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Thread: Packaging Salt/Sugar...etc.??

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
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    Richmond~abroad
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    899

    Packaging Salt/Sugar...etc.??

    I got thinking about this recently...and am curious as to how certain goods were packaged for transport...and for retail in shops, specifically; salt & sugar.

    Please provide period references, or pictures to support answer.

    NOT LOOKING FOR OPINIONS, but Documentable evidence.

    Thanks,

    Paul B.
    Paul B. Boulden Jr.
    CAMP LEE 2011

    RAH VA MIL '04
    (Loblolly Mess)
    23rd VA Vol. Regt.
    Waggoner's Company of the Virginia Regiment

    Company of Military Historians
    Museum of the Confederacy
    Historic Sandusky

    Inscription Capt. Archibold Willet headstone:

    "A span is all that we can boast, An inch or two of time, Man is but vanity and dust, In all his flower and prime."

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Posts
    357

    Re: Packaging Salt/Sugar...etc.??

    Quote Originally Posted by Stonewall_Greyfox View Post
    I got thinking about this recently...and am curious as to how certain goods were packaged for transport...and for retail in shops, specifically; salt & sugar.

    Please provide period references, or pictures to support answer.

    NOT LOOKING FOR OPINIONS, but Documentable evidence.

    Thanks,

    Paul B.
    Paul,

    There is an article on our website, www.raggedsoldier.com in the archived section of Virginia's Veranda, titled "How Sweet It Is" that will probably answer your question on sugar. In short, how sugar was packaged for retail sale depended on the type of sugar. The lower grades of sugar (unrefined, brown, demerara) were shipped in barrels and the white refined sugar was formed in cone shaped loaves of various sizes, wrapped first in white paper and then in blue paper, tied with string and shipped to merchants.

    I've also researched salt extensively for an article in Food History News. Most of the primary sources I've read are not specific as to the type of containers salt was packed in after processing. They just relate that it was "packed into vessels (Manufacture and Builder, June 1869) or containers . Some sources indicated that the salt was packed into barrels (Manufacture and Builder, February 1869 and Great Industries of the United States, 1872).

    I also looked in Historic Accounts my ledger database and checked the sales of salt. Salt there was sold by the bushel, peck and sack. A bushel of salt weighed 56 pounds and cost about $1 in 1859 and a peck cost $ .25. I don't know how much a sack of salt weighed but it must have weighed quite a bit more because it cost $2.50. In this store salt was only sold in these quantities.

    As you probably know there were very few things that were packaged in small quantities for retail sale. Most all the foodstuffs were packed in larger containers and then shipped to merchants who then measured out the quantities the customer purchased onto paper and wrapped the package with string or poured a liquid into a purchased container or one the customer brought in themselves. In Historic Accounts there are entries for customers purchasing a molasses jug along with the molasses and sometimes the merchant sold his containers such as goods boxes, coffee bags or salt sacks (these were not mentioned when a sack of salt was purchased).

    Let me know if you have any further questions and I try to answer them.
    Virginia Mescher
    vmescher@vt.edu
    http://www.raggedsoldier.com

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Thurmont, MD
    Posts
    82

    Re: Packaging Salt/Sugar...etc.??

    An article in the Hardcracker Handbook mentions that if soldiers preferred their coffee sweet they would actually mix the sugar right in with the crushed grounds and carry them in a ration bag.
    Respectfully,
    Joseph S. Danner


    The Pine River Boys - 7th Wisconsin, Company I

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Pacific
    Posts
    5

    Re: Packaging Salt/Sugar...etc.??

    A stores list that I have from California from 1856 lists salt as follows:
    Fine 20lb bag
    Fine 10lb bag
    Fine 5lb bag
    California gr'nd 10lb bag
    Coarse p lb

    Sugar is listed as follows:
    Boston, crushed
    New York, crushed
    Refined Loaf
    Dutch refined, csks
    China, first quality
    China, second quality
    China, third quality
    Ping Fa
    Manila, first quality
    Manila, second quality
    Manila, third quality
    Batavian, first quality
    Batavian, second quality
    Peruvian brown
    Sandwhich I brown
    New Orl's yellow



    Jo Byrum

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Goleta CA.
    Posts
    193

    Re: Packaging Salt/Sugar...etc.??

    Could there be some items from the steamboat Arabia collection to help answer this?
    Tom Smith, 2nd Lt. T.E.
    Nobel Grand Humbug, Al XXI,
    Chapt. 1.5 De la Guerra y Pacheco
    Ancient and Honorable Order of E Clampus Vitus
    Topographer for: TAG '03, BGR, Spring Hill, Marmeduke's Raid, & ITPW

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