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Milton S. Hershey

Milton Snavely Hershey (September 13, 1857 – October 13, 1945) was an American chocolatier, businessman, and philanthropist.

Milton S. Hershey
Hershey in 1905
Born
Milton Snavely Hershey

(1857-09-13)September 13, 1857
DiedOctober 13, 1945(1945-10-13) (aged 88)
Hershey, Pennsylvania, United States
Resting placeThe Hershey Memorial, Hershey Cemetery, Laudermilch Road, Hershey, Pennsylvania, U.S. Section Spec-Her, Lot 1.
40.3083229 N, 76.6383057 W
NationalityAmerican
Other namesThe Chocolate King
EducationStarted school at 6 years old and finished through fourth grade
Occupation(s)Confectioner, businessman, philanthropist
Known forThe Hershey Company-Founder, Hershey Bar, Hershey, Pennsylvania-founder/planner, Hershey Cemetery
Spouse
Catherine "Kitty" Elizabeth Sweeney
(m. 1898; died 1915)
Websitewww.hersheyland.com/home
Milton S. Hershey, circa 1915

Trained in the confectionery business, Hershey pioneered the manufacture of caramel, using fresh milk. He launched the Lancaster Caramel Company, which achieved bulk exports, and then sold it to start a new company supplying mass-produced milk chocolate, previously a luxury good.

The first Hershey bars were sold in 1900 and proved so popular that he was able to build his own company town of Hershey, Pennsylvania. Hershey's philanthropy extended to a boarding school, originally for local orphans, but accommodating around 2,000 students as of 2016.[1] In World War II, the company developed a special non-melting bar for troops serving overseas. The Hershey Company, known as Hershey's, is one of the world's biggest confectionery manufacturers.

Early life

Milton Hershey was born on September 13, 1857, to Henry and Veronica "Fanny" (née Snavely) Hershey. Of Swiss and German descent, his family were members of Pennsylvania's Mennonite community, and he grew up speaking Pennsylvania Dutch.[2]

In April 1862, Hershey's sister Sarena Hershey was born in Derry Township, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, and died in 1867 at age 4.[3]

Like many rural young people of the time, Milton was expected to help out on the family farm, and he learned early on of the value of hard work and perseverance. Henry Hershey rarely stayed anywhere very long, and was prone to leaving his wife and child for long periods. Because of this, Hershey had a very limited education with no schooling beyond the 4th grade.

In 1871, Milton Hershey left school for good and was apprenticed to a local printer, Sam Ernst, who published a German-English newspaper. He did not like that kind of work and he thought it was very boring. One day at work there, he accidentally dropped his hat in one of the machines. Because his boss was hot-tempered, he was fired shortly after. He was worried to see how his parents would react. His father asked Ernst to take him back, and he did decide to give him a second chance, but Mattie Snavely, his aunt, and his mother had a different idea. They wanted him to learn the trade of candy making instead.[4] So, his mother arranged for the 14-year-old Hershey to be apprenticed to a confectioner named Joseph Royer in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Over the next four years, Hershey learned the craft of creating confections. In 1876, he moved to Philadelphia to start his first confectionery business.

Milton then traveled to Denver and, finding work at a local confectioners, learned how to make caramels using fresh milk. He then went to New Orleans and Chicago looking for opportunities, before settling in New York City in 1883 and training at Huyler's. He started his second business which, while initially successful, lasted only three years, closing in 1886.[5]

Lancaster Caramel Company

Hershey returned to Lancaster in 1883. He borrowed money from the bank to start the Lancaster Caramel Company, which quickly became a success. He used the caramel recipe he had obtained during his previous travels to make candies. Also, from his previous travels, he learned that caramels sell better in bulk, so that is what he did. This company soon became a success when a man from England visited Lancaster. He loved Hershey's candies once he tasted them and placed a big order to be delivered to Britain. Hershey was able to pay off his debt and had money left over to buy more ingredients and equipment.

