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{{For|other persons named George Washington|George Washington (disambiguation)}}
[[Image:Washington Coffee New York Times b.PNG|thumb|A pre-World War I ad introduced Washington's coffee to the public. Advert from ''The New York Times'' - [[February 23]] [[1914]].]]
[[Image:Washington Coffee New York Times b.PNG|thumb|A pre-World War I ad introduced Washington's coffee to the public. Advert from ''The New York Times'' - [[February 23]] [[1914]].]]



Revision as of 02:32, 2 April 2007

A pre-World War I ad introduced Washington's coffee to the public. Advert from The New York Times - February 23 1914.

George Washington[1] (1871March 29, 1946) was a reclusive American inventor and businessman of English-Belgian origin. He is best remembered for his invention of an early instant coffee process and for the company he founded to mass-produce it, the G. Washington Coffee Company.

An emigrant from his native Belgium, he arrived in the New York area in 1895 and dabbled in several technical fields before hitting upon instant coffee manufacture during a sojourn in Central America in 1906 or 1907. He began selling his coffee in 1909 and founded a company to manufacture it in 1910. Based in New York and New Jersey, his company prospered and became an important military supplier during World War I. The company's products were also advertised in New York newspapers and on the radio. The success of his company made Washington wealthy, and he lived in a mansion in Brooklyn and then moved to a country estate in New Jersey in 1927. In that same year, he lost a dispute with the tax authorities. Washington was married and had three children.

Washington's company was sold to American Home Products in 1943, shortly before his death. Though the coffee brand was discontinued by 1961, Washington's name is still used today in the product G. Washington's Seasoning & Broth.

Early life and family

George Washington was born in Kortrijk, Belgium,[2][3] in 1871 to parents of English and Belgian ancestry.[4][5] At least six siblings in the family also settled in different parts of the United States and Central America.[2] A number of accounts claim a relation to U.S. President George Washington, but this is not clearly explained.[6]

Washington came to reside in Brussels, and also attained a degree in chemistry at the University of Bonn in Germany,[4] before emigrating to the United States. Despite his birthplace, he noted himself a British subject on some of his early American patent applications, though sometimes he just noted his origin in the Kingdom of Belgium. He came to the New York area in 1895, and founded a company producing kerosene gas mantles.[2] At this time he lived in New Brighton on Staten Island, but his company, George Washington Lighting Company, was based in nearby Jersey City. This business was abandoned with the maturation of incandescent light bulb technology.[4] Washington also had a camera company for a time.

Washington tried his hand at cattle ranching[4] in Guatemala in 1906[7][8] or 1907,[4] but in the meantime developed his instant coffee process. There is some suggestion that he was inspired by seeing dried powder on the edge of a silver coffee pot.[9] Federico Lehnhoff Wyld, a German-Guatemalan, also developed an instant coffee process about this time,[8] which he later marketed in Europe; as Wyld was Washington's personal doctor, there has been some suggestion that the discovery was not independent.[7] Washington returned to New York City after only a period of about a year[2] in Guatemala, and then began pursuing the main part of his career in coffee manufacture.

Washington married Lina Van Nìeuvenhuys[10], also from Belgium,[11] and they had three children: George Washington Jr., Lina Washington and a Mrs. Herman B. Esslen.[2][4][12] George Washington Jr. served for a time as treasurer of his father's company, and, like his father, dabbled in invention, patenting a widely used photoengraving process for newspapers that was introduced by Fairchild Camera and Instrument in 1948.[13]

Personal life

After his coffee business was established in 1910, Washington lived in Brooklyn at 47 Prospect Park West,[14] with a second home in Bellport in Suffolk County at 287 South Country Road.[15] Washington sold both his homes in 1926–1927 (for a price reportedly exceeding $1 million) to a group of wealthy Brooklyn men intent on founding a social club.[16][17] With his company's relocation to New Jersey, he moved to the former estate of Governor Franklin Murphy at "Franklin Farms" in Mendham.[18]

Washington was a lover of exotic animals, as well as gardening.[15] He maintained extensive menageries on his country properties, first at Bellport, and later at Mendham. On Long Island, it is reported that he was often seen with a bird or monkey on his shoulder.[15] At both his menageries, Washington specialized in rare birds,[16][4] but such animals as deer, sheep, goats, and antelope are also recorded at Bellport,[16] and deer, llamas and zebras are recorded among the hundreds of animals in the larger space at Mendham.[2] Socially, he was an active member of the Lotos Club, a literary gentlemen's club in New York City.[2]

