Charles Elmer Hires

Charles Elmer Hires (August 19, 1851 – July 31, 1937) was a pharmacist an early promoter of commercially prepared root beer. He founded the Charles E. Hires Co., which manufactured and distributed Hires Root Beer.[1]

Biography

Early life

Hires was born on August 19, 1851 in Salem County, New Jersey.[2] At age 12, his parents sent him to work as an apprentice at a drugstore owned by his brothers-in-law.[3] When he was 16 he moved to Philadelphia and worked in a pharmacy. He saved until he had nearly $400, when he started his own drugstore.

Career

Hires reportedly learned about root beer on his honeymoon in New Jersey, where the woman who ran the hotel served a tisane known as "root tea" made from roots.[4] His friend Russell Conwell, who went on to found Temple University, suggested that "root beer" would be more appealing to the working class. Originally, Hires packaged the mixture in boxes and sold it to housewives and proprietors of soda fountains. They needed to mix in water, sugar, and yeast.

The drink was slow to catch on, but Conwell persuaded Hires to present his product at the 1876 U.S. Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. To make it stand out, he called his drink "the temperance drink" and "the greatest health-giving beverage in the world."

Hires did not drink and marketed root beer as an alternative to alcohol.[5] However, following an analysis that suggested there was alcohol in root beer, the Woman's Christian Temperance Union launched a boycott of his product. Hires ran his own analysis and advertised heavily that the amount of alcohol was about the same as in a half loaf of bread.<Floss/>

Personal life

He married Clara Kate Smith in 1875. After her death in 1910, Hires married Emma Waln. He passed away on July 31, 1937 at the age of 85.

See also

References

  1. "The History of Root Beer and Inventor Charles Hires". Inventors.about.com. 2012-04-09. Retrieved 2012-06-28.
  2. "10 Things You Might Not Know About Root Beer Magnate Charles Hires". Philadelphia Magazine. 2018-06-05.
  3. "How the Temperance Movement Almost Killed Root Beer". Mental Floss. 2013-08-15.


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