By the early 1890s Lancaster Caramel Company had grown, employing over 1,300 workers in two factories. After traveling to Chicago for the World's Columbian Exposition, Hershey became interested in chocolate. After a long time of deciding, he took a risk and sold Lancaster Caramel Company for one million dollars to start the famous Hershey Chocolate Company.[6]

The Hershey Chocolate Company

Using the proceeds from the 1900 sale of the Lancaster Caramel Company, Hershey initially acquired farm land roughly 30 miles (50 km) northwest of Lancaster, near his birthplace of Derry Township. 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 luxury product, Hershey was 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. The first Hershey bar was produced in 1900. Hershey's Kisses were developed in 1907, and the Hershey's Bar with almonds was introduced in 1908.

On March 2, 1903, he began construction on what was to become the world's largest chocolate manufacturing company. 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.

The factory was in the center of a dairy farmland, but with Hershey's support, houses, businesses, churches and a transportation infrastructure accreted around the plant. Because the land was surrounded by dairy farms, Hershey was able to use fresh milk to mass-produce quality milk chocolate. Hershey continued to experiment and perfect the process of making milk chocolate using the techniques he had first learned for adding milk to make caramels when he had moved to Drexel Hill.

Philanthropy

Since Hershey and his wife could not have children, they decided to help others, establishing the Hershey Industrial School with a Deed of Trust in 1909.[7]

In 1918, Hershey transferred the majority of his assets, including control of the company, to the Milton Hershey School Trust fund, to benefit the Industrial School. The trust fund has a majority of voting shares in the Hershey Company, allowing it to keep control of the company. In 1951, the school was renamed the Milton Hershey School. The Milton Hershey School Trust also has 100% control of Hershey Entertainment and Resorts Company, which owns the Hotel Hershey and Hersheypark, among other properties. He took great pride in the growth of the school, the town, and his business. He placed the quality of his product and the well-being of his workers ahead of profits.[8]

He was part of a forward-looking group of entrepreneurs who believed that providing better living conditions for their workers resulted in better workers…Milton Hershey conceived of building a community that would support and nurture his workers. Developing the community became a lifelong passion for him.[9]

Hershey built Hershey Cemetery on Laudermilch Road in Hershey, Pennsylvania. On July 31, 1923, Hershey transferred the land into a cemetery for $1.00.[10][11]

In 1935, Hershey established the M.S. Hershey Foundation, a private charitable foundation that provides educational and cultural opportunities for Hershey residents.[12] The foundation supplies funding for three entities: the Hershey Museum and Hershey Gardens, the Hershey Theatre and the Hershey Community Archives.

The founding of the Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center occurred in 1963 when the board of the trust went to the Dauphin County Orphans Court with the cy-près doctrine (cy près is a French phrase meaning "As close as possible"). It was a gift from the Milton Hershey School Trust to the people of Pennsylvania, with an initial endowment of $50 million and only one restriction—the hospital had to be built in Hershey. The hospital is a teaching hospital, with an annual budget exceeding the initial construction cost.

The Hershey Company has continued his philanthropic ways. The Hershey Company helped start up Elizabethtown College's honors program.[13]

Close call of the Titanic

In 1912, the Hersheys were booked to travel on the ill-fated maiden voyage of the British luxury liner RMS Titanic. They canceled their reservations at the last minute due to business matters requiring Hershey's attention. The cancellation is often incorrectly attributed to Kitty Hershey falling ill, but by this time, she had been ill for several years.[14] Instead, they booked passage to New York on the German luxury liner SS Amerika. The former Hershey Museum displayed a copy of the check Milton Hershey wrote to the White Star Line as a deposit for a first-class stateroom on the Titanic.[15] This copy is now located in the archives of the Hershey Story Museum, which replaced the original Hershey Museum in 2009.[16]