Washington's name was briefly put forward for the 1920 presidential election in South Dakota's preference primary for the "American Party", although papers were filed too late to be valid.[14] There is no indication, however, that the nomination was serious. George Washington would not have been eligible for that office, in any case, as he was foreign-born. There have been several "American Party"s in history — it is unclear if the nomination was a particular satire on any so-named movement at the time.[19]

That's the fellow. He has put one over on us. He has a barrel of money —- enough to run a slambang campaign. Why, don't you remember, he just bought that $100,000 mansion from Albert Feltman on Prospect Park West. He's learned a lot about politics by being a neighbor of Senator Calder and George Hamlin Childs. And when you come to think of it, that American Party stuff is good campaign dope this year, what with all the Bolsheviki and the Government after the Reds and the row about the League of Nations, and all that. We've been overlooking something for sure.

— Brooklyn politician (unnamed), The New York Times, 4 January 1920[14]

Invention and business

This advertisement compares instant coffee to the "purity" of white refined sugar. Advert from The New York Times, January 2 1922.

George Washington held over two dozen patents, in the fields of hydrocarbon lamps, cameras and food processing. He was not the first to invent an instant coffee process (Satori Kato's work was a notable precursor, among others), but his was the first effort that led to commercial manufacture.

The product was first marketed as Red E Coffee (a pun on "ready") in 1909, and the G. Washington Coffee Refining Company was founded in 1910.[7] Washington's first production plant was at 147 41st Street in Brooklyn's Bush Terminal industrial complex. The company later moved operations to New Jersey, acquiring the land for the new plant at 45 Hannover Avenue in Morris Plains in 1927.[18]

Advertising for the product often emphasized its supposed convenience, modernity and purity. It was claimed to be better for digestion, and even that the "pure" coffee did not have the wakefulness effect of coffee from ground beans (a direct effect of caffeine content, present in both forms). After World War I ended, the American military's use of the coffee became another selling point. A different avenue for promotion came when the company sponsored a "Sherlock Holmes" radio series on NBC and the Blue Network from 1930 to 1935.[20]

But the early instant coffee was also often considered of poor quality, of disagreeable taste, and little more than a novelty product.[21]

Washington experienced some tax trouble with federal authorities, concerning the financial relationship between himself and his company. In November 1918, he contracted with the company for the use of his trade secrets in the manufacture of the coffee, and a month later gave a four-fifths stake in this to his immediate family. The Washingtons insisted that taxes needn't be paid on the family members' income, and the case went first to the Board of Tax Appeals, and then to the Court of Appeals, which in 1927 ruled against the Washingtons by a two-to-one decision. A petition to the Supreme Court was not accepted.[22]

Military contracts

After World War I, the coffee was reintroduced to the public with the slogan, Went to War! Home Again. Advert from the New York Tribune, June 22 1919.

Washington's at-that-time unique product saw major use as combat rations in World War I. Coffee consumption on the battlefield was seen as valuable since it gave soldiers a caffeine boost.[21] E.F. Holbrook, the head of the coffee section of the U.S. War Department at the time, also considered it an important aid in recovery from mustard gas.[7] It was employed by the Canadian Expeditionary Force from 1914 until the American Expeditionary Force entered the war in 1917, and all production was shifted toward American military use.[6] New, smaller producers also sprung up to meet the incredible level of demand from the Army, which in the final period of the war was six times the national supply.[8]

The instant coffee achieved some popularity with the soldiers, who nicknamed it a "cup of George". As the prime attraction was the caffeine boost, rather than the flavor, it was sometimes drunk cold.[8]

I am very happy despite the rats, the rain, the mud, the draughts [sic], the roar of the cannon and the scream of shells. It takes only a minute to light my little oil heater and make some George Washington Coffee... Every night I offer up a special petition to the health and well-being of [Mr. Washington].

