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Archival Treasures: 25 Years of Caring for Hershey’s History

2015 marks the 30th anniversary of the Hershey Community Archives. This exhibit highlights some of the many treasures found in the collections. Just as Hershey’s history is not only about Milton Hershey, the Archives’ collections contain information about the many businesses, organizations, events and individuals that have shaped the community.

“Please send me a box of your chocolates as they are very hard to get here.”

By 1909, Hershey Chocolate Company was the largest confectionery company in the United States, with net sales of over $2 million. In 1910, sales nearly doubled.

Hershey Chocolate Company sales booklet, ca. 1916-1920
Hershey Chocolate Company sales booklet, ca. 1916-1920

Hershey’s Milk Chocolate bars could be found throughout the United States and beyond, as evidence by this postcard postmarked in Tientsin, China.

Postcards like this one were wrapped with Hershey's standard size milk chocolate bars, 1915
Postcards like this one were wrapped with Hershey’s standard size milk chocolate bars, 1915

 

T.J. Kelly mailed this postcard back to the Hershey Chocolate Company from Tientsin, China, 1915
T.J. Kelly mailed this postcard back to the Hershey Chocolate Company from Tientsin, China, 1915

“Sorry that I cannot be with [you] this evening when our baby will be christened stop”

Anton Tedesko's illness forced him to miss the Hershey Arena dedication, December 19, 1936
Anton Tedesko’s illness forced him to miss the Hershey Arena dedication, December 19, 1936

When Hershey’s builder, D. Paul Witmer needed to build a new ice arena for Hershey’s popular ice hockey team, he turned to Anton Tedesko, a German engineer with the Chicago design-construction firm Roberts and Schaefer. Tedesko was the design engineer who developed the concept of thin shelled concrete structures. The Hershey Arena would be the largest monolithic concrete roof structure in North America. Milton Hershey was initially skeptical but the design’s innovation and novelty excited him and he soon gave his approval. Construction began March 11, 1936 and was completed in late fall for the Arena’s opening on December 19, 1936.

The Hershey Arena was built as five interconnected bridge arches, 1936
The Hershey Arena was built as five interconnected bridge arches, 1936

 

Teams of workers working on opposite sides of the Hershey Arena structure continuously poured concrete until they met at the top of arch, 1936
Teams of workers working on opposite sides of the Hershey Arena structure continuously poured concrete until they met at the top of arch, 1936

 

Dedication ceremonies for the new Hershey Arena included a hockey game and a figure skating exhibition by Olympic champion Sonja Henie, 1936
Dedication ceremonies for the new Hershey Arena included a hockey game and a figure skating exhibition by Olympic champion Sonja Henie, 1936

“The more beautiful you make something which people can see and use, the more enjoyment they will get out of it.”

Circular Dining Room, Hotel Hershey, October 21, 1958
Circular Dining Room, Hotel Hershey, October 21, 1958

The beautiful stained glass art created by J. Horace Rudy and the Rudy Glass Company of York, Pennsylvania can be found throughout the Hershey community. The company’s work was incorporated in many of Hershey’s most prominent buildings, including Milton Hershey’s home (High Point), 1 West Chocolate Avenue, Hershey Community Building and Hershey Theatre.

Proposal for the Hotel Hershey's Circular Dining Room windows created by J. H. Rudy, Rudy Glass Company, York, PA, ca. 1931
Proposal for the Hotel Hershey’s Circular Dining Room windows created by J. H. Rudy, Rudy Glass Company, York, PA, ca. 1931

 

Rudy Glass stained glass windows were incorporated into some of Hershey's more utilitarian spaces such as the Community Building swimming pool, ca. 1933
Rudy Glass stained glass windows were incorporated into some of Hershey’s more utilitarian spaces such as the Community Building swimming pool, ca. 1933

 

Rudy Glass Company designed and produced the stained glass for High Point Mansion including the stair landing window, ca. 1911-1920
Rudy Glass Company designed and produced the stained glass for High Point Mansion including the stair landing window, ca. 1911-1920

“Seating: 1904 people. Motion pictures, musical and deluxe revues of Broadway merit or vaudeville.”

Hershey Theatre main auditorium and fire screen, ca. 1933-1950
Hershey Theatre main auditorium and fire screen, ca. 1933-1950

Hershey dedicated its new Theatre during the town’s 30th anniversary celebration held over Labor Day weekend in 1933.

Hershey Theatre Premiere program, outside cover, September 1933
Hershey Theatre Premiere program, outside cover, September 1933

 

Hershey Theatre Premiere program, inside pages, September 1933
Hershey Theatre Premiere program, inside pages, September 1933

That weekend, Hershey Theatre offered a daily program of movies and vaudeville performances featuring nationally popular singers, comediennes, dancers and acrobatics. Also featured were “The Hersheyettes,” 16 female dancers performing precision routines. Vaudeville continued to be a regular part of Hershey’s programming until 1938. Legendary performers such as ventriloquist Edgar Bergen, Ethel Barrymore, Roy Rogers, Fanny Brice, Jackie Cooper and Blackstone the Magician all appeared at Hershey Theatre during the 1930s.

Program for "The Corn is Green" starring Ethel Barrymore, October 13, 1942
Program for “The Corn is Green” starring Ethel Barrymore, October 13, 1942

“Children and teachers take their breakfast together at 7:30 a.m.”

A page from a photo album presented to Milton Hershey as a thank you from the Colonia Infantil Hershey, 1938
A page from a photo album presented to Milton Hershey as a thank you from the Colonia Infantil Hershey, 1938

The flagship of Milton Hershey’s Cuban holdings was a new sugar mill and town, Central Hershey*, located near Santa Curz. Once Central Hershey was well established, Hershey purchased other centrals, some for the mill and others for the sugar plantations attached to them. In 1920 he bought Central Rosario. In 1925 he bought Central Carmen and Central San Antonio and in 1927 Central Jesus Maria.

Students and their teacher at Colonia Infantil Hershey, 1957
Students and their teacher at Colonia Infantil Hershey, 1957

At Rosario Mr. Hershey also founded an orphan school, the Hershey Agricultural School (later known as Colonia Infantil Hershey). Hershey operated it for 10 years before transferring its operation to a local orphanage. The first students were boys whose parents had been killed in a 1923 train accident on the Hershey Cuban Railroad. The primary object of this school was to train boys for jobs on the farm or in industry. Milton Hershey had great plans for it, including building a model sugar mill and teaching modern agricultural methods to prepare the boys for careers in Cuba’s principal industries.

Milton Hershey standing outside his home in Central Rosario, Cuba, ca. 1920
Milton Hershey standing outside his home in Central Rosario, Cuba, ca. 1920

*Central = Cuban word referring to a sugar mill and its surrounding town.

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