World War II

Hershey Chocolate supplied the U.S. Armed Forces with chocolate bars during World War II. These bars were called Ration D Bars and Tropical Chocolate Bars. The Ration D Bar had very specific requirements from the army: It had to weigh 1 or 2 ounces (28 or 57 g); it had to resist melting at temperatures higher than 90 degrees, and it had to have an unpleasant-enough flavor to prevent the troops from developing cravings for them. After a year or two, the Army was impressed enough with the durability and success of the Ration D Bar to commission Hershey to make the Tropical Chocolate Bar. The only difference between them was that the Tropical Chocolate Bar was made to taste better than the Ration D Bar and still be as durable. Tropical Chocolate Bars were designed not to melt in the tropical weather. It is estimated that between 1940 and 1945, over three billion of the Ration D and Tropical Chocolate Bars were produced and distributed to soldiers throughout the world. In 1939, the Hershey plant was capable of producing 100,000 ration bars a day. By the end of World War II, the entire Hershey plant was producing ration bars at a rate of 24 million a week. For its service throughout World War II, the Hershey Chocolate Company was issued five Army-Navy 'E' Production Awards for exceeding expectations for quality and quantity in the production of the Ration D and Tropical Chocolate Bars. The Hershey factory machine shop even made some parts for tanks and machines during the war.[17]

Personal life

On May 25, 1898, Hershey married Catherine Elizabeth "Kitty" Sweeney (b. 1872), an Irish-American Catholic from Jamestown, New York.[18] Hershey and his wife Catherine did not have any children.[19]

On March 25, 1915, Hershey's wife Catherine died of an unknown disease.[18] In 1919, Hershey moved his wife Catherine's body from Philadelphia to Hershey Cemetery.[10] In March 1920, Hershey's mother Fanny Hershey died and she was buried in Hershey Cemetery. In late 1930, his father's body was moved there.[10]

Death

Hershey died of pneumonia in Hershey Hospital on October 13, 1945, at the age of 88.[20] Hershey is buried at Hershey Cemetery, a cemetery which he built, on Laudermilch Rd in Hershey, Pennsylvania. Hershey's grave is located at Section Spec-Her, Lot 1, Grave 1, next to his wife (Grave 2).[10][11]

Legacy

At the Hershey School, there is a bronze statue of Milton Hershey with an orphan boy wrapped in his arms. Below the statue are these words: "His deeds are his monument. His life is our inspiration."[21]

Hershey's birthday, September 13, is one of several competing dates celebrated as International Chocolate Day.[22]

On September 13, 1995, the United States Postal Service issued a 32-cent stamp for Milton S. Hershey, which honors him as a philanthropist, as part of the Great Americans series. The stamp was designed by Dennis Lyall, an artist from Norwalk, Connecticut.[23][24]

