One never knows what
interesting history old houses have ingrained in their past until one begins to
research the past occupants, owners, and evolution of the building. A single house in the 1500 block of R Street
may not stand out among its many neighbors architecturally, but our recent
research revealed that it was built by an individual that changed the way ice
cream was manufactured in 1856, making it instantly available and affordable to
the masses.
Jacob Fussell applied for a Permit
to Build on August 24, 1886 for the construction of a single family house
for himself at 1514 R Street. He listed
architect Albertus R. Duryee on the application as responsible for its design,
and builder John H. Lewis for its construction, estimated to cost $5,000. The estimated cost was slightly higher than
the typical townhouse being built in Washington at the time, which usually
ranges from $2,500 to $4,000.
Architect Albertus R. Duryee first
appeared as an architect-apprentice in the 1880 census, when he and his large
family resided at 1606 Q Street, N.W. Duryee
had been born about 1862 in Connecticut, and his City Directory entry from 1881
indicated he was a draftsman, at the young age of just 19. He was listed as an architect the following
year. Little is known of his other
Washington commissions.
From 1885-1886, Duryee was not
listed in the DC Directory, and apparently ventured to Philadelphia, as several
of his designs appeared in the Builder and Wood-worker, published in 1884. Jacob Fussell hired Duryee to design
1514 R Street in 1886 as one of his two personal residences, the other being in
New York City. He was 67 years old at
the time, when most individuals of that era were living with their children.
Fussell was the founder and owner of
the Fussell Ice Cream Company, said to be the first large scale, wholesale ice
cream business in the country. By 1886,
he had businesses in Baltimore, New York, and Washington. He had been born on February 24, 1819 in
Hartford County, Maryland. His first
career followed an apprenticeship and journeyman in the tinsmith business. Fussell left that occupation in 1851 to open
four milk routes in the emerging city of Baltimore, before opening the first
manufacturing plant for ice cream in the country on June 15th of
that year, utilizing manually operated churns.
He advertised his ice cream business
liberally, and the business grew such that he left the milk delivery business
to a partner to manage in 1856, when he began an ice cream business in Washington
at 1427 New York Avenue, NW. In 1863,
Fussell purchased a house in New York City, establishing an ice cream store on
Fourth Avenue.
Fussell shipped his ice cream in
trains packed with ice from Baltimore to Washington, Boston and New York,
earning the title of the “father of the wholesale ice cream industry.” From
then on, ice cream popularity skyrocketed, and Fussell’s contribution is often
cited in the ‘history of ice cream.’
Other inventions were made to make ice cream better and faster, such as
William Clewell's mechanical ice cream scoop in 1878.
Fussell sold his ice cream at less
than half the price charged by others (twenty-five cents a quart against
sixty-five cents a quart charged by others in the city). By 1856 he had opened manufacturing
operations and parlors in both Washington and Boston. At the corner of Hillen and Exeter Streets in
Baltimore, the Maryland Historical Society has erected a plaque in Jacob
Fussell’s honor, proclaiming Baltimore as the “Birthplace of the ice cream
industry.”
During the second half of the 19th
century, ice cream became the delight of masses of Americans, thanks to the
development of the wholesale industry. Before the advent of the ice cream
factory, the frozen treat was made primarily by confectioners and sold in their
stores, in retail shops, restaurants, saloons and parlors. By increasing output and by sharply lowering
prices, they put ice cream within the economic reach of nearly everyone.
National ice cream production in
1859 was estimated at only 4,000 gallons. Ten years later output had jumped to
24,000 gallons, and by 1899 it topped five million. In 1874, James Horton became full owner of
Fussell’s original firm, although Fussell continued many of his other ice cream
businesses. The operation grew rapidly
and by 1895, it employed 250 men and ran 250 wagons. The business continued until it became part of
the Pioneer Ice Cream Division of Borden Company in 1928.
Fussell’s tenure at 1514 R Street was
short, however, as he sold the house to Rear Admiral John Mitchell Hawley and
his wife Ella by 1893, according to the tax assessment records. Fussell died in 1912, and a copy of his Last
Will and Testament was filed in Washington, in which most of his belongings
were left to his wife Caroline C. Fussell, sons Mordecai, Francis, and William,
and daughter Carrie E. Craft. It
revealed that he maintained a house in Washington that contained “bookcase and
books, trunks, traveling bags, canes, umbrellas and personal effects,” which
were left to his son William. He also
left him books at the Fussell house in Manhattan, located at 38 East 28th
Street, between Madison and Park Avenues.
It was located adjacent to the MIT Technology Club at 36 E 28th,
established in 1903.
From 1887 to 1890, Hawley was executive officer of the Nipsic (above), one of the United States fleet sent to Apia, Samoan Islands, during the uprisings in 1889. The American, British and German fleets in the bay were overwhelmed by a fearful hurricane which swept the islands in March, 1889, and the Nipsic was one of only two vessels that escaped total destruction, but both were driven ashore and seriously damaged. During the next two months, Nipsic was repaired enough to allow her to depart for Honolulu, Hawaii, where she arrived in early August 1889. He remained at 1514 R until his death in 1925.
Who invented the
ice cream cone? The answer is yet another ice cream mystery. Most sources
credit Ernest Hamwi, who sold waffle-shaped cakes at the 1904 World's Fair in
St. Louis, Missouri. He rolled his cakes into cones when a nearby ice cream
stand ran out of dishes.
Copyright Paul K. Williams
1 comment:
We enjoyed your article about the Fussell-Young Ice Cream Co. I found your article while researching our small chest Kelvinator freezer with a plaque on it stating it is the property of the Fussell-Young Ice Cream Co.and numbered 2699.
Can you give me any history on the freezer and its approximate value?
Thanks for you help,
Ada Sternberg
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