The high temperatures here have been in the mid 90s and I must admit that I have enjoyed having refrigerated air conditioning while drinking beverages with ice. I often don't acknowledge the people who have made this level of comfort possible, but none the less, I am truly grateful.
A couple of summers ago, our A/C died in South Georgia while I was traveling in the course of my work. I picked up the part I needed on my trip and installed it myself, potentially saving $500 for the repair. The part was under warranty but the labor would not have been. And the last time I’d hired a H&A guy to work on the A/C he conveniently ignored that the part was warrantied and I wound up paying $600. So I’ve been doing my own ever since. But they were miserable until I got back. Modern homes are designed to be heated and cooled by HVAC systems. Before air conditioning became an option in the 1950s and 60s, houses were designed to allow natural air flow. But people didn’t spend as much time in doors then, either, especially during the day time
I enjoy looking through old kit home catalogues by Sears and other companies, and it's also interesting to see the effect the icebox, and later refrigerator, had on home design.
My bride's family patented an ice harvester (The Gee Brothers Ice Harvester) made with a giant one cylinder engine and saw blades almost four feet across. This saved many a horse from falling in the lakes during the winter. Unfortunately, home refrigerators were just coming on the scene and they were just a bit late. EDIT: She just reminded me, as recently as ten years ago, one of their ice harvesters were still being used in Canada.
Those single cylinder engines built the modern world, and many run to this day. Out in the oil fields there are still single cylinder engines running from the day they were installed with almost no maintenance. They were a true marvel imo and deserve an hour episode
My grandfather worked for many years at The American Ice Company in Leavenworth Kansas. They harvested ice off of the adjacent(by Alito's defininition ha!) Missouri River. I wouldn't want to put THAT ice in a drink! As refrigerators started to become popular, the ice business's days were numbered. In a drawer somehere, I still have an old ice pick from his company with slogan "Ice Never Fails" printed on the wood handle. It didn't take long for those early refrigerators to become more reliable than what we can buy today. My grandmother's 1946 GE refrigerator ran without a single repair for 50 years. It had to be defrosted a couple of times/year, and I'm sure it wasn't the model of efficiency, but it was running when we unplugged it and hauled it off. It still had the 2 original lever operated aluminum ice cube trays that still worked perfectly. I still remember running them under cold water for a few seconds and tugging on the the handle to release those big square cubes.
I have my grandpa's ice tongs he used to deliver ice in Louisville, KY ~1900. In my hometown of Glasgow, KY there is a park where I played Little League Baseball that at the time had 2 large shallow ponds adjacent a spring fed creek. Story was water from the creek was pumped into the ponds in winter and blocks of ice would be cut and stored for summer use. When I played baseball there in the 50s & early 60s, a "ice plant" had been built across the creek from the ponds and the ponds were used for public fishing. We went to the ice plant for block ice put in our steel Coca-Cola cooler for summer picnics & 1957 Chevy Station Wagon road trips. We also got chipped ice for the ice cream churn. Memories for sure.
In the late 1950's when I was a kid, there was a local fish plant that still had an ice house, filled with ice harvested from a nearby pond, and covered in sawdust. We kids would sneak in there to cool off on hot summer days.
I remember going to a camp ground on a lake in Northern Minnesota in the early sixties. I was prolly six. My brother and I was sent off to the ice house to get a block of ice. On the way we saw some toads I picked up one which immediately peed on my hand. The square of ice we got had saw dust on it. So I learned that saw dust kept the ice from melting. One pound of ice melting has the same cooling effect as lowering one pound of water by 144 deg. F. So in theory one can take one lb of water at 176 deg. and add one lb of ice and it should get down to about 32 deg.
Has a high school student, one of the most sought-after summer jobs was working in the local ice house. I will have to check and see whether People's ice house still exists. Probly not. Thanks for the memory.
The town I come from had an ice house, where the local fishers stored ice harvested from the ponds around the village (I don't know if they imported some after a warm winter). It vent out of business when a cooling tower was build. Now the winters are seldom cold enough to freeze the ponds.
I work every morning 7 days a week and you are the first thing I listen to when my shift is over. Learning random snippets of history has become a daily joy. Thank you History Guy.
@@0ThrowawayAccount0 Just remember, vulgar curse words (language) are/is the sign of a weak mind trying to express itself forcefully. Clean it up or shut it up! Thank you. Maybe (probably) he has a family to support and he doing the best he can.
@@jimbarber9414 I know this is a year old comment, but I really have to make sure someone lets you know that this is an incredibly pretentious view. The idea that someones vocabulary is that indicative of intelligence is classist as can be, and has traditionally been a tool for some pretty nefarious business. I urge you to consider why and how an idea like that comes about and what purpose and people does it serve. I refrained some saying fuck and such, despite my kneejerk reaction being to rib you for being a bit of an ass; that wouldve only further cemented your views. (The word "ass" here is used an observation of your behaviour, not simply a baseless jab.)
Dude, ice harvesting is a key element in my love of history. I’m from Green Bay, WI, the last place ice was commercially harvested. Up until the late 1990’s, we used to be able to drive trucks across the bay on over a foot of ice every winter. We went out there to ice fish, no we weren’t fishing for ice 😁 In lake Winnebago, they still use big chainsaws to cut large holes to spear sturgeon. That was just so cool to see. The bay never completely freezes up anymore and my son can’t imagine it. Anywho, my love for history… the Nevelle museum in Green Bay has a permanent exhibit on the history of Green Bay from the last ice age. One of the displays has film footage of ice harvesting in the bay in the 1930’s. It went on until the 1960’s. From Green Bay, it was stored in ice houses and in spring thru the summer, the ice could be shipped anywhere in the world thru the Great Lakes and out to the Atlantic without leaving the boat. There was something about that display and especially that film. When I was still in school, I got a job cleaning the floors and such at the museum. I’ve seen that film 100 times. After that, I see something old and wonder. I wonder as much as I can afford…
@@Genesh12 To split a hair, it's "the Bay", "the lake" is lake Michigan, but it's climate change. If you'd like the full breakdown of the change of climate in north east Wisconsin, let me know. It's a long, sad list
@IStillShower Future humans will look at people like you and laugh or more likely cry. 5000 years ago the Sahara desert was a jungle. Climate change isn't a thing. Change is part of climate.
In your research for this piece, did you ever come across the Absorption Refrigerator? Look up Ferdinand Carré who patented the device in 1859 (France) and 1860 (USA). It was used to make "artificial ice", and was a major (if not the dominant) cooling mechanism during that period. I understand the device was one of the hot blockade runner items for the South during the Civil War because their sources of "natural ice" from the north were cut off. The process is based on a thermodynamic cycle called gas absorption. There are a few variations on the theme, but they are all fundamentally heat pumps where a refrigerant is circulated through high and low pressure phases to create cooling (or heating in some cases). The single effect ammonia water gas absorption cycle was the dominant variation of this process and was a (the?) major source of early air conditioning, refrigeration, and of course, ice-making. The process is driven by heat, as opposed to electricity, which is what we're more familiar with for cooling today. But gas absorption cooling extended well into the 20th century: people who had air conditioning in their homes in the early to mid-1900s most likely used gas air conditioners driven by this process. See this old Dinah Shore commercial: th-cam.com/video/S4aiP15EYbs/w-d-xo.html While electrically powered heat pumps (air conditioners) are now the dominant source of cooling today, the old gas absorption process is still around. It is still used in some limited applications, such as what drives the propane refrigerator in your RV. Today's modern heat pumps are mostly powered by electricity. But don't write this process off: it is on the verge of making a major comeback in surprising ways. ( see www.StoneMountainTechnologies.com for more information ). Full disclosure: I work there, and am involved in developing the technology into a new generation of ultra-high-efficiency building heat devices. Great video - very informative about the early processes involved in cooling - I had no idea it extended back so far in history. Thank you! (Scott Reed)
The simplest absorption units were intermittent types similar to the Crosley Icy Ball. There was a heating period and a cooling period. When I was a kid an elderly neighbor described growing up on a dairy farm that had intermittent ammonia absorption units. They were suited for the task. He would wake up before dawn and set the kerosene burner then head off to milk the cows. The refrigerator was ready by the time the milk was collected in a large classic milk pail. The refrigerator would cool it from body temperature to below 40°F on about a quart of kerosene he said. Then they’d send it off to market. I still use a 1946 Servel gas fridge in the basement too!
