Marching Into March

Coca Cola was Invented on March 29, 1886
On March 29, 1886, Dr. John Pemberton created the first batch of Coca-Cola in his backyard. :unsure:
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"Some people believe on this date, 126 years ago, an Atlanta pharmacist crafted one of the world’s most famous drinks. But experts aren’t sure of the date when Coca-Cola was officially created — and that’s not the only misconception."

"The story goes that John Pemberton used a copper pot and boat oar in his Atlanta backyard to mix his first batch of Coca-Cola.
Well, maybe not, says Mark Pendergrast, who’s researched and authored a book on the company’s history. “There’s this myth that Pemberton was sort of this ignorant root doctor who messed around in a kettle in his backyard,” he says. “He was a scholar and he was a trained pharmacist.”

"Phil Mooney, an archivist at Coca-Cola, agrees that the soft drink probably wasn’t a “backyard” discovery. “The story has been repeated so frequently that it takes on the aura of truth,” he says. Pemberton did most experiments at his home lab, in a more controlled environment."

"Despite when and how Coke was discovered, Mooney says there’s been nothing but growth since. “In the first year of Coca-Cola’s introduction back in 1886, we sold about nine drinks a day,” he says. “Today, every 24 hours we sell about 1.7 billion servings of Coca-Cola.”
 

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A Refreshing Legacy


One of the most famous shapes in the world is the iconic contour fluted lines of the Coca-Cola bottle. Renowned as a design classic and described by noted industrial designer, Raymond Loewy as the “perfect liquid wrapper,” the bottle has been celebrated in art, music and advertising. When Andy Warhol wanted a shape to represent mass culture, he drew the bottle and when Volkswagen wanted to celebrate the shape of the Beatle, they compared the car to the bottle.


How did the bottle become so iconic?


It began with the desire to protect brandCoca-Cola and was a cooperative project between The Coca-Cola Company and its bottlers.

https://www.coca-colacompany.com/news/the-history-of-the-coca-cola-contour-bottle
 

Coca-Cola sold in glass bottles for the first time

"Though today there is almost nothing as ubiquitous as a bottle of Coca-Cola, this was not always the case. For the first several years of its existence, Coke was only available as a fountain drink, and its producer saw no reason for that to change. It was not until March 12, 1894 that Coke was first sold in bottles."

"Originally developed as a non-addictive substitute for morphine, then marketed as a non-alcoholic "temperance drink," Coca-Cola was invented by John Pemberton, a druggist in Columbus, Georgia, in 1886. It was soon popular throughout the region, and the rights to the brand passed to Asa Griggs Candler. Candler's nephew had advised him that selling the drink in bottles could greatly increase sales, but Griggs apparently wasn't interested. The first person to bottle Coke was Joseph A. Biedenharn, owner of a candy store in Vicksburg, Mississippi. Correctly determining that bottles could boost sales, Biedenharn put the drink into Hutchinson bottles, a common and reusable glass bottle that bore no resemblance to the modern Coke bottle. He sent Candler a case, but Candler continued to stick with fountain sales."

"In 1915, the bottlers put out a call for a new design, one so distinctive that one could recognize it if it were in pieces on the ground or by feeling it in the dark. The winning design, produced by the Root Glass Company of Terre Haute, Indiana, gave the world the iconic contoured bottle we know today."

 
March 30th: National Pencil Day!✏✏✏✏✏

Almanac: The pencil and eraser (VIDEO)

"On March 30, 1858, Hymen Lipman received a patent for inventing the first pencil eraser. In the past, pencil users had to scratch out unwanted markings created by the pencil or use charcoal or lead tablets to black out pencil marks.
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U.S. patent 19,783 was awarded to the Philadelphia stationery entrepreneur extraordinaire for what he described as a “combination of the lead and India rubber or other erasing substance [embedded] in the holder of a drawing-pencil.”

"The fact that higher court overturned the patent does not detract from Hymen Lipman's vast contributions to the modern office worker."

"The integrated eraser-pencil was not by any means Hymen Lipman’s only contribution to the 19th-century office arsenal. Lipman was also America’s first envelope manufacturer, and it was he who had the idea of adding adhesive to the back flap, so as to make sealing easier. He devised a method for binding papers with an eyelet that preceded the stapler by two decades. And Lipman was the first to produce and sell blank postcards in the United States, in 1873."
 
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Well, our "March into March has turned into quite a unique and unprecedented one. It is almost over, as tomorrow will be it's final day. We began marching abreast....and are ending in single file, six feet apart.... but we will make it.:cool:
 
March 31......HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Christopher Walken!
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"Christopher Walken (born Ronald Walken, March 31, 1943) is an American actor, singer, comedian, director, producer, screenwriter, and dancer, who has appeared in more than 100 films and television programs, including Annie Hall (1977), The Deer Hunter (1978), The Dogs of War (1980), The Dead Zone (1983), A View to a Kill (1985), Batman Returns (1992), True Romance (1993), Pulp Fiction (1994), Antz (1998), Vendetta (1999), Sleepy Hollow (1999), Joe Dirt (2001), Catch Me If You Can (2002), Hairspray (2007), Seven Psychopaths (2012), the first three Prophecy films, The Jungle Book (2016), and Irreplaceable You (2018). He has received a number of awards and nominations, including the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for The Deer Hunter. He was nominated for the same award and won BAFTA and Screen Actors Guild Awards for Catch Me If You Can. His films have grossed more than $1 billion in the United States."


 
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