See also

References

  1. ^ Fernandez, Bob. "Milton Hershey School's lack of charity isn't candy-coated". Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  2. ^ "Milton S. Hershey", Milton Hershey School. Mhs-pa.org. Retrieved on 2013-07-23.
  3. ^ . HersheyArchives.org. Archived from the original on September 6, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  4. ^ Burford, Betty (1994). Chocolate by Hershey. Minneapolis: Carolrhoda Books. p. 15. ISBN 978-0876148303.
  5. ^ Hershey, Milton Snavely; 1857–1945, Hershey Archives.org Retrieved on 2014-08-15.
  6. ^ Buckley Jr., James (2013). Who Was Milton Hershey?. New York: Grosset & Dunlap. pp. 23–40. ISBN 978-0448479361.
  7. ^ "Milton Hershey School Deed of Trust" 2010-11-01 at the Wayback Machine November 15, 1909 (As restated on November 15, 1976)
  8. ^ Mary Davidoff Houts, Pamela Whitenack (2000). Images of America: Hershey, pp 36–38. Chicago: Arcadia Publishing.
  9. ^ Mary Davidoff Houts, Pamela Whitenack (2000). Images of America: Hershey, p. 36. Chicago: Arcadia Publishing.
  10. ^ a b c d "History of the Hershey Cemetery". HersheyCemetery.com. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  11. ^ a b "Hershey Cemetery, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania". Interment.com. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  12. ^ The Philanthropy Hall of Fame, Milton Hershey
  13. ^ Elizabethtown College. "College Honors Program". www.etown.edu. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  14. ^ Daugherty, Greg, "Seven Famous People Who Missed the Titanic." Smithsonian Magazine, March 2012.
  15. ^ Todd Mountford ”Milton S.Hershey's link to Titanic highlights exhibit“. The Harrisburg Patriot-News, January 10, 2009.
  16. ^ "The Hershey Story". www.hersheystory.org. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  17. ^ Hostetter, Christina J. "Sugar Allies: How Hershey and Coca-Cola Used Government Contracts and Sugar Exemptions to Elude Sugar Rationing Regulations". Master's Thesis, University of Maryland, 2004.[pages needed]
  18. ^ a b "It was Kitty's idea". Milton Hershey School. Retrieved November 20, 2018.
  19. ^ Buckley Jr., James (2013). Who Was Milton Hershey?. New York: Grosset & Dunlap. p. 112. ISBN 978-0448479361.
  20. ^ D'Antonio, Michael. Hershey: Milton S. Hershey's Extraordinary Life of Wealth, Empire, and Utopian Dreams. New York: Simon & Schuster (2006), p. 239
  21. ^ McMahon, James D. Jr.; McMahon, James D. Jr. (2009-08-01). Milton Hershey School. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-5661-1.
  22. ^ "Candy Holidays (September)". candyusa.com. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  23. ^ "September 13, 1995 First Day of Issue..." HersheyArchives.org. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  24. ^ "32-cent Hershey". Smithsonian National Postal Museum. Retrieved September 5, 2018.

Further reading

  • Katherine B. Shippen & Paul A. W. Wallace, Milton S. Hershey. New York: Random House, 1959.

External links

  • Hershey Community Archives website
  • Biography
  • Hershey photo
  • Hershey Public Library
  • HersheyArchives.org – Image of Catherine Sweeney Hershey in 1910
  • Flickr.com – Catherine Hershey archival photographs
  • Worldcat.org – Who Was Milton Hershey by James Buckley Jr.
  • Milton S. Hershey at Find a Grave