Luckily swamp coolers work where I am in California. Routinely reaching 110'. But 'It's a dry heat' mostly. AC is unaffordable for most in this rural area.
Some 3 or 4 decades ago I watched a PBS show written/narrated by James Burke that covered 80% of this. Thanks History Guy for the additional information. Definitely worth the time to watch!!
As a young feller back during the "war" and even for a year or two after my parents bought ice off a guy who delivered ice for our ice box. No refrigerator until late 40's. Enjoy your videos.
@@mikehydropneumatic2583 He does; in his old intro he said he has a degree in history. Probably a bachelors, but even that much teaches you to cite, cite, cite.
Isn't it amazing? You college and high school students take note! You can find these same sources and cite them yourself in research papers. Impress your teachers/professors. Make THG proud. 😊
In the late 1970's and early 1980's before solar panels and battery banks were readily available to power the refrigerator units used today, several of my friends and I would fly into fishing lodges in northern Alberta in the late spring and stock the ice houses of fly in fishing camps. The ice houses were pretty much as described in the video (dug into the earth and the double log walls were insulated with sawdust. The log walls were chinked with moss). The ice blocks we cut from the lake and stored in the ice houses would supply the lodges for the entire summer season. We cut the blocks with chainsaws and pulled out the blocks with ice tongs. Big, heavy duty ice tongs! Usually a two man job to pull a block up onto the ice. Hard work, but we were young men back then and I have many fond memories of those trips! Good times.
Another fascinating story HG. I will always remember Curly from the Three Stooges carrying a large block of ice up the long flight of stairs only to arrive at the top and it is the size of a cube!
Neat video. I am glad you covered the early Persian ice making systems. Many other Persian buildings used a similiar process to keep them cool in summer. I first found out from a sustainable building industry magazine. On another note. There has been a severe heat wave in the Pacific Northwest. In several other places the electrical grid has been strained. It is possible that your home or apartment could lose power. Take some precautions to protect your refrigerated and frozen food supplies. Freeze gallon jugs and bottled water and fill the empty spaces of the freezer. If the power goes out the extra ice will extend the ability of the freezer to keep food frozen. You can rotate some of the frozen jugs to the refrigerator and place things in close proximity to keep them cold. Wrapping a light towel around a frozen 20 oz bottle of water makes a great cold pack. Also as the ice melts the water is really cold. Sip on it. Like drinking off an iceberg. Yall stay safe and cool.
Having lived in a house in the rain forest as a child with no electricity but with a kerosene powered refrigerator - I can appreciate how important ice can be. If you've ever lived without it, you'd understand.
I love how your videos elicit so many personal memories from people and add a personal touch to the history you provided. There are some great stories in the comments.
My grandfather's first job was delivering ice with a horse and wagon. The job had a added bonus that he could collect swill on his route that he could use to feed his pigs.
My grandmother growing up in rural Manitoba (she was born in 31) had an ice house up until electrification sometime in the 50s. Her dad and brothers cut ice from the nearby creek.
My dad recalled watching ice harvesters on a pond near Fall River when he was a kid. They'd pack the blocks in sawdust and/or hay and it would somehow last all summer. Between the ice box (a terrifying contraption imo) and the cold box on the north-side windowsill, that's all there was when he was growing up.
I couldn't be more happy for you and your lovely wife's success. The free market for information had another Revolution with the internet age. Now people can reward individuals and regular citizens to become their own media operation. Your history channel teaches history not taught in schools today. Many millions around the world are thrilled to learn our past. The reach of The History Guy is growing and will continue. The professionalism of the production, is as good as any legacy media. We continue to root on "THG". In a time When trusting journalism is low, THG channel has excellent credibility, and trust.
My Dad pointed out where the old "Ice House" was near the lake where I grew up in New Hampshire. It seemed impossible but they'd cut tons of ice off the lake every winter and have enough to sell all summer by packing it in saw dust apparently. Before refrigerators lots of people had "Ice Boxes". Just like a fridge but with a big area at the top for a chunk of ice delivered by the ice men. Imagine that... ice cut off a lake staying frozen all summer without refrigeration. It almost seems magical to me.
@@peterstickney7608 Newfound Lake near Bristol, friend. I count myself lucky having such a big clean lake to grow up near. It is in the "Lakes Region" of New Hampshire so I'm sure there was no lack of ice for citizens living in the area.
@@thanksfernuthin Out of our area, but I know the Lakes Region well. Newfound Lake is a great place to be around - the whole Lakes Region is a treasure.
It is so n(ice) to be part of a global community that makes such terrible/wonderful puns… and that treats each other so nicely (the actual reason I started writing is the way you are talking to each other). Remarkable. If only more of the world behaved this way! Best regards from Australia.
@@thanksfernuthin As you know, Newfound Lake is the deepest lake in NH, 183 feet deep. The Rockwold Deephaven camps on Squam Lake still use ice harvested there for the ice boxes in the cabins.
I remember seeing pictures from old Cincinnati of ice workers pulling slabs out of the canal that used to run through town (now Central Parkway). BLECHHHH!!
@@michaelwalton7066 I remember watching (with my mother) people walking across the Ohio River during the winter of 1978 (I think). This at Louisville, down from Cincinnati.
In 1970 as young boy on fishing trip to Canada, I remember they still were using ice blocks cut from the lake in winter and stored in ice houses for summertime uses.
My grandfather worked as a stationary engineer at an ice plant in Chicago. It apparently paid a decent salary, and he was employed steadily through the great depression.
Excellent video as always, sir. A bit unexpected as a resident of Apalachicola to hear us get mentioned! The John Gorrie historic house, the Ice Machine museum, and the yellow fever cemeteries are important parts of this area's nearly forgotten history. Glad to see we're not the only ones who remember. 😀 Hats off, and bravo.
When I was a kid, in the late 50's and early 60's they still had a big ice-house in East Troy Wisconsin. Blocks were cut from lakes and stored in a huge barn insulated with hay. My dad had several big cookouts every summer where horse troughs filled with block ice, soda, beer and bottles of champagne stayed cold all day.
I am old enough to remember the Ice Man and his horse drawn wagon delivering to my house in the City of Los Angeles Ca. At that young age I wanted to be an Ice Man because of the horse. My parents purchased a Refrigerator before I entered Kindergarten, and used until it was unrepairable some 30 years later. Room for two ice trays and a quart of Ice Cream.
Sometimes I miss those old refrigerators (where the cooling apparatus was mostly contained in the "freezer" portion) but the new ones are so much better and more efficient.
those coolers at 02:40 resemble termite mounds - which also mitigate heat for the colonies inside. Curious if that was adapted or if there was any info gleaned from that source (or if it was a mere coincidence). It's also amusing that there's still a 'gourmet' ice collecting business for iceberg sourced ice.
