Now that Cecil has debunked my favorite Chicago story (the one about why streets jog at North Avenue http://chicago.straightdope.com/sdc20091008.php ), I am daring to ask whether there’s any truth in another wonderful story that I’ve often repeated but somehow can’t really prove:dubious:
The Encyclopedia of Chicago History http://http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/468.html confirms that Chicago held the #1 candy manufacturing spot at the turn of the 20th century and for some years thereafter. Somewhere along the line I heard that this was related to Chicago’s location as a rail hub–specially that sugar was shipped F.O.B. Chicago, so that if you put your candy company in Chicago you could hold down your shipping costs for sugar, hence reducing your costs and increasing your profits. It’s a great story, and people are always impressed when I tell it (usually as I pass the abandoned Brach’s plant on the Green Line or Ferrara Pan Candy on the Blue), but after the scales fell from my eyes on the North Avenue story I started to wonder if this is equally fanciful.
Anyone?
Corn syrup was usually quoted FOB Chicago–most of it was made in Summit or Decatur–but not sugar. Chicago was, however, well positioned to get beet sugar from the northern Plains or cane sugar from the Gulf Coast via a single railroad routing. Chicago was a center for making everything, because raw materials could easily converge here and finished products could be easily distributed to the whole continent. And having all those Germans around in the 19th century (skilled in candy making, with a taste for the stuff) probably also played a rôle.
Thank you, Mr. Downtown! I found this article http://www.dailynorthwestern.com/2.13923/chocolate-candy-bars-share-succulent-history-with-evanston-chicago-1.1929427 which also suggests access to dairy and lots of cool months also helped.
Don’t ask me how I knew about this but there’s a fairly large (and old and cool) cane sugar processing facility near the courthouse at 26th/Calif.
Sugar comes in by barge and railcars. It’s processed and taken away on pallets of consumer bags/boxes/canisters and tanker trucks.
Google overhead photo: here
They share a driveway with an El Milagro tortilla factory, too.
Now that is really cool! Right by Animal Care and Control as well, I see. From the Google street view it looks abandoned. How neat that it’s not. Thank you!
I remember reading some years ago in a book on Chicago history that the main reason that candy manufacture concentrated in the city was that, before cheap refrigeration, it had more cool months in which the candy could be manufactured, and situated as it is/was at the heart of the railroad distribution network, its products could be delivered to consumers quickly, before they melted, perhaps using the same refrigerator car network that meat used.