milton, hershey, milton, snavely, hershey, september, 1857, october, 1945, american, chocolatier, businessman, philanthropist, hershey, 1905bornmilton, snavely, hershey, 1857, september, 1857derry, township, pennsylvania, united, statesdiedoctober, 1945, 1945,. Milton Snavely Hershey September 13 1857 October 13 1945 was an American chocolatier businessman and philanthropist Milton S HersheyHershey in 1905BornMilton Snavely Hershey 1857 09 13 September 13 1857Derry Township Pennsylvania United StatesDiedOctober 13 1945 1945 10 13 aged 88 Hershey Pennsylvania United StatesResting placeThe Hershey Memorial Hershey Cemetery Laudermilch Road Hershey Pennsylvania U S Section Spec Her Lot 1 40 3083229 N 76 6383057 WNationalityAmericanOther namesThe Chocolate KingEducationStarted school at 6 years old and finished through fourth gradeOccupation s Confectioner businessman philanthropistKnown forThe Hershey Company Founder Hershey Bar Hershey Pennsylvania founder planner Hershey CemeterySpouseCatherine Kitty Elizabeth Sweeney m 1898 died 1915 wbr Websitewww wbr hersheyland wbr com wbr homeMilton S Hershey circa 1915 Trained in the confectionery business Hershey pioneered the manufacture of caramel using fresh milk He launched the Lancaster Caramel Company which achieved bulk exports and then sold it to start a new company supplying mass produced milk chocolate previously a luxury good The first Hershey bars were sold in 1900 and proved so popular that he was able to build his own company town of Hershey Pennsylvania Hershey s philanthropy extended to a boarding school originally for local orphans but accommodating around 2 000 students as of 2016 1 In World War II the company developed a special non melting bar for troops serving overseas The Hershey Company known as Hershey s is one of the world s biggest confectionery manufacturers Contents 1 Early life 2 Lancaster Caramel Company 3 The Hershey Chocolate Company 4 Philanthropy 5 Close call of the Titanic 6 World War II 7 Personal life 7 1 Death 8 Legacy 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly lifeMilton Hershey was born on September 13 1857 to Henry and Veronica Fanny nee Snavely Hershey Of Swiss and German descent his family were members of Pennsylvania s Mennonite community and he grew up speaking Pennsylvania Dutch 2 In April 1862 Hershey s sister Sarena Hershey was born in Derry Township Dauphin County Pennsylvania and died in 1867 at age 4 3 Like many rural young people of the time Milton was expected to help out on the family farm and he learned early on of the value of hard work and perseverance Henry Hershey rarely stayed anywhere very long and was prone to leaving his wife and child for long periods Because of this Hershey had a very limited education with no schooling beyond the 4th grade In 1871 Milton Hershey left school for good and was apprenticed to a local printer Sam Ernst who published a German English newspaper He did not like that kind of work and he thought it was very boring One day at work there he accidentally dropped his hat in one of the machines Because his boss was hot tempered he was fired shortly after He was worried to see how his parents would react His father asked Ernst to take him back and he did decide to give him a second chance but Mattie Snavely his aunt and his mother had a different idea They wanted him to learn the trade of candy making instead 4 So his mother arranged for the 14 year old Hershey to be apprenticed to a confectioner named Joseph Royer in Lancaster Pennsylvania Over the next four years Hershey learned the craft of creating confections In 1876 he moved to Philadelphia to start his first confectionery business Milton then traveled to Denver and finding work at a local confectioners learned how to make caramels using fresh milk He then went to New Orleans and Chicago looking for opportunities before settling in New York City in 1883 and training at Huyler s He started his second business which while initially successful lasted only three years closing in 1886 5 Lancaster Caramel CompanyHershey returned to Lancaster in 1883 He borrowed money from the bank to start the Lancaster Caramel Company which quickly became a success He used the caramel recipe he had obtained during his previous travels to make candies Also from his previous travels he learned that caramels sell better in bulk so that is what he did This company soon became a success when a man from England visited Lancaster He loved Hershey s candies once he tasted them and placed a big order to be delivered to Britain Hershey was able to pay off his debt and had money left over to buy more ingredients and equipment By the early 1890s Lancaster Caramel Company had grown employing over 1 300 workers in two factories After traveling to Chicago for the World s Columbian Exposition Hershey became interested in chocolate After a long time of deciding he took a risk and sold Lancaster Caramel Company for one million dollars to start the famous Hershey Chocolate Company 6 The Hershey Chocolate