All those outside the USA (and parts of Canada)…are saying “What is this fascination with ice in beverage???” As a frequent traveler (pre-pandemic) for work…iced beverages are one of the first things I want when I return home!
Lucas was an English company that made motorcycle Electrics ,,not very good ones either,, The joke in England was the poor refrigeration was also Made by Lucas
Thanks, H-G! 2 side-stories. I and an old friend from Peoria were talking about the subject. A Dr. In Tallahassee, Dr Carrier, had a number of Tuberculosis patients whose only relief was to move to a warmer climate. He fashioned an air-cooled cottage for them which eventually morphed into Air-Conditioning, so it is told. Also, an enterprising off-shore barge-Captain who regularly came South to Florida during the heyday of Flagler, Barnum, Deering and the like, saw a market for cool, iced drink. So he pulled frozen slabs of ice, packed it in sawdust wrapped in canvas and brought it down. Made his fortune. Must've been cleaner in those days! Lastly, the Peoria deep-sea fisherman said there was a time when a person could get off of a boat in the Bahamas and hold out a bag of ice and before it would melt, it was sold!
Each history guy video I always find myself saying "who knew this totally uninteresting topic can be so interesting", and that is why I subscribed to this channel in the first place
I often thought the term “iceberg lettuce” was used because the round shape of the lettuces head but it came from the method of packing the rail cars full of lettuce with ice to transport it from California to NY!
I fact checked this claim because of, you know, this being the Internet and found this claim to be true! And I also found out that lettuce has mild narcotic properties! Link that backup the claim of the ice part of the name: www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/tip-of-the-iceberg-our-love-hate-relationship-with-the-nations-blandest-vegetable-9074175/
@@Nastyswimmer I'm going to cunsult three experts and get back to you! Ice-T, Ice Cube and you know, the other one too, I guess? The three Ice men will also bring us gifts, I hope? Anyway, BRB!
@@Nastyswimmer : I can tell you that the description of the cooling method is false. Before the adoption of mechanical refrigeration, refrigerator cars used ice, yes, but it was kept in bunkers at the ends of the car (or at the top in the case of some very early cars), with later designs circulating air through the car with electric fans driven by small generators that ran off the car's wheels. There was a service called "top icing" that was used to moisturize some kinds of perishable agricultural loads. A thin layer of ice (about 2 inches) was spread over the top portions of the load (actually they used a blower), but it required a lot of extra ice, which was dead weight (any weight that isn't lading is), and it didn't even work that well, so they stopped doing it. The linked article has several key inaccuracies: -The article claims this ice packing was done before the refrigerator car was invented. If iceberg lettuce was introduced in the late 1940s, it was introduced about 100 years after the advent of the refrigerator car. -As I noted before, ice was not piled on top of the lading, it was kept in bunkers at the car ends. -Again, top icing was a practice, but ice was not packed in the boxes. Only a thin layer (about 2 inches) was spread over the top. In fact, this article found other inconsistencies in that story, namely, that it's been called iceberg lettuce since the 1890s: blog.angelatung.com/2012/04/14/lying-about-lettuce/ The story seems to be a fabrication of some corporation's marketing department (especially since it describes a shipping practice that never happened). I tend to side with the article I link above - nobody really knows.
My family were ice dealers in Chicago cut from frozen lake Michigan in the 1920's. They supplied rail cars loaded with meat from the stockyards, theaters and commerical buildings for air conditioning and households with a wagon and a horse named Tom. My grandfather in retirement said he was an iceman but now is a nice man. 😊
I was just looking at the picture of ice cutting using horses at 10:14. Horse poop & urine must've been a real problem! I think i'd've checked the delivery very closely before it was slid down into my icehouse! "Don't use the yellow ice & no, they aren't dried figs!" 😆
My great, great grandfather had a 3 masted schooner in Boston. He delivered ice to the Bahamas and came back with molasses and sugar. Not sure if he worked for Tudor.
I grew up in the Adirondacks, where there was once a lot of iron mining. I don't know if it's still done, but one mine in particular supplied a lot of cheap ice for keg parties over the years.
I moved back to Haiti 🇭🇹 few years ago and those huge blocks are what most people buy. Trucks will deliver it to people or they come pick it up and the resell it to the people. I sometimes buy the bags from the market but a big chunk of ice last longer in the igloo. It was crazy seeing it but now I’m use to it.
To help insulate your igloo. Make a liner from a couple of those bubble foil reflectors for car windows and duct tape. This will add an additional layer of insulation to an igloo.
In single digit humidity I would get a 30° temperature difference between my house in Phx AZ with 110° temp outside using an evaporative coole and an oscillating fan to move air around. 80° feels surprisingly comfortable when it's that hot outside. And my electric bill was ridiculously low.
My great grandfather delivered ice in NYC in the early 1900's. It was told to us that he was one of the first to use a gas powered delivery truck! Love this channel
It would be interesting to see an episode on the American Icehouse, a long-forgotten business. Initially they were designed to only store ice, but in many towns, they also became the local bar and hangout. They were the only place in the summer to get cold beer or other drinks, so many icehouse owners opened them up to the public. They were gathering places for towns and often they were the morgue (the only place to store a body). Many of these buildings are still in existence across America. My favorite is in Punta Gorda Florida. It's actually called the Ice House Pub. The buildings walls are about four feet thick, built of brick and the building is about four stories tall, designed to move the heat from the ice. The social aspects of the Icehouse is history that deserves to be remembered.
There are still people in our town that worked for the local ice house. I live along the Mississippi River in Wisconsin, and they cut ice from the river around here and stored it all summer. We also have ice caves in the area that have ice in them naturally year-round. There are plants that grow near their mouths that are only found in the artic and here.
One of the biggest businesses in the rural Idaho town when I was growing up was the Feed and Ice company. Didn’t think much of it then, but learned some interesting things as I got older. The ice was made in big blocks in rectangular sheet metal cans using liquid ammonia as the coolant. The huge ice blocks were used to cool spud cellars. Grandpa had one on his farm. The spud cellar was a sunken structure with a roof of straw bales covered over with earth. The empty spud cellar was cool year round by itself. The ice would have cooled the spuds stored there.
Hobbyist ice machine technician here. Well, just the guy who's willing to "give it a go" on whatever is needing attention in a small business. Any advice on an Indigo (R404A) that keeps detecting full bin? Magnet/sensor on the curtain? I was working on that as yesterday met today but I didn't expect to be asking for advice here!
At my sister's wedding , we chilled her wine, in a cave with a spring that ran thru the back. It was 90 degrees, we checked the wine after four hours, and it was starting to freeze. Lol , cool Mountain spring water.
Common in rural hills - the Spring House was used, not only as a source of drinking water, but to store milk, butter, cheese, meats, and drinks to be served cold. These huts had roofs to keep out debris, a shelf above the waterline to store food, and sometimes hooks from the overhead beams to hang meat and cheese.
Yes. We always called in the cave. Built into the side of a mountain. Thirty feet deep and twelve feet wide. Lined with shelves and a trough at the end, with the spring running thru it. A cool drink in the hottest days. Built for the Mann family, of axe makers. A large and wealthy family.
