Sunday, October 30, 2016

Hershey Chocolate World

September 25, 2016
Hershey PA

Hershey PA s more than a town named for the chocolate.  It's founder, Milton Hershey, was more than a man who made chocolate.  I copied the following from the Hershey website.
http://www.hersheypa.com/


Life of Milton S. Hershey

Born September 13, 1857 on a farm near Derry Church, a small Pennsylvania community, Milton Hershey was the only surviving child of Fannie and Henry Hershey. His mother raised him in the strict discipline of the Mennonite faith. Frequent family moves interrupted his schooling and left him with a limited education. He only completed the fourth grade.
Following a four-year apprenticeship with a Lancaster candy maker, he established his first candy making business in Philadelphia. That initial effort failed as did his next two attempts in Chicago and New York. Returning to Lancaster, PA in 1883, Hershey established the Lancaster Caramel Company, which quickly became an outstanding success. It was that business which established him as a candy maker and set the stage for future accomplishments.

Learning About Chocolate

Hershey became fascinated with German chocolate-making machinery exhibited at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition. He bought the equipment for his Lancaster plant and soon began producing a variety of chocolate creations. Hershey sold the Lancaster Caramel Co. for $1 million in 1900 in order to concentrate exclusively on his chocolate business. Three years later, he returned to Derry Church to build a new factory. There he could obtain the large supplies of fresh milk needed to perfect and produce fine milk chocolate.
Excited by the potential of milk chocolate, which at that time was a Swiss luxury product, Milton Hershey determined to develop a formula for milk chocolate and market and sell it to the American public. Through trial and error he created his own formula for milk chocolate. In 1903 he began construction on what was to become the world's largest chocolate manufacturing plant. The facility, completed in 1905, was designed to manufacture chocolate using the latest mass production techniques. Hershey's milk chocolate quickly became the first nationally marketed product of its kind.

Milton Hershey's Model Town

With Milton Hershey's success came a profound sense of moral responsibility and benevolence. His ambitions were not limited to producing chocolate. Hershey envisioned a complete new community around his factory. He built a model town for his employees that included comfortable homes, an inexpensive public transportation system, a quality public school system and extensive recreational and cultural opportunities. Unlike other industrialists of his time, Hershey avoided building a faceless company town with row houses. He wanted a "real home town" with tree-lined streets, single- and two-family brick houses, and manicured lawns. He was concerned about providing adequate recreation and diversions, so he built a park that opened on April 24, 1907, and expanded rapidly over the next several years. Amusement rides, a swimming pool, and a ballroom were added. Soon, trolley cars and trains were bringing thousands of out-of-town visitors to the park.

Many of the town's impressive structures were built during the Great Depression, as part of Milton Hershey's "Great Building Campaign," to provide jobs. It was then that monumental structures such as The Hotel Hershey, community center, theatre, sports arena and stadium were constructed, transforming the town into a major tourist attraction that continues to grow in popularity each year.

Milton Hershey's business success allowed him to practice an extensive philanthropy. In 1909, unable to have children of their own, he and his wife Catherine established a school for orphan boys that today is known as the Milton S. Hershey School. In 1918, three years after Catherine's premature death, Milton Hershey endowed the school with his entire fortune of Hershey Chocolate Company stock. He took great pride in the growth of the school, the town, and his business. For the rest of his life, he always placed the quality of his product and the well-being of his workers ahead of profits.

Milton Hershey's Legacy

In 1935, Milton Hershey established The M.S. Hershey Foundation, a small, private charitable foundation to provide educational and cultural opportunities for local residents. The Foundation supports four entities: The Hershey Story and Hershey Gardens, the Hershey Theatre and the Hershey Community Archives.

In 1963, The Milton S. Hershey Medical Center of The Pennsylvania State University was founded with a $50 million award from the Milton Hershey School Trust Fund for construction and endowment, and $21.3 million from the U.S. Public Health Services. The College of Medicine enrolled its first students in 1967 and has conferred 2,182 doctor of medicine degrees.
The Milton S. Hershey Testamentary Trust makes an annual contribution to the Derry Township School District, the local public school district.

Since his death in 1945 at age 88, Milton Hershey's legacy has thrived with a constantly changing world. Today, Milton Hershey School, the institution he and his wife founded, nurtures more than 2,000 financially needy boys and girls in grades K-12. The school and the Hershey philanthropy are perpetuated through the holdings of the Milton Hershey School Trust, which in turn derives much of its support from the profits of The Hershey Company and Hershey Entertainment & Resorts Company.

Hershey Today

The town of Hershey continues to be a special place for its residents and a popular attraction for millions of visitors annually. The Hershey Company is the nation's leading manufacturer of confectionery products and Hershey Entertainment & Resorts continues to provide attractions and accommodations in Hershey that exceed guests' expectations. Indeed, Milton Hershey's accomplishments do speak for themselves.


His deeds are his monument. His life is our inspiration.

Without knowing about the vision and philanthropy of Milton Hershey, it would be easy to get swept up in the commercialism of Hershey.  It's pretty corny and goofy, but fun for kids.

Hershey's Chocolate World



The Food Court


There's a cacao tree in there somewhere.  While you're here, spend some more money.


We did the Chocolate tasting. We had to evaluate some of the various chocolates that they make and sell.  It's a tough job, but somebody's got to do it.







Where chocolate comes from.








Then it's chocolate as we know it.





The Entrance.




We're taking the history of Hershey Tour.  This is how you get the real story of Milton Hershey and his legacy.


The Street names are cute.


Milton Hershey did more than make chocolates.
Founder's Hall at the Milton S. Hershey school. 
Milton and Catherine Hershey did not have children of their own, but founded this school to house and educate orphaned boys from pre-K through 12th grade. They wanted to offer them a structured home life and help them gain the skills to be successful. 
Today it continues as a coed school to house and educate income eligible students from around the country.








This was Milton Hershey's home on High Point.  In 1930, he founded the Hershey Country Club and gave the first floor to the country club for their clubhouse and lived on the second floor.




The Hershey Smokestacks are a Landmark.




Looking down toward Hershey World, from the trolley






Hershey Arena


Hershey Amusement Park




One of the schools.


Time for the factory tour.


The man himself


Hershey TimeLine


































The Cacao 










Now the fun part, talking and singing cows tell us about the milk that makes the chocolate special.  We are in a car that is moving along a track, so the photos may be blurred a bit.










Simulated chocolate making.  I repeat, we are riding in a moving carnival type car and the photos aren't the best.











Those are kisses


Note that the street lights are shaped like Hershey Kisses