CompanyUsing the proceeds from the 1900 sale of the Lancaster Caramel Company Hershey initially acquired farm land roughly 30 miles 50 km northwest of Lancaster near his birthplace of Derry Township 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 luxury product Hershey was 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 The first Hershey bar was produced in 1900 Hershey s Kisses were developed in 1907 and the Hershey s Bar with almonds was introduced in 1908 On March 2 1903 he began construction on what was to become the world s largest chocolate manufacturing company 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 The factory was in the center of a dairy farmland but with Hershey s support houses businesses churches and a transportation infrastructure accreted around the plant Because the land was surrounded by dairy farms Hershey was able to use fresh milk to mass produce quality milk chocolate Hershey continued to experiment and perfect the process of making milk chocolate using the techniques he had first learned for adding milk to make caramels when he had moved to Drexel Hill PhilanthropySince Hershey and his wife could not have children they decided to help others establishing the Hershey Industrial School with a Deed of Trust in 1909 7 In 1918 Hershey transferred the majority of his assets including control of the company to the Milton Hershey School Trust fund to benefit the Industrial School The trust fund has a majority of voting shares in the Hershey Company allowing it to keep control of the company In 1951 the school was renamed the Milton Hershey School The Milton Hershey School Trust also has 100 control of Hershey Entertainment and Resorts Company which owns the Hotel Hershey and Hersheypark among other properties He took great pride in the growth of the school the town and his business He placed the quality of his product and the well being of his workers ahead of profits 8 He was part of a forward looking group of entrepreneurs who believed that providing better living conditions for their workers resulted in better workers Milton Hershey conceived of building a community that would support and nurture his workers Developing the community became a lifelong passion for him 9 Hershey built Hershey Cemetery on Laudermilch Road in Hershey Pennsylvania On July 31 1923 Hershey transferred the land into a cemetery for 1 00 10 11 In 1935 Hershey established the M S Hershey Foundation a private charitable foundation that provides educational and cultural opportunities for Hershey residents 12 The foundation supplies funding for three entities the Hershey Museum and Hershey Gardens the Hershey Theatre and the Hershey Community Archives The founding of the Penn State Milton S Hershey Medical Center occurred in 1963 when the board of the trust went to the Dauphin County Orphans Court with the cy pres doctrine cy pres is a French phrase meaning As close as possible It was a gift from the Milton Hershey School Trust to the people of Pennsylvania with an initial endowment of 50 million and only one restriction the hospital had to be built in Hershey The hospital is a teaching hospital with an annual budget exceeding the initial construction cost The Hershey Company has continued his philanthropic ways The Hershey Company helped start up Elizabethtown College s honors program 13 Close call of the TitanicIn 1912 the Hersheys were booked to travel on the ill fated maiden voyage of the British luxury liner RMS Titanic They canceled their reservations at the last minute due to business matters requiring Hershey s attention The cancellation is often incorrectly attributed to Kitty Hershey falling ill but by this time she had been ill for several years 14 Instead they booked passage to New York on the German luxury liner SS Amerika The former Hershey Museum displayed a copy of the check Milton Hershey wrote to the White Star Line as a deposit for a first class stateroom on the Titanic 15 This copy is now located in the archives of the Hershey Story Museum which replaced the original Hershey Museum in 2009 16 World War IIHershey Chocolate supplied the U S Armed Forces with chocolate bars during World War II These bars were called Ration D Bars and Tropical Chocolate Bars The Ration D Bar had very specific requirements from the army It had to weigh 1 or 2 ounces 28 or 57 g it had to resist melting at temperatures higher than 90 degrees and it had to have an unpleasant enough flavor to prevent the troops from developing cravings for them After a year or two the Army was impressed enough with the durability and success of the Ration D Bar to commission Hershey to make the Tropical Chocolate Bar The only difference between them was that the Tropical Chocolate Bar was made to taste better than the Ration D Bar and still be as durable Tropical Chocolate Bars were designed not to melt in the tropical weather It is estimated that between 1940 and 1945 over three billion of the Ration D and Tropical Chocolate Bars were produced and distributed to