Augustus Jackson (1808-1852) [Children’s Edition]

June 10, 2021 
/ Contributed By: Tricia Martineau Wagner

Pennsylvania counties|Robert Jones Abele (Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity)

Pennsylvania counties|Robert Jones Abele (Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity)

Image courtesy WaterproofPaper.com|

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]This entry is for juvenile audiences. To see the full version of this entry, click here.[/vc_column_text][vc_column_text]Who are they:

Augustus Jackson worked as a chef in the White House in Washington D.C. He is known for making ice cream. Augustus created many new and popular ice cream flavors.

Why are they important to know about:

Augustus Jackson invented a better way of making ice cream. He is sometimes called the modern-day “Father of Ice Cream.” Jackson did not invent ice cream but his ice cream recipes became famous.

Details of the life of the person:

Augustus Jackson started working in the White House when he was nine years old. He became a top chef. Augustus was a cook from 1817 until 1837. He cooked for three United States presidents. He cooked for President James Monroe, President John Quincy Adams, and President Andrew Jackson. Augustus was an excellent chef. Sometime in the 1830s Augustus Jackson stopped working as a chef. He left Washington D.C. He moved back to his hometown of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Augustus opened his own business. He was a candy confectioner (candy maker). Augustus Jackson discovered a new way to make ice cream. Most early ice cream recipes used eggs. Augustus’s recipes were eggless. Augustus added salt to the ice. He mixed salt, new flavors, and cream. The salt made his flavors taste even better. The salt also lowered the temperature of the ice cream. Now the ice cream could be kept cold for a longer time. Augustus packaged his ice cream in metal tins. He sold the tins to ice cream parlors owned by other Black people in Philadelphia. Augustus sold his ice cream for $1 a quart. He made a lot of money. Augustus became one of the wealthiest people in the city of Philadelphia. His ice cream was called “Philadelphia style.” Augustus Jackson did not patent or protect his ice cream recipes. He shared his way of making ice cream. He shared his ideas with other Black ice cream parlor owners. The cost of making ice cream went down. More people could afford to enjoy ice cream. When Black people moved north, they took their ice cream recipes with them. This helped spread people’s love of ice cream to new places.

Their lasting impact:

Augustus Jackson invented a way of making ice cream that is still used today. He used salt. Salt lowered the temperature of the ice cream. It also made the flavors taste better.

What we learned from them:

Good training at a job gives you skills that you can use later. When Augustus Jackson experimented, he discovered new things. While Augustus Jackson did not invent ice cream, his ice cream recipes became famous, Jackson’s eggless “Philadelphia style” ice cream is why many ice creams today do not use eggs.

Author Profile

Tricia Martineau Wagner is a North Carolina author and hands-on living history presenter. She is an experienced elementary teacher, reading specialist, and independent historian. Her four non-fiction books are: It Happened on the Underground Railroad (2007; 2nd edition 2015), Black Cowboys of the Old West (2011), African American Women of the Old West (2007), and It Happened on the Oregon Trail (2004; 2nd edition 2014). Ms. Wagner is a well-versed and entertaining speaker who brings history to life. She enjoys conducting presentations for schools around the country in grades 2 – 8 on: the Underground Railroad, Black Cowboys of the Old West, African American Women of the Old West, and the history of the Oregon Trail. She has spoken at the 4th Annual Black History Conference in Seattle, Washington sponsored by the Association for African American Historical Research and Preservation (AAAHRP), Presentation title: “Rewriting American History: The Untold Story of the Contributions & Achievements of African American Citizens.” Ms. Wagner also spoke at the Western Heritage Symposium for the National Day of the American Cowboy, Arlington Texas, (National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum in association with University of Texas at Arlington), Presentation title: “America’s New Vision of the Old West: Black Cowboys & Black Women Who Reformed and Refined Society.”

Categories:
Children's Page

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Martineau Wagner, T. (2021, June 10). Augustus Jackson (1808-1852) [Children’s Edition]. BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/childrens-page/augustus-jackson-1808-1852/

Further Reading