My father, his brothers, and some of their friends were some of the last Ice Harvesters in Southern New Hampshire, cutting ice until the late 1940s. My family had been harvesting ice since roughly 1920. It's interesting to note that at a time when we had developed nuclear power, supersonic flight, and were preparing for space travel, that we were still cutting ice as we had for more than a century. What is fascinating about transporting the ice such long distances in sailing ships was that the chips themselves did not require special construction or preparation. The ability to cut the ice into large, uniform blocks, insulated between layers, and packed closely in the holds kept the ice from melting, and, perhaps more importantly, the load from shifting in heavy weather - loose ice could easily capsize a ship, or even punch through the hull. While rural electrification spread the use of mechanical refrigerators, there are no-moving parts systems that require just an external heat source. They are in use today in RVs, and in remote locations where electric power is generally not available. Albert Einstein and Leo Szilard invented a non-electrical refrigerator in the 1920s. Their design is still in use in systems like nuclear reactor cooling systems, where simplicity and reliability are paramount. (That story may be history that's worth remembering.)
Very interesting experiences your family had! By the way, one of the innovations the Ice King was responsible for was making double-walled hulls on his ships to transport ice; he filled the space between the wall/hull with straw to insulate the ice en route to India.
Nice and cool.down in those caves. The green ice looks neat. It's interesting to hear that they don't know how they exists. There are theories but none are totally agreed on.
I remember learning about John Gory because, as a Floridian, he was one of our state’s statues in Washington, DC. Even though he was cheated out of his fair recompense, he’s still a hero for me. He began developing a cooling machine to save the lives of his patients with yellow fever in Florida, noticing that patients in cooler temperatures healed better and faster, and with cooled air, there were less deaths. And from there, we Floridians and everyone else who enjoys air conditioning, have benefited from his design. He’s a hero to me every time I walked into an air conditioned building from our 90+ degree temperatures!
3:00 The really amazing thing to me is, such buildings would have to be deliberately designed to produce this effect. You might design a building that provides some cooling by accident, but then, how do you improve the design to make the effect stronger. You'd need to have an understanding of what parts of the accidental design worked to create the cooling effect and for that you'd need an understanding of how evaporative cooling actually worked. I remember visiting Scotty's Castle in Death Valley. Most of the rooms in the house had these little water falls, fountains that allowed a thin sheet of water to trickle over a tile surface on the wall. These fountains would cool the room with evaporative cooling. They were quite effective.
@@bkbj8282 Wikipedia defines irony as "what on the surface appears to be the case or to be expected differs radically from what is actually the case". On the surface it appears that History guy talks about historical people. The irony is that by doing this he himself is becoming part of history. I think it fits the definition well enough. Noone likes a smart alec anyway
Cheers! Another interesting one, thanks. The first refrigerator (complete with a tiny ice maker) in our family was bought by my parents when I was born in 1955. It was in fact gas powered but converted to electricity later.
I heard about them from a sustainable building project magazine. The building was going to use some of the same principles to maintain the internal temperatures. One of the reasons they quit being used was the introduction of contaminants into the ice such as sand.
My wife's grandfather had the icebox that we still have in our living room. It's a gorgeous piece of work in oak with cast (Bronze?) latches and hinges. We use it for storing CDs, DVDs and digital media. First time over, our guests always point at it with the "what's that?" question. THG explains much better than we ever could!
Around 1958, I was in third grade and read a story called "Hot as Summer, Cold as Winter." The short version is that a bored prince ordered his staff to come up with something to present to him that was "hot as summer and cold as winter." The staff presented him with a hot-fudge sundae.
I used to run a Victorian house museum; on tours, when grandparents saw the icebox in the kitchen, they loved to share the stories of growing up with ice delivery to the grandkids they brought with them. I pretty much let them lead the kitchen tour, since they had seen it all!
Well it's going to kill a lot of people who's been worried what the pyramids were for when it comes to find out they were nothing but elaborate ice machine, 😂
If you put a styrofoam cup of water under a bell jar and turn on the vacuum pump, the water will start to boil at low temperature and you can see the vapor leaving the water. As you continue running the vacuum pump the water gets colder and in a flash turns to ice. I was surprised the first time I saw the demonstration.
A fun science experiment with a kid is to put a bowl of water outside on a chilly, clear night. Like lows in the upper 30s. And go out and see how much ice is on it, even though it didn't get below freezing. There's ways to set it up to maximize success, and maybe have the kid try to come up with his/her own way to get the most amount of ice. Have them set up multiple experiments in one night, and weigh the results.
This got me thinking of the Crosley icyball. I made one when I was in my early teens. I don't know what happened to it. ::Sarcastic Voice:: "Great! Now I need to make a new one."
Great episode! James Harrison invented his mechanical refrigerator in my home town of Geelong, Victoria, Australia. One of his original machines sits on display Deakin University where I studied (sadly not well preserved). He is well celebrated in Geelong for his many achievements , with a major bridge named in is honour.
I read somewhere that Albert Einstein and Leo Szilard patented a method of making ice with methanol. It worked fairly well but the increased demand for methanol for other purposes raised the price until it became uneconomical.
Yes you can look up the design online. I have seen the illustrations of the device. Almost any gas can be used. Some are more efficient and safer than the others.
@@shawnr771 Indeed. I used to have a camper, and the refrigerator inside was cooled with propane. Ingenious, considering you already carry a tank of the stuff to run the stove and furnace.
3:54 If you take a digital spot thermometer, and point it up at the clear sky, you will find that the sky is quite a bit colder than you'd expect. It's usually quite far below the freezing point. If you point at a cloudy section of the sky, you'll find the cloud produces an insulating effect, and is much closer to the ambient ground temperature. This is why it's important protect yourself from exposure by getting underneath some sort of shelter if you're ever lost in the wilderness.
Cold beverages of any kind in the middle on a scorching hot day in the middle of summer is an almost indescribable pleasure that we take for granted. But during a power outage on a hot humid day and suddenly air conditioning and refrigeration become priceless commodities.
There are advantages of cutting blocks of ice from a lake though, it is very hard to get totally clear ice from a refrigerator. Dave Arnold explains the process and how to actually make clear ice in his book "Liquid intelligence", I recommend it. However, while I did bother to make some really clear ice it was more work then it was worth even if it made a GT look extra awesome.
@@BruceLortzHI The thing is that ice naturally freezes from above on a lake and it tend to push all gas and other junk below making it crystal clear. When you freeze ice cubes it freezes from all around, trapping any gas (and whatever else you have in your tapwater) in the middle, giving you that ugly thing in the middle. Now, if you isolate everything but the top the ice get clear but not all the way, you will still have to cut away the bottom of the cube to have it really clear. There are professional places that make ice this way but I am not sure how LG get the pollutants out of the water. Ice is certainly nice (it is really hot here today) and I am going to use it for a drink soon. :)
@@BruceLortzHI That makes sense, if you can filter out any pollutants and gas and freeze it slowly it would get pretty clear. Still, I used more then 3 2" cubes today already by myself so I don't think it is a perfect solution, you have to save up quite a lot for a cocktail party. Ice is pretty fascinating and I don't want to live without it during summer days like this. Well, I guess I could buy an AC but I live so far up north that the idea seems a bit ludicrous to me.
@@pauleohl It does but if you stick in hot water and cool it down fast you still get a really muddy ice cube. Boiling or just having really warm water and first let it cool down in room temperature before freezing it do help but it still wont get totally clear. What I did instead was taking a large square form about 3" deep and isolate it on the sides and bottom. Once it freezes the top 2" will actually get perfectly clear, the problem is that I have to first cut away the last " and then cut them into squares. That is a whole lot of work but work it does and I didn't boil it first, it is possible that there would be less to cut away then.
