When was soda invented




















Vendors carried tanks of lemonade on their backs and dispensed cups of the soft drink to thirsty Parisians. In , the first drinkable man-made carbonated water was created by Englishman Joseph Priestley. Three years later, Swedish chemist Torbern Bergman invented a generating apparatus that made carbonated water from chalk using sulfuric acid.

Bergman's apparatus allowed imitation mineral water to be produced in large amounts. In , the first United States patent was issued for the "means of mass manufacture of imitation mineral waters" to Simons and Rundell of Charleston, South Carolina. Carbonated beverages, however, did not achieve great popularity in America until , when John Mathews invented his own apparatus for making carbonated water and mass-manufactured the apparatus for sale to soda fountain owners.

Drinking either natural or artificial mineral water was considered a healthy practice. American pharmacists selling mineral waters began to add medicinal and flavorful herbs to unflavored mineral water using birch bark, dandelion, sarsaparilla, and fruit extracts.

Some historians consider that the first flavored carbonated soft drink was made in by Dr. Philip Syng Physick of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Early American pharmacies with soda fountains became a popular part of culture. Customers soon wanted to take their "health" drinks home with them, and a soft drink bottling industry grew from consumer demand.

Over 1, U. Carbonated drink bottles are under a lot of pressure from the gas, so inventors sought the best way to prevent the bubbles from escaping. It was the first successful method of keeping the bubbles in the bottle.

In , the first patent was issued for a glass-blowing machine for the automatic production of glass bottles. Earlier bottles had been hand-blown. Four years later, the new bottle-blowing machine was in operation, first by the inventor, Michael Owens, an employee of Libby Glass Co. Within a few years, glass bottle production increased from 1, to 57, bottles a day.

Updated: Feb 24, Ah, soda. For as long as you can remember, soda has been there for you. Thirsty on a hot summer day?

Have some lone vanilla ice cream that could really use some oomph? Enjoying a delicious meal and need something to wash it down? You already know you're reaching for a bubbly ice-cold soda. But have you ever wondered what had to go down to get that bottle to your table? Buckle up for this ride. Photo, courtesy Reggie Lynch, www.

If you answered Dr. Born in Leeds, England, Priestley became interested in science after meeting Benjamin Franklin in Priestley was the pastor of a small break-away church at the time, and one day, he noticed the smell coming from a brewery next door.

He reproduced the gas in an experiment later recognized as carbon dioxide and dissolved it in water, noting its pleasant taste. For this discovery, Priestley was inducted into the French Academy of Sciences in Contact us to place your antique shop or antique related information here. A few years later, a Swedish chemist named Torbern Bergman invented a machine that created carbonated water from chalk and sulfuric acid. Perhaps the first unintentional carbonated soft drink was created at the direction of Dr.

Philip Syng Physick, also known as the father of American surgery. In , he ordered the preparation of a carbonated drink for a patient that had flavoring added to enhance the taste.

No other mention is made of Dr.



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