• August 3, 2022

a sense of humor

The year was 1920 in Youngstown, Ohio, when Harry Burt, an ice cream and candy store owner, created a unique chocolate coating for his ice cream. Although her daughter liked the taste, she found it unpleasant to eat, so her son suggested freezing the coated ice cream and inserting a stick. Already selling lollipops, Dad modeled the treat after his Jolly Boy Suckers, and thus the ice cream bar was born. Much like the invention of an Iowa businessman who had come up with the Eskimo Pie a year earlier, Burt raced (or rather drove) with it, executing his unique distribution of getting the product to his customers instead of waiting for them to come to buy it. your store. Apparently great minds think the same, because several years later the Popsicle was born but made with frozen fruit-flavored juices, not ice cream.

Pictures of the products were on the outside of the truck, but we didn’t need them as we all had our favourites, and the Good Humor man always knew which little door to open, extracting our requests in a flash. On busy city streets, pushcarts often lined the sidewalks with a limited selection, but one thing that never changed was the instantly recognizable pattern of the chocolate-covered ice cream bar.

The name Good Humor was obviously derived from America’s love of sweets and the promising business of novelty ice cream. Not much has changed since then, except for the huge selection of frozen treats now available, but clearly Good Humor was a pioneer. In an effort to distribute his new creation, albeit somewhat primitive in the 1920s, Burt came up with the first vending trucks equipped with jingling bells to alert children that there were frozen treats in the neighborhood, an ingenious way and inventiveness of marketing your new creation. It was an instant hit. Push carts soon followed to capture the city’s inhabitants and not clog up traffic on the streets. The humorous man in his starched white uniform was a minor celebrity along the way and became a household name in the ’50s and ’60s, often appearing in movies.

Not surprisingly, the company recognized the importance of mass distribution in grocery stores, and by the mid-1970s, Good Humor bars took their rightful place alongside Eskimo popsicles and pies. By merging with Popsicle and Klondike, the three now dominate the novelty ice cream market.

Although Klondike reigns as America’s most popular ice cream parlor, the addition of the Oreo Ice Cream sandwich tops the Good Humor brand’s repertoire (not surprisingly, with the popular Oreo cookie flavor), followed by Strawberry Shortcake in second place and Chocolate Eclair in third place. Sadly, some of the original classics, like Chocolate Malt, are no longer on the menu, but they remain in the memories of many Boomers (including this author’s).

Although the familiar white van of the 1940s and 1950s has all but disappeared, and many other options have appeared in supermarket freezers, the sight and sound of that van will remain indelibly in the minds and hearts of Boomers, and nothing more will again be entirely take its place.

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