I'm an hvac technician. The ability to control pressure to create temperature differences is a fascinating story. Some of the brightest minds in history contributed to it. Newton, Faraday, Edison, Tesla, even Einstein. Every day I stand on the shoulders of those people and try really hard to understand it.
I’m in my 50’s, and my great grandpa was known as the ice man where he was from in Texas. He used to pull a ice wagon with a team of horses around town. My brother has some of his ice bags and tongs. He worked into his 70’s and toward the end of his career there was a featured article in the newspaper about him titled, “The Ice Man Cometh”, detailing his daily life. I’ll never forget him and my great grandma. They retired, then fished and “worked” in their vegetable garden well into their 90’s.
I was very happy with this addition on Ice. My childhood was full of 'Ice Houses' in Long Island , NY. Every pond or lake had it's ice house at it's shores. By the 1950's these were subject to disuse, vandalism, and fires. My Dad was the fire chief and I could ride along to the latest ' big blaze' of the past night. Because of the insolation being saw dust, these ice houses would flare up again and again. So much so that it caused me to be turned to 'ice making' and 'solar heating'.
When I was a kid people still called refrigerators "Ice Boxes." Ice used to be delivered to houses in large blocks and the block was put in the top of an icebox. as the ice melted the chilled air would go down in the box it would cool whatever was put in it. My Dad worked in an ice house in the 1940s before he enlisted in the Marines. When I was a kid we bought ice in blocks or cubes from the ice house where we lived.
Thank you so much, HG, for always bringing me fascinating and compelling stories. Your voice means I’m going to learn something new that day, and is a great comfort for this old man.
Ohhhhh Lance, if ever there was "history worth being remembered," this is it! Great video! As a resident of the Gulf Coast, I'm familiar with the Gorrie Museum in Apalachicola - and his invention - which was intended to provide cool air for the sufferers of yellow fever. So he really invented two things: Air conditioning and the ice machine! Back then, there were "ice cartels" similar to the oil cartels of the 1980's. The smear campaign against Dr. Gorrie was effective. Even the New York Times ran a scoffing article about Dr. Gorrie with the headline, "Only God Can Make Ice." Which wasn't true, of course. As you mentioned, Dr. Gorrie died broke and humiliated. His patents expired, later to be picked up as the air conditioning industry took off. Every time we drink a frozen margarita down here (which we do a lot!), we toast to our hero, Dr. John Gorrie, who made it all possible.
I live in Nicaragua. As an American expat I have a refrigerator and freezer. Many down here do not. 1 liter blocks of ice can still be commonly found sold in the local Pulperia or convenience type store operated out of people’s home. Most neighborhoods, even the poorest, usually have a pulperia and there they buy “homemade” block ice.
As a HVAC and Commercial Refrigration guy I find this most interesting. Having a lot of experience with commercial ice making equipment since 1975 and seeing the progress of ice making and freezers. Though all manufacturers of ice making equipment do the same task of making ice and the process is the same each equipment design is different. Whether it’s flaked, crushed, small cubes or large cubes. Ice is now a big business especially in warmer climates like where I’m at. People often it for granted. Large ice making plants supply many markets and newer machines in supermarkets make and bag ice mechanically. One particular machine even makes both cubed and crushed ice from the same machine simultaneously.
My father told me..they cut out blocks of ice...from there frozen lake...and covered them with saw dust. Giving them Ice well into summer. Free! Just a lot of labor..and storage in a cellar...or barn.
Hey! I did an internship with a professor in my history department on the history of Anheuser-Busch in Texas, and this topic came up quite a bit and I found your video helpful. To all the ice novices out there, I highly recommend giving it a watch.
I work at a family owned popcorn and ice cream stand open since 1885 in Salem, MA. And they have the saws they used to cut ice blocks with in the winter for the old time walk in freezer. My boss now uses them to keep his ice rink crisp in the winter.
Great video. There’s an excellent Harvard Business School case taught about Tudor (the Ice King). He did quite a bit of innovation in creating insulated ships to carry his ice and insulated buildings to store it. Just down the street from Harvard is “Fresh Pond,” one of many Boston area ponds that were sawn up and stored in ice houses every winter!
The high temperatures here have been in the mid 90s and I must admit that I have enjoyed having refrigerated air conditioning while drinking beverages with ice. I often don't acknowledge the people who have made this level of comfort possible, but none the less, I am truly grateful.
We couldn’t write down all the stuff to be thankful for. We live far better than 99percent of all the kings in history of our race (Adams).
Can you tell me how to refrigerate my airconditioner? It's not cool enough 😉
Mid 90's sound ALmost cool here in Sunny Las Vegas, lol
@@michaelgarwood7076 I agree. I spent three weeks once in the Summer, it was torture 😰
A couple of summers ago, our A/C died in South Georgia while I was traveling in the course of my work. I picked up the part I needed on my trip and installed it myself, potentially saving $500 for the repair. The part was under warranty but the labor would not have been. And the last time I’d hired a H&A guy to work on the A/C he conveniently ignored that the part was warrantied and I wound up paying $600. So I’ve been doing my own ever since.
But they were miserable until I got back.
Modern homes are designed to be heated and cooled by HVAC systems. Before air conditioning became an option in the 1950s and 60s, houses were designed to allow natural air flow. But people didn’t spend as much time in doors then, either, especially during the day time
My dad grew up in the depression. One of his first jobs was delivering ice to people's homes. He always called our refrigerator "the icebox."
I saw an icebox on a ladies porch the other day.
No electrical or mechanical parts.
I remember there being an ice house in Tallahassee, FL that made and sold block ice in the 60's.
My grandma usually did, too. She was born in December of 1929.
My grandfather and many others from the Bari province of Italy delivered ice to people's homes for their iceboxes.
I enjoy looking through old kit home catalogues by Sears and other companies, and it's also interesting to see the effect the icebox, and later refrigerator, had on home design.
My bride's family patented an ice harvester (The Gee Brothers Ice Harvester) made with a giant one cylinder engine and saw blades almost four feet across. This saved many a horse from falling in the lakes during the winter. Unfortunately, home refrigerators were just coming on the scene and they were just a bit late. EDIT: She just reminded me, as recently as ten years ago, one of their ice harvesters were still being used in Canada.
Those single cylinder engines built the modern world, and many run to this day. Out in the oil fields there are still single cylinder engines running from the day they were installed with almost no maintenance.
They were a true marvel imo and deserve an hour episode
My grandfather worked for many years at The American Ice Company in Leavenworth Kansas. They harvested ice off of the adjacent(by Alito's defininition ha!) Missouri River. I wouldn't want to put THAT ice in a drink! As refrigerators started to become popular, the ice business's days were numbered. In a drawer somehere, I still have an old ice pick from his company with slogan "Ice Never Fails" printed on the wood handle. It didn't take long for those early refrigerators to become more reliable than what we can buy today. My grandmother's 1946 GE refrigerator ran without a single repair for 50 years. It had to be defrosted a couple of times/year, and I'm sure it wasn't the model of efficiency, but it was running when we unplugged it and hauled it off. It still had the 2 original lever operated aluminum ice cube trays that still worked perfectly. I still remember running them under cold water for a few seconds and tugging on the the handle to release those big square cubes.
