Schimpff`s Confectionery Museum
Transcription
Schimpff`s Confectionery Museum
Schimpff’s Confectionery Museum Offering a history of candy as told by its packaging and advertising chimpff ’s Confectionery in Jeffersonville, Indiana, celebrated 120 years in business this summer — a grand feat. Ten years ago, owners Jill and Warren Schimpff opened a confectionery museum next door to educate and delight the public with advertising, containers and equipment from bygone eras. The museum is a free attraction and a source of confectionery inspiration. More than 20,000 people visit Schimpff ’s Confectionery Museum each year. Within the 2,500 sq. ft. space, there are hundreds of brass hard-candy dies, dozens of hand-operated candy machines, a number of salesman sample kits, thousands of candy tins, tubs and boxes, as well as a wide variety of advertising signs. In the process of collecting for and opening this museum, Warren and Jill Schimpff have become not just S candymakers but candy historians. They want to help tell the history of American candy. It is obvious that the Schimpffs respect and cherish the industry as it was. Containers are displayed on every available surface, as are posters, gilt mirrors, packaging, ad specialties, salesman’s sample kits and equipment. The couple fights an ongoing struggle against time, it seems; each year much is sent to scrap yards, burn piles or otherwise lost when people aren’t aware of the historic value of these pieces. Large ledger books help them keep track of all the items they own and display, and their provenance. Many of the companies represented are no longer in business. The couple started buying antique candy machinery long before they were aware of their future in the business. While they lived in California, they acquired an old candy stove, several kettles and various drop roll candymaking equipment. Most of their collection was acquired in the 1980s and 1990s from various sources, including many candy companies getting rid of equipment they no longer wanted. The museum has antique candymaking equipment and thousands of pieces of candy memorabilia on display. The equipment quietly speaks of a simpler time. Hard work and ingenuity. Techniques that involved equal parts artistry and skill. Machines that were solid and easily adjusted. No computers needed. Most didn’t even require electricity. The advertising pieces harken back to days when children played happily on wood teeter-totters, smil- 1950s sales sample vials of Peerless Candy. Donated by Kathleen and Rita Picken, former owners of Peerless Candy. The butter cream corn ad is paired with the bucket in the museum’s display. “Cut rock” hard candy remains beautifully intact in the sales kits from the 1920s. The Manufacturing Confectioner • August 2011 39 ➤