Who Invented Candy Corn?
The tri-colored confection was
designed to look like chicken feed and came out at a time when about half of
Americans worked on farms. Whether you like it, hate it or just use it to
decorate, you probably think of candy corn as a Halloween treat. But in the
beginning, it was associated more with chickens than the spooky holiday. Candy
corn’s origins are a little iffy, but it seems to have come out around the
1880s, a time when candy companies were mixing up slurries of mellowcreme and
molding the confection into the shape of pumpkins, chestnuts, turnips and other
agricultural products. Farmers made up about half of the American labor force,
and companies marketed agriculture-themed candies to children in farm country
all year round. Enter candy corn, which featured the innovation of three
hand-layered colors. Oral histories identify the inventor of candy corn as
George Renninger, an employee at Wunderle Candy Company in Philadelphia.
Wunderle was the first company to sell these multi-colored treats made of sugar
and corn syrup, according to the National Confectioners Association. But it was
the Goelitz Candy Company—now the Jelly Belly Candy Company—that really
popularized the candy. In 1898, Goelitz picked up the recipe and started
marketing the kernels as a candy called “Chicken Feed,” writes Rebecca Rupp in
National Geographic. That’s because before World War I, most Americans didn’t
really think of corn as people food. “There were no sweet hybrids in those
days,” writes Samira Kawash, author of Candy: A Century of Panic and Pleasure,
in The Atlantic. “Corn was coarse and cheap and not very tasty: good food for
pigs and chickens. It wasn't until war-time wheat shortages in 1917 that any
but the poorest Americans would have considered corn flour, corn meal, or corn
bread acceptable foodstuffs.” Even after World War I, candy corn maintained its
association with chickens. Packages of Goelitz’s candy corn from the 1920s
displayed a rooster and the motto, “King of the Candy Corn Fields.”
In the first half of the 20th
century, candy corn became a common “penny candy.” These were the types of treats
kids could buy in bulk for very little money. Kids most likely thought of them
as candies to eat year-round than special ones to get on Halloween, which
wasn’t yet specifically associated with candy. Candy corn might appear at
Halloween parties, but also at celebrations for Thanksgiving and Easter. “As
Halloween became more and more dominated by candy beginning in the 1950s, candy
corn increasingly became the candy for Halloween,” Kawash writes. “There was a
dramatic spike in October advertising of candy corn beginning in the 1950s.
Other kinds of candy were advertised for Halloween too, but they were
advertised just as heavily during the rest of the year.” Today, while it’s easy
to find candy corn year-round (the National Confectioners Association estimates
more than 35 million pounds of the candy are sold every year), it’s most
prominent in October when, on the 30th, National Candy Corn Day honors the
original “chicken feed” treat.
https://www.history.com/news/candy-corn-invented
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