I have my grandpa's ice tongs he used to deliver ice in Louisville, KY ~1900. In my hometown of Glasgow, KY there is a park where I played Little League Baseball that at the time had 2 large shallow ponds adjacent a spring fed creek. Story was water from the creek was pumped into the ponds in winter and blocks of ice would be cut and stored for summer use. When I played baseball there in the 50s & early 60s, a "ice plant" had been built across the creek from the ponds and the ponds were used for public fishing. We went to the ice plant for block ice put in our steel Coca-Cola cooler for summer picnics & 1957 Chevy Station Wagon road trips. We also got chipped ice for the ice cream churn. Memories for sure.
In the late 1950's when I was a kid, there was a local fish plant that still had an ice house, filled with ice harvested from a nearby pond, and covered in sawdust. We kids would sneak in there to cool off on hot summer days.
Reminds me of the movie East of Eden.
I remember going to a camp ground on a lake in Northern Minnesota in the early sixties. I was prolly six. My brother and I was sent off to the ice house to get a block of ice. On the way we saw some toads I picked up one which immediately peed on my hand. The square of ice we got had saw dust on it. So I learned that saw dust kept the ice from melting.
One pound of ice melting has the same cooling effect as lowering one pound of water by 144 deg. F. So in theory one can take one lb of water at 176 deg. and add one lb of ice and it should get down to about 32 deg.
Has a high school student, one of the most sought-after summer jobs was working in the local ice house. I will have to check and see whether People's ice house still exists. Probly not. Thanks for the memory.
The town I come from had an ice house, where the local fishers stored ice harvested from the ponds around the village (I don't know if they imported some after a warm winter). It vent out of business when a cooling tower was build. Now the winters are seldom cold enough to freeze the ponds.
I work every morning 7 days a week and you are the first thing I listen to when my shift is over. Learning random snippets of history has become a daily joy. Thank you History Guy.
Holy fuck, dude. Why work so much???
@@0ThrowawayAccount0 My prediction: Farmer with milk cows.
@@0ThrowawayAccount0 Just remember, vulgar curse words (language) are/is the sign of a weak mind trying to express itself forcefully. Clean it up or shut it up! Thank you.
Maybe (probably) he has a family to support and he doing the best he can.
@@jimbarber9414 I know this is a year old comment, but I really have to make sure someone lets you know that this is an incredibly pretentious view. The idea that someones vocabulary is that indicative of intelligence is classist as can be, and has traditionally been a tool for some pretty nefarious business.
I urge you to consider why and how an idea like that comes about and what purpose and people does it serve.
I refrained some saying fuck and such, despite my kneejerk reaction being to rib you for being a bit of an ass; that wouldve only further cemented your views. (The word "ass" here is used an observation of your behaviour, not simply a baseless jab.)
@@jimbarber9414 ok boomer 🤡
Dude, ice harvesting is a key element in my love of history. I’m from Green Bay, WI, the last place ice was commercially harvested. Up until the late 1990’s, we used to be able to drive trucks across the bay on over a foot of ice every winter. We went out there to ice fish, no we weren’t fishing for ice 😁 In lake Winnebago, they still use big chainsaws to cut large holes to spear sturgeon. That was just so cool to see. The bay never completely freezes up anymore and my son can’t imagine it. Anywho, my love for history… the Nevelle museum in Green Bay has a permanent exhibit on the history of Green Bay from the last ice age. One of the displays has film footage of ice harvesting in the bay in the 1930’s. It went on until the 1960’s. From Green Bay, it was stored in ice houses and in spring thru the summer, the ice could be shipped anywhere in the world thru the Great Lakes and out to the Atlantic without leaving the boat. There was something about that display and especially that film. When I was still in school, I got a job cleaning the floors and such at the museum. I’ve seen that film 100 times. After that, I see something old and wonder. I wonder as much as I can afford…
Do you know why the lake doesn't freeze completely anymore?
@@Genesh12 To split a hair, it's "the Bay", "the lake" is lake Michigan, but it's climate change. If you'd like the full breakdown of the change of climate in north east Wisconsin, let me know. It's a long, sad list
@IStillShower Future humans will look at people like you and laugh or more likely cry. 5000 years ago the Sahara desert was a jungle. Climate change isn't a thing. Change is part of climate.
I found a bunch of old ice handling tools once and wondered who was being tortured.
Ice delivery boys. Their block-spatulas are still used to spank pizza-boys to this day
@@robwaddell7934 Yeah I've seen the Laurel and Hardy and Three Stooges shorts where they deliver ice.
Some are nasty looking tools!
Frosty the snowman is still in therapy to this day!
😂👍 I've seen a few of those old ice handling tools, some most definitely have a certain Medieval look!
In your research for this piece, did you ever come across the Absorption Refrigerator? Look up Ferdinand Carré who patented the device in 1859 (France) and 1860 (USA). It was used to make "artificial ice", and was a major (if not the dominant) cooling mechanism during that period. I understand the device was one of the hot blockade runner items for the South during the Civil War because their sources of "natural ice" from the north were cut off.
The process is based on a thermodynamic cycle called gas absorption. There are a few variations on the theme, but they are all fundamentally heat pumps where a refrigerant is circulated through high and low pressure phases to create cooling (or heating in some cases). The single effect ammonia water gas absorption cycle was the dominant variation of this process and was a (the?) major source of early air conditioning, refrigeration, and of course, ice-making. The process is driven by heat, as opposed to electricity, which is what we're more familiar with for cooling today. But gas absorption cooling extended well into the 20th century: people who had air conditioning in their homes in the early to mid-1900s most likely used gas air conditioners driven by this process. See this old Dinah Shore commercial: th-cam.com/video/S4aiP15EYbs/w-d-xo.html
While electrically powered heat pumps (air conditioners) are now the dominant source of cooling today, the old gas absorption process is still around. It is still used in some limited applications, such as what drives the propane refrigerator in your RV. Today's modern heat pumps are mostly powered by electricity. But don't write this process off: it is on the verge of making a major comeback in surprising ways. ( see www.StoneMountainTechnologies.com for more information ). Full disclosure: I work there, and am involved in developing the technology into a new generation of ultra-high-efficiency building heat devices.
Great video - very informative about the early processes involved in cooling - I had no idea it extended back so far in history. Thank you!
(Scott Reed)
The simplest absorption units were intermittent types similar to the Crosley Icy Ball. There was a heating period and a cooling period. When I was a kid an elderly neighbor described growing up on a dairy farm that had intermittent ammonia absorption units. They were suited for the task. He would wake up before dawn and set the kerosene burner then head off to milk the cows. The refrigerator was ready by the time the milk was collected in a large classic milk pail. The refrigerator would cool it from body temperature to below 40°F on about a quart of kerosene he said. Then they’d send it off to market.
I still use a 1946 Servel gas fridge in the basement too!
It had never occurred to me how easily ice can be produced in very arid climates. I live in humid Florida where swamp coolers do absolutely nothing.
Luckily swamp coolers work where I am in California. Routinely reaching 110'. But 'It's a dry heat' mostly. AC is unaffordable for most in this rural area.
Some 3 or 4 decades ago I watched a PBS show written/narrated by James Burke that covered 80% of this. Thanks History Guy for the additional information. Definitely worth the time to watch!!
"Now I'm here, in Memphis, talking with you. There's ice in my glass." - Cast Away. I always liked that line. It's my favorite from the movie.
As a young feller back during the "war" and even for a year or two after my parents bought ice off a guy who delivered ice for our ice box. No refrigerator until late 40's. Enjoy your videos.
I like the fact that the history guy credits his research sources…
He probably has an academic background.
Of course. He's a real historian and a consummate professional.
@@mikehydropneumatic2583 He does; in his old intro he said he has a degree in history. Probably a bachelors, but even that much teaches you to cite, cite, cite.
