr. Pepper and began to sell a bottled
version of his root beer for home
consumption. By the turn of the 20th century, his
bottled root beer was sold nationally and was featured at many soda
fountains.
Naturally,
other manufactures entered the fray with their own creations, some of them mildly alcoholic—usually less than 2% or about the same as near beer. Most, like Hires, used a
sassafras base but one early competitor, Barq’s,
which was founded in 1898, employed sarsaparilla instead with a variety of
other flavoring herbs and spices.
In
1919, just in time for both Prohibition
and the triumph of the automobile, Roy Allen opened a root beer stand in Lodi, California, which
led to the development of A&W Root
Beer. Aside from roadside service convenience, A&W’s
big innovation was serving its signature
drink in frosted glass mugs. This was soon copied by most soda fountains
and by upstart competitors like the Midwest’s
iconic Dog n Suds carhop served
drive-ins of the 1950’s.
Prohibition
did indeed spread the popularity of root beer, just as it did for most carbonated soft drinks. The Depression
somewhat nicked sales, and many adults returned to guzzling the real
stuff, but the popularity of the drink with children and teens still
made it a good business.
In
the ‘50’s and ‘60’s root beer held its cultural
niche. It was the proclaimed
favorite of Dennis the Menace in both comics
and on the TV sitcom. And every year on Veteran’s Day in Peanuts Snoopy in his World War I
Ace outfit would “head over to Bill
Malden’s for a root beer quaff.”
How
successful root beer was as a deterrent to alcohol is open to
question. It was my beverage of choice
as the kid growing up in Cheyenne,
but the attraction was that it looked so much like real beer in those frosty
mugs with the head of foam. I felt grown
up drinking them, pretending it was real beer.
It turned out to be a training
beverage and no deterrent at all.
But
the soda fountains and drive-ins are the stuff of mere nostalgia now. Try finding a
frosty mug of root beer. And it just ain’t
the same in a foam cup over chipped ice.
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