Original photo by Felix Choo/ Alamy Stock Photo

Cracker Jack’s early marketing warned prospective customers about the effects of the product. “Do not taste it,” one 1896 article cautioned. “If you do, you will part with your money easy.” Some historians believe that the caramel-coated popcorn and peanut treat jump-started the American snack food industry around the turn of the 20th century. It may even hold the title of the country’s first junk food, though the types of junk food popular today didn’t make their appearances until the 1950s. It all started with Chicago candy and popcorn peddlers Frederick and Louis Rueckheim, German immigrants who crafted a nonsticky caramelized popcorn as a way to stand out from other popcorn vendors. Their version — with a sweet, crunchy coating that was different from the salted popcorn and kettle corn available at the time — became a hit after it was mass-produced in 1896.

The “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” songwriter had never seen a baseball game.

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Jack Norworth’s most famous tune was scrawled on an envelope during a subway ride in 1908, though the writer wasn’t on his way to a baseball game — he’d never even been to a professional one. Music publisher Albert von Tilzer, who penned the melody, also hadn’t seen a game.

It was a song, however, that helped cement Cracker Jack’s snack status. In 1908, songwriter Jack Norworth — entirely unknown to the Rueckheims — composed “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” after seeing an advertisement for an upcoming game. The song, which mentions the snack by name, led to a surge in sales that forever linked Cracker Jack with sports. Four years later, the Rueckheims sweetened their popcorn business with a marketing gimmick that would eventually be replicated by cereal brands, fast-food restaurants, and candymakers for decades to come: a toy in every box. By 1916, Cracker Jack was the bestselling snack worldwide.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Original price of a box of Cracker Jack popcorn
$0.05
Year Cracker Jack was first sold at baseball games
1907
Year Frito-Lay stopped putting toys in Cracker Jack boxes
2016
Total number of prizes given out in Cracker Jack boxes
23 billion

Before Sailor Jack, Cracker Jack’s original mascots were ______.

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Before Sailor Jack, Cracker Jack’s original mascots were teddy bears.

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Popcorn was once banned in movie theaters.

It may feel like popcorn and movies have always gone hand-in-hand — except that at one time, they were a contested combo. Americans experienced a 19th-century popcorn boom; by 1848, it was common fare at circuses and street fairs. But when movie theaters emerged in the early 1900s, they tried to align themselves with upscale stages, creating lavish interiors with fine carpets and furniture that could be messied by patrons’ snacks. Plus, theater owners believed popcorn munching would be too distracting at a time when filmgoers were focused on reading silent film subtitles. (Neither argument seemed to deter theatergoers, who snuck in snacks anyway.) Everything changed when the Great Depression hit; by the 1930s, theaters were seeing as many as 90 million visitors per week, and serving inexpensive popcorn was one way to generate extra money in a rough economy. That change worked in favor of big-screen owners (and popcorn producers): By 1945, more than half of popcorn eaten in the U.S. was sold at movie theaters.

Nicole Garner Meeker
Writer

Nicole Garner Meeker is a writer and editor based in St. Louis. Her history, nature, and food stories have also appeared at Mental Floss and Better Report.