The History of the Popsicle
The Popsicle was invented by an 11 year old boy in 1905 and it was a fluke! Frank Epperson didn't set out to create a treat that would keep kids happy and cool on summer days for generations to come. He mixed some soda powder and water in a glass with a small wooden stir stick then adventure called and he wandered off and forgot about his drink. It remained outside overnight. It was cold in the San Francisco Bay area that night so when Epperson went outside the next morning, he discovered the first-ever Popsicle waiting for him, trapped frozen inside its glass. He ran the glass under hot water and was able to pull the icy treat out using the stick He licked the frozen treat and decided it was pretty good. History was made and a young entrepreneur was born! Frank named the treat an Epsicle, taking credit where it was due and began selling them around the neighborhood.
Fast-forward 18 years to 1923. Epperson saw a bigger and better future for his Epsicle applying for a "frozen ice on a stick" patent. He described the treat as a "frozen confection of attractive appearance which can be conveniently consumed with the hand and without need for a plate, spoon or fork".
Now a grown man with children of his own, Epperson deferred to their judgment and renamed the treat Popsicle, as in "Pop's Sickle". He moved beyond the neighborhood and began selling his Popsicles at a California amusement park.
Unfortunately, Epperson's Popsicle business failed to thrive .. at least for him, personally. He fell on hard times in the late 1920s and sold his Popsicle rights to the Joe Lowe Company of New York. The Lowe Company took the Popsicle to national fame with more success than Epperson had enjoyed. The company added a second stick, effectively creating two Popsicles stuck together and selling this double-sized version for a nickel. It's rumored that approximately 8,000 were sold on just one hot summer day at Brooklyn's Coney Island.
Then Good Humor decided all this was an infringement of its own copyright for ice cream and chocolate sold on a stick. A series of lawsuits ensued with the courts ultimately deciding that the Lowe Company had the right to sell frozen treats made from water while Good Humor could continue to sell its "ice cream pops". Neither side was particularly pleased with the decision. Their feud continued until 1989 when Unilever purchased Popsicle and, subsequently, Good Humor, joining the two brands under one corporate roof.
Unilever continues to sell Popsicles to this day to the tune of an estimated two billion of them a year in flavors as exotic as mojito and avocado although cherry still remains the most popular. The double-stick version is gone, however. It was eliminated in 1986 because it was too messy and more difficult to eat than Epperson's initial accidental brainstorm.
I recall the nostalgic double-stick Popsicle! My favorite Popsicle flavors were banana and root beer!
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