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The Toaster In Your Home: Do You Know Where It Came From?

In the days of the Roman gladiators, toasting bread was a way to prolong its life (not the gladiator’s; the bread). In fact, the word “tostum,” from which toast derives, is actually Latin for scorching or burning. (In my house, the word would be synomous with ironing, but that’s information for another blog entirely.) In their conquests, the Romans took their love of toast with them and spread the custom as far away as Britain. Later, English colonists brought the tradition to the New World.

In pre-electric times, there were a variety of methods employed to make toast. They ranged from using a hot hearthstone to putting bread on toasting forks and holding it over a fire and fancy bread holders that could be attached to the side of a fireplace and rotated into the flame.

Crompton and Company invented the first electric toaster in England in 1893. In 1909, it was developed in the United States. It was labor-intensive however, as it required someone to manually turn the toaster off when the toast was done and it also only toasted one side of the bread. In 1919, the pop-up toaster as we know it today was invented by a man named Charles Strite.

The popularity of the toaster spread even further with the invention of pre-sliced bread in 1928 by Otto Frederick Rohwedder. When pre-sliced bread was introduced by Wonder Bread in 1930, the toaster became the coolest thing since…well…since sliced bread!

How do YOU feel about your toaster? Do you take it for granted?

Happy toasting!

This entry was posted in Appliances and tagged , , , , by Marjorie Dorfman. Bookmark the permalink.

About Marjorie Dorfman

Marjorie Dorfman is a freelance writer and former teacher originally from Brooklyn, New York. A graduate of New York University School of Education, she now lives in Doylestown, PA, with quite a few cats that keep her on her toes at all times. Originally a writer of ghostly and horror fiction, she has branched out into the world of humorous non-fiction writing in the last decade. Many of her stories have been published in various small presses throughout the country during the last twenty years. Her book of stories, "Tales For A Dark And Rainy Night", reflects her love and respect for the horror and ghost genre.