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Dad's Root Beer is an American brand of root beer that was created in Chicago in 1937 by Ely Klapman and Barney Berns. It is currently owned by Hedinger Brands, LLC, and sold and marketed by the Dad's Root Beer Company LLC.
- Soft Drink
- The Dad's Root Beer Company LLC
Aug 9, 2019 · Dad's: The recipe for Dad's Root Beer was created by Ely Klapman and Barney Berns in the basement of Klapman's Chicago-area home in the late 1930s. It was the first product to make use of the six-pack packaging format invented by the Atlanta Paper Company in the 1940s.
- Mary Bellis
- In The Beginning: Before Old Fashioned Was Old Fashioned
- The Soda Underworld
- All Root Beer, All The Time
- Battling The Bottling Giants
- Hey Jules
- “That’s My Pop”
In the standard corporate version of the Dad’s Root Beer creation myth, everything began in the middle of the Great Depression, when business partners Ely Klapman and Barney Berns discovered “that mellow old time flavor” while experimenting with carbonated concoctions in Klapman’s Wicker Park basement. They trademarked the “Dad’s” name in 1937—supp...
Any discussion of the drinking habits of Chicagoans during the ‘20s and ‘30s tends to begin and end with illegal hooch and the romantic rebellion of the Speakeasies. Understandably, most people don’t find Prohibition’s thriving soda pop industry quite as compelling, except perhaps for the odd novelty of giant breweries like Anheuser-Busch shifting ...
By 1938, Bernard “Barney” Berns (1903-1983) had joined Chicago Distilled Water as its vice president, and Ely Klapman’s 20 year-old son, Jules, was a newly anointed full-time employee, as well. This was the magical year, according to Jules, that “the principals of the company recognized that specialization was necessary if the company was to achiev...
In 1948, Barney Berns made his own appearance on Capitol Hill, testifying before a Senate committee that was looking into the potential monopolization of the soda business by Coca Cola. Frustratedly referring to Coke’s exclusive, single-product vending machines as “red devils,” Berns complained that “once a [Coke] machine goes in an average small o...
Jules Klapman (1918-2002) was as a colorful character, literally and figuratively—he was noted for his loud painted ties and a contradictory disinterest in wearing socks. “Born and raised in the soft drink business,” as he put it, he drove a delivery route to fund his way to an accounting degree from the Walton School of Commerce, then served as an...
“The root beer that bridges the generation gap. Dad’s rich root beer flavor is traditional. It tastes like root beer SHOULD. If you have any doubts, just ask your parents—or your children! A family favorite for generations . . . and the best friend the working glasses ever had. Next time, make it DAD’S Root Beer and you, too, will say: ‘That’s MY P...
Dad's Root Beer, one of America's most popular soft drinks, was developed in the 1930s by partners Barney Berns and Ely Klapman in the basement of Klapman's Chicago-area home. The first trademark registration was filed on September 24, 1938, granted on February 14, 1939 to The Dad's Root Beer Company of Chicago, and alleged use since February ...
Jan 21, 2018 · Dad’s Root Beer makes its debut in St. Louis in November of 1941. Dad’s Root Beer Bottling Company, per the ad is located at 1822 S. 12th Street. This is the same address as the Ritz Beverage Co. Ritz has purchased a franchise for Dad’s and also has a franchise for Clicquot Club Soda.
Dad’s Root Beer Barrels are a classic American candy made by F.B. Washburn Candy. The company was founded in 1856 as an offshoot of the Washburn Bakery. Francis B. Washburn started the business over 164 years ago in a small building in Brockton that now encompasses five floors.
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Jul 16, 2024 · Root beer, a North American invention, is famously flavored with sassafras or sarsaparilla root extracts. This traditional recipe set the stage for Dad’s famous root beer flavor. Root beer gained major traction during the Prohibition era in the U.S. (1920-1933), when alcoholic beverages were banned.