Isn't it amazing? You college and high school students take note! You can find these same sources and cite them yourself in research papers. Impress your teachers/professors. Make THG proud. 😊
I believe he was a teacher as well
In the late 1970's and early 1980's before solar panels and battery banks were readily available to power the refrigerator units used today, several of my friends and I would fly into fishing lodges in northern Alberta in the late spring and stock the ice houses of fly in fishing camps.
The ice houses were pretty much as described in the video (dug into the earth and the double log walls were insulated with sawdust. The log walls were chinked with moss).
The ice blocks we cut from the lake and stored in the ice houses would supply the lodges for the entire summer season. We cut the blocks with chainsaws and pulled out the blocks with ice tongs. Big, heavy duty ice tongs! Usually a two man job to pull a block up onto the ice.
Hard work, but we were young men back then and I have many fond memories of those trips! Good times.
Another fascinating story HG. I will always remember Curly from the Three Stooges carrying a large block of ice up the long flight of stairs only to arrive at the top and it is the size of a cube!
And then the Ice Box 😆
That's a hilarious classic. Always remember that.
😅 N'yuk, n'yuk, n'yuk....!✌🏼😎
I was just thinking of that episode.
Great episode! That was truly hard work, back in the day.
Neat video.
I am glad you covered the early Persian ice making systems.
Many other Persian buildings used a similiar process to keep them cool in summer. I first found out from a sustainable building industry magazine.
On another note.
There has been a severe heat wave in the Pacific Northwest. In several other places the electrical grid has been strained.
It is possible that your home or apartment could lose power. Take some precautions to protect your refrigerated and frozen food supplies.
Freeze gallon jugs and bottled water and fill the empty spaces of the freezer.
If the power goes out the extra ice will extend the ability of the freezer to keep food frozen.
You can rotate some of the frozen jugs to the refrigerator and place things in close proximity to keep them cold.
Wrapping a light towel around a frozen 20 oz bottle of water makes a great cold pack.
Also as the ice melts the water is really cold.
Sip on it.
Like drinking off an iceberg.
Yall stay safe and cool.
Having lived in a house in the rain forest as a child with no electricity but with a kerosene powered refrigerator - I can appreciate how important ice can be.
If you've ever lived without it, you'd understand.
I love how your videos elicit so many personal memories from people and add a personal touch to the history you provided. There are some great stories in the comments.
Enjoyed this while icing my (middle aged and cranky) knee. Well played, History Guy!
My grandfather's first job was delivering ice with a horse and wagon. The job had a added bonus that he could collect swill on his route that he could use to feed his pigs.
When my dad was a kid ~1940, people in small town Wisconsin were still saving winter ice through the summer in sawdust lined pits.
My grandmother growing up in rural Manitoba (she was born in 31) had an ice house up until electrification sometime in the 50s. Her dad and brothers cut ice from the nearby creek.
My dad recalled watching ice harvesters on a pond near Fall River when he was a kid. They'd pack the blocks in sawdust and/or hay and it would somehow last all summer. Between the ice box (a terrifying contraption imo) and the cold box on the north-side windowsill, that's all there was when he was growing up.
Very chill episode, nice work
^^^^ 😂 I see what you did there 😂
I couldn't be more happy for you and your lovely wife's success. The free market for information had another Revolution with the internet age. Now people can reward individuals and regular citizens to become their own media operation. Your history channel teaches history not taught in schools today. Many millions around the world are thrilled to learn our past. The reach of The History Guy is growing and will continue. The professionalism of the production, is as good as any legacy media. We continue to root on "THG". In a time
When trusting journalism is low, THG channel has excellent credibility, and trust.
Does he brag in this episode?
I hate that.
Thirteen weeks ago I bought a new refrigerator with an icemaker. The icemaker was backordered, and was just installed today. How very apt a topic HG.
My Dad pointed out where the old "Ice House" was near the lake where I grew up in New Hampshire. It seemed impossible but they'd cut tons of ice off the lake every winter and have enough to sell all summer by packing it in saw dust apparently. Before refrigerators lots of people had "Ice Boxes". Just like a fridge but with a big area at the top for a chunk of ice delivered by the ice men. Imagine that... ice cut off a lake staying frozen all summer without refrigeration. It almost seems magical to me.
Out of curiosity, sir, which lake? My grandfather's operation was mostly on Big Island Pond in Atkinson/Derry NH.
@@peterstickney7608 Newfound Lake near Bristol, friend. I count myself lucky having such a big clean lake to grow up near. It is in the "Lakes Region" of New Hampshire so I'm sure there was no lack of ice for citizens living in the area.
@@thanksfernuthin Out of our area, but I know the Lakes Region well. Newfound Lake is a great place to be around - the whole Lakes Region is a treasure.
It is so n(ice) to be part of a global community that makes such terrible/wonderful puns… and that treats each other so nicely (the actual reason I started writing is the way you are talking to each other).
Remarkable.
If only more of the world behaved this way!
Best regards from Australia.
@@thanksfernuthin As you know, Newfound Lake is the deepest lake in NH, 183 feet deep. The Rockwold Deephaven camps on Squam Lake still use ice harvested there for the ice boxes in the cabins.
Wow, we take so many things for granted in the modern world. Great topic on a Hot day👍
When I read " The history of ice " I thought the history guy ran out of history to talk about.
I remember seeing pictures from old Cincinnati of ice workers pulling slabs out of the canal that used to run through town (now Central Parkway). BLECHHHH!!
Probably from the Ohio river too!
YUCK!😝
@@michaelwalton7066 I remember watching (with my mother) people walking across the Ohio River during the winter of 1978 (I think). This at Louisville, down from Cincinnati.
Yeah, man! And we wonder why cancer rates are so high...
In 1970 as young boy on fishing trip to Canada, I remember they still were using ice blocks cut from the lake in winter and stored in ice houses for summertime uses.
My grandfather worked as a stationary engineer at an ice plant in Chicago. It apparently paid a decent salary, and he was employed steadily through the great depression.
I can't imagine tea or lemonade without ice, especially in the summer!☃️
ewe... that's not tea....
Excellent video as always, sir. A bit unexpected as a resident of Apalachicola to hear us get mentioned! The John Gorrie historic house, the Ice Machine museum, and the yellow fever cemeteries are important parts of this area's nearly forgotten history. Glad to see we're not the only ones who remember. 😀 Hats off, and bravo.
When I was a kid, in the late 50's and early 60's they still had a big ice-house in East Troy Wisconsin. Blocks were cut from lakes and stored in a huge barn insulated with hay. My dad had several big cookouts every summer where horse troughs filled with block ice, soda, beer and bottles of champagne stayed cold all day.
Who else is addicted to The History Guy?
I am old enough to remember the Ice Man and his horse drawn wagon delivering to my house in the City of Los Angeles Ca. At that young age I wanted to be an Ice Man because of the horse. My parents purchased a Refrigerator before I entered Kindergarten, and used until it was unrepairable some 30 years later.
Room for two ice trays and a quart of Ice Cream.
Sometimes I miss those old refrigerators (where the cooling apparatus was mostly contained in the "freezer" portion) but the new ones are so much better and more efficient.
those coolers at 02:40 resemble termite mounds - which also mitigate heat for the colonies inside. Curious if that was adapted or if there was any info gleaned from that source (or if it was a mere coincidence). It's also amusing that there's still a 'gourmet' ice collecting business for iceberg sourced ice.