— American soldier, 1918 letter from the trenches[8]

American emergency rations in World War I consisted of a quarter ounce (7 grams) packet of double-strength instant coffee, packed one per man in containers with multiple types of foods meant for twenty-four men.[6] Instant coffee was also utilized in reserve rations and trench rations. During World War II, the U.S. military again relied on Washington, but this time on an equal footing with the other major instant coffee brands that had emerged in the interwar period, most notably Nescafé, as well as the new companies formed to meet a renewed military demand.[21]

Fate of man and company

G. Washington Coffee Refining Company was purchased by American Home Products in 1943, and George Washington retired. The purchase of the company, which was mostly held by the family, was in exchange for 29,860 shares (approx. $1.7 million) of American Home Products stock, at a time when American Home Products was in a period of intense buying, purchasing 34 companies in eight years.[23][24] Clarence Mark, general manager of G. Washington, succeeded Washington in running the merged unit.[23]

In Washington's final years, he sold the "Franklin Farms" property, and lived in a home on New Vernon Road in Mendham.[4] He died three years after his company was sold, on March 29 1946,[2] after an illness, at the age of 74.[5] His funeral was held three days later.[25]

G. Washington coffee was discontinued as a brand by 1961, when Washington's New Jersey plant was sold to Tenco, by then a division of The Coca-Cola Company.[21] The last remnant of the brand survives in G. Washington's Seasoning & Broth, a sideline developed in 1938. This brand was sold by American Home Products in 2000, and, after passing through a couple of intermediaries, has been run by Homestat Farm, Ltd. since 2001.[26]

Patents

References

  1. ^ "George Constant Washington" appears in many similar modern web sources. "Constant" does not appear to be present in period sources, such as his patent applications and news articles about him.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "G. Washington, 74; Began Coffee Firm", The New York Times, March 30 1946.
  3. ^ The New York Times gives the place of birth as Kortrijk, while The New York Herald Tribune gives Brussels. It is presumed that the more obscure town would be a less likely error to make.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "G. Washington Is Dead, Made Instant Coffee", The New York Herald Tribune, March 29 1946.
  5. ^ a b The New York Times gives 74 as age at death, without a year of birth. The New York Herald Tribune gives 1871 as year of birth, and 75 as age at death. It is presumed that 1871 is the correct date of birth, and 75 an error of simply subtracting 1871 from 1946.
  6. ^ a b c The Story of a Pantry Shelf: An Outline History of Grocery Specialties (1925). New York: Butterick Publishing Company. online here
  7. ^ a b c d Ukers, William H. (1922). All about Coffee. The Tea and Coffee Trade Journal Co.
  8. ^ a b c d e Pendergrast, Mark (1999). Uncommon Grounds: The history of coffee and how it transformed our world. Basic Books. ISBN 0465054676.
  9. ^ History of Instant Coffee. Nestlé UK. Retrieved on March 31 2007.
  10. ^ Recorded as "Neiuvenhuys", which is a probable spelling error.
  11. ^ "Mrs. George Washington", The New York Times, October 30 1952.
  12. ^ "Mrs. Herman B. Esslen" not further identified in either The New York Times or The New York Herald Tribune.
  13. ^ "George Washington Jr. is Dead; Invented an Engraving Device", The New York Times, December 27 1966.
  14. ^ a b c "Presidency Candidate Found in Brooklyn", The New York Times, January 4 1920.
  15. ^ a b c Principe, Victor (2002). Bellport Village & Brookhaven Hamlet, NY. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 073850968X.
  16. ^ a b c "Big Bellport Sale", The New York Times, March 23 1926.
  17. ^ "Brooklyn Club Buys", The New York Times, February 25 1927.
  18. ^ a b "Coffee Company Builds New Plant", The New York Times, May 26, 1927.
  19. ^ In 1920, former Texas governor James E. Ferguson ran under an "American Party" label.
  20. ^ Haendiges, Jerry. "Sherlock Holmes episodic log". The Vintage Radio Place. Retrieved on March 27 2007.
  21. ^ a b c d Talbot, John M. (1997). "The Struggle for Control of a Commodity Chain: Instant Coffee from Latin America". Latin American Research Review 32 (2), 117–135.
  22. ^ "George Washington Sues", The New York Times, May 26 1927.
  23. ^ a b "To Buy Coffee Company", The New York Times, April 8 1943.
  24. ^ "Buy, Buy, Buy", Time, December 6 1943.
  25. ^ "Deaths", The New York Times, March 30 1946.
  26. ^ History — G. Washington's Seasoning & Broth. Homestat Farm, Ltd. Retrieved on March 31 2007.