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View attachment 113310
Coca~Cola in glass bottles also sold for 5¢.
The Frito Company was born in 1932 at the height of the Great Depression.
The family of Charles Elmer (C. E.) Doolin (1903-1959) owned the Highland
Park Confectionary in San Antonio, and Doolin, twenty-eight at the time,
wanted to add a salty snack to their repertoire. He responded to an ad in
the San Antonio Express newspaper,
The ad, placed by Gustavo Olguin, listed for sale an original recipe for
fried corn chips along with an adapted potato ricer and nineteen
retail accounts.
Doolin bought the small business venture for $100, and began to
manufacture the chips in his mother’s kitchen at first with the help
of his father, Charles Bernard Doolin; mother, Daisy Dean
Stephenson Doolin; and brother, Earl Doolin.
These four founders made up the first board of directors, with
Charles Bernard Doolin serving as the first chairman.
First location, a garage in San Antonio.
View attachment 113307
1940s
View attachment 113308
For the record, Frito-Lay did not invent tortilla chips; they were just the
first to make and sell them for a mass U.S. market. The original tortilla
chip is widely credited to Rebecca Webb Carranza, who is said to have
begun frying tortilla pieces at her Southern California tortilla factory in
the 1940s.
Cool stuff. If I've learned one thing from Fedora Lounge, it's that, given enough time to research, we'll find that somebody was actually frying up tortilla pieces in 1910 or 1890, oh, and here's a newspaper article from 1912 about the local sensation or here is an old B&W photo of someone's grandmother in 1899 with her "famous" creation. Or, back in the 16th Century, when the Spanish invaded Mexico, they learned of a local food of cut up, stale tortilla that were they covered in pig fat and cooked in a skillet...
My point, we seem to always be finding earlier antecedents to almost everything. To be fair, sometime that early knowledge was lost or localized and the person who later "discovered / invented" something truly did work without any of this former knowledge - but it is rare that something doesn't have an earlier progenitor of some sort.