soldiers throughout the world In 1939 the Hershey plant was capable of producing 100 000 ration bars a day By the end of World War II the entire Hershey plant was producing ration bars at a rate of 24 million a week For its service throughout World War II the Hershey Chocolate Company was issued five Army Navy E Production Awards for exceeding expectations for quality and quantity in the production of the Ration D and Tropical Chocolate Bars The Hershey factory machine shop even made some parts for tanks and machines during the war 17 Personal lifeOn May 25 1898 Hershey married Catherine Elizabeth Kitty Sweeney b 1872 an Irish American Catholic from Jamestown New York 18 Hershey and his wife Catherine did not have any children 19 On March 25 1915 Hershey s wife Catherine died of an unknown disease 18 In 1919 Hershey moved his wife Catherine s body from Philadelphia to Hershey Cemetery 10 In March 1920 Hershey s mother Fanny Hershey died and she was buried in Hershey Cemetery In late 1930 his father s body was moved there 10 Death Hershey died of pneumonia in Hershey Hospital on October 13 1945 at the age of 88 20 Hershey is buried at Hershey Cemetery a cemetery which he built on Laudermilch Rd in Hershey Pennsylvania Hershey s grave is located at Section Spec Her Lot 1 Grave 1 next to his wife Grave 2 10 11 LegacyAt the Hershey School there is a bronze statue of Milton Hershey with an orphan boy wrapped in his arms Below the statue are these words His deeds are his monument His life is our inspiration 21 Hershey s birthday September 13 is one of several competing dates celebrated as International Chocolate Day 22 On September 13 1995 the United States Postal Service issued a 32 cent stamp for Milton S Hershey which honors him as a philanthropist as part of the Great Americans series The stamp was designed by Dennis Lyall an artist from Norwalk Connecticut 23 24 See alsoMilton S Hershey Mansion List of chocolatiersReferences Fernandez Bob Milton Hershey School s lack of charity isn t candy coated Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved 2020 10 30 Milton S Hershey Milton Hershey School Mhs pa org Retrieved on 2013 07 23 April 12 1862 Sarena Hershey HersheyArchives org Archived from the original on September 6 2018 Retrieved September 5 2018 Burford Betty 1994 Chocolate by Hershey Minneapolis Carolrhoda Books p 15 ISBN 978 0876148303 Hershey Milton Snavely 1857 1945 Hershey Archives org Retrieved on 2014 08 15 Buckley Jr James 2013 Who Was Milton Hershey New York Grosset amp Dunlap pp 23 40 ISBN 978 0448479361 Milton Hershey School Deed of Trust Archived 2010 11 01 at the Wayback Machine November 15 1909 As restated on November 15 1976 Mary Davidoff Houts Pamela Whitenack 2000 Images of America Hershey pp 36 38 Chicago Arcadia Publishing Mary Davidoff Houts Pamela Whitenack 2000 Images of America Hershey p 36 Chicago Arcadia Publishing a b c d History of the Hershey Cemetery HersheyCemetery com Retrieved September 5 2018 a b Hershey Cemetery Dauphin County Pennsylvania Interment com Retrieved September 5 2018 The Philanthropy Hall of Fame Milton Hershey Elizabethtown College College Honors Program www etown edu Retrieved 16 March 2018 Daugherty Greg Seven Famous People Who Missed the Titanic Smithsonian Magazine March 2012 Todd Mountford Milton S Hershey s link to Titanic highlights exhibit The Harrisburg Patriot News January 10 2009 The Hershey Story www hersheystory org Retrieved 16 March 2018 Hostetter Christina J Sugar Allies How Hershey and Coca Cola Used Government Contracts and Sugar Exemptions to Elude Sugar Rationing Regulations Master s Thesis University of Maryland 2004 pages needed a b It was Kitty s idea Milton Hershey School Retrieved November 20 2018 Buckley Jr James 2013 Who Was Milton Hershey New York Grosset amp Dunlap p 112 ISBN 978 0448479361 D Antonio Michael Hershey Milton S Hershey s Extraordinary Life of Wealth Empire and Utopian Dreams New York Simon amp Schuster 2006 p 239 McMahon James D Jr McMahon James D Jr 2009 08 01 Milton Hershey School Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 5661 1 Candy Holidays September candyusa com Retrieved September 5 2018 September 13 1995 First Day of Issue HersheyArchives org Retrieved September 5 2018 32 cent Hershey Smithsonian National Postal Museum Retrieved September 5 2018 Further readingKatherine B Shippen amp Paul A W Wallace Milton S Hershey New York Random House 1959 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Milton S Hershey Hershey Community Archives website M Hershey s Biography by the Hershey Entertainment and Resorts Company Biography Hershey photo Hershey Public Library HersheyArchives org Image of Catherine Sweeney Hershey in 1910 Flickr com Catherine Hershey archival photographs Worldcat org Who Was Milton Hershey by James Buckley Jr Milton S Hershey at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Milton S Hershey amp oldid 1133618802, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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