All those outside the USA (and parts of Canada)…are saying “What is this fascination with ice in beverage???” As a frequent traveler (pre-pandemic) for work…iced beverages are one of the first things I want when I return home!
Outside the USA & Canada this video just left viewers cold I suppose?
Lucas was an English company that made motorcycle
Electrics ,,not very good ones either,,
The joke in England was the poor refrigeration was also
Made by Lucas
Thanks, H-G! 2 side-stories. I and an old friend from Peoria were talking about the subject. A Dr. In Tallahassee, Dr Carrier, had a number of Tuberculosis patients whose only relief was to move to a warmer climate. He fashioned an air-cooled cottage for them which eventually morphed into Air-Conditioning, so it is told. Also, an enterprising off-shore barge-Captain who regularly came South to Florida during the heyday of Flagler, Barnum, Deering and the like, saw a market for cool, iced drink. So he pulled frozen slabs of ice, packed it in sawdust wrapped in canvas and brought it down. Made his fortune. Must've been cleaner in those days! Lastly, the Peoria deep-sea fisherman said there was a time when a person could get off of a boat in the Bahamas and hold out a bag of ice and before it would melt, it was sold!
Each history guy video I always find myself saying "who knew this totally uninteresting topic can be so interesting", and that is why I subscribed to this channel in the first place
Exactly!!!
I often thought the term “iceberg lettuce” was used because the round shape of the lettuces head but it came from the method of packing the rail cars full of lettuce with ice to transport it from California to NY!
I fact checked this claim because of, you know, this being the Internet and found this claim to be true! And I also found out that lettuce has mild narcotic properties! Link that backup the claim of the ice part of the name:
www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/tip-of-the-iceberg-our-love-hate-relationship-with-the-nations-blandest-vegetable-9074175/
@@Apeshaft "True" in the sense that most websites repeat it - is there any prima facie evidence though?
@@Nastyswimmer I'm going to cunsult three experts and get back to you! Ice-T, Ice Cube and you know, the other one too, I guess? The three Ice men will also bring us gifts, I hope? Anyway, BRB!
@@Nastyswimmer : I can tell you that the description of the cooling method is false. Before the adoption of mechanical refrigeration, refrigerator cars used ice, yes, but it was kept in bunkers at the ends of the car (or at the top in the case of some very early cars), with later designs circulating air through the car with electric fans driven by small generators that ran off the car's wheels.
There was a service called "top icing" that was used to moisturize some kinds of perishable agricultural loads. A thin layer of ice (about 2 inches) was spread over the top portions of the load (actually they used a blower), but it required a lot of extra ice, which was dead weight (any weight that isn't lading is), and it didn't even work that well, so they stopped doing it.
The linked article has several key inaccuracies:
-The article claims this ice packing was done before the refrigerator car was invented. If iceberg lettuce was introduced in the late 1940s, it was introduced about 100 years after the advent of the refrigerator car.
-As I noted before, ice was not piled on top of the lading, it was kept in bunkers at the car ends. -Again, top icing was a practice, but ice was not packed in the boxes. Only a thin layer (about 2 inches) was spread over the top.
In fact, this article found other inconsistencies in that story, namely, that it's been called iceberg lettuce since the 1890s:
blog.angelatung.com/2012/04/14/lying-about-lettuce/
The story seems to be a fabrication of some corporation's marketing department (especially since it describes a shipping practice that never happened). I tend to side with the article I link above - nobody really knows.
I remember the milkman would leave the blocks of ice on the curb. It was a great attraction to all the kids in the neighborhood.
I remember "stealing" ice out of the milk truck.
I believe that. I buy bag ice regularly and my red heeler puppy loves to get some.
THG sipping his drink with a resounding and satisfied "Ah!" So corny, so welcome and expected. Well played sir!
The little smile at the side of his mouth. Trying not to smile....
Another of the many things that are under-appreciated today.
agreed
My family were ice dealers in Chicago cut from frozen lake Michigan in the 1920's. They supplied rail cars loaded with meat from the stockyards, theaters and commerical buildings for air conditioning and households with a wagon and a horse named Tom. My grandfather in retirement said he was an iceman but now is a nice man. 😊
I was just looking at the picture of ice cutting using horses at 10:14.
Horse poop & urine must've been a real problem! I think i'd've checked the delivery very closely before it was slid down into my icehouse!
"Don't use the yellow ice & no, they aren't dried figs!" 😆
My great, great grandfather had a 3 masted schooner in Boston. He delivered ice to the Bahamas and came back with molasses and sugar. Not sure if he worked for Tudor.
As the fleet manager of one of the largest ice companies in North America, I appreciate this video
I grew up in the Adirondacks, where there was once a lot of iron mining. I don't know if it's still done, but one mine in particular supplied a lot of cheap ice for keg parties over the years.
I moved back to Haiti 🇭🇹 few years ago and those huge blocks are what most people buy. Trucks will deliver it to people or they come pick it up and the resell it to the people. I sometimes buy the bags from the market but a big chunk of ice last longer in the igloo. It was crazy seeing it but now I’m use to it.
To help insulate your igloo.
Make a liner from a couple of those bubble foil reflectors for car windows and duct tape.
This will add an additional layer of insulation to an igloo.
@@shawnr771 Thanks I’ll do that
@@livinghaiti1098 Here is a link to the guy I got it from.
th-cam.com/video/SKO-oopGvfQ/w-d-xo.html
In single digit humidity I would get a 30° temperature difference between my house in Phx AZ with 110° temp outside using an evaporative coole and an oscillating fan to move air around. 80° feels surprisingly comfortable when it's that hot outside.
And my electric bill was ridiculously low.
What would you do during monsoon season?
@@V.Hansen.
A/C and fans!
My great grandfather delivered ice in NYC in the early 1900's. It was told to us that he was one of the first to use a gas powered delivery truck! Love this channel
Thank you for this. I always wondered what the heck people did before modern refrigeration.
I truly love this guy.he can take something as simple as ice and make it fascinating👍👍👍❤❤❤
I absolutely love how you make something that seems mundane and everyday feel extraordinary ❤️
It would be interesting to see an episode on the American Icehouse, a long-forgotten business. Initially they were designed to only store ice, but in many towns, they also became the local bar and hangout. They were the only place in the summer to get cold beer or other drinks, so many icehouse owners opened them up to the public. They were gathering places for towns and often they were the morgue (the only place to store a body). Many of these buildings are still in existence across America. My favorite is in Punta Gorda Florida. It's actually called the Ice House Pub. The buildings walls are about four feet thick, built of brick and the building is about four stories tall, designed to move the heat from the ice. The social aspects of the Icehouse is history that deserves to be remembered.
There are still people in our town that worked for the local ice house. I live along the Mississippi River in Wisconsin, and they cut ice from the river around here and stored it all summer. We also have ice caves in the area that have ice in them naturally year-round. There are plants that grow near their mouths that are only found in the artic and here.
One of the biggest businesses in the rural Idaho town when I was growing up was the Feed and Ice company. Didn’t think much of it then, but learned some interesting things as I got older. The ice was made in big blocks in rectangular sheet metal cans using liquid ammonia as the coolant. The huge ice blocks were used to cool spud cellars. Grandpa had one on his farm. The spud cellar was a sunken structure with a roof of straw bales covered over with earth. The empty spud cellar was cool year round by itself. The ice would have cooled the spuds stored there.
Ice machine technician here for the ice history!
Hobbyist ice machine technician here. Well, just the guy who's willing to "give it a go" on whatever is needing attention in a small business.
Any advice on an Indigo (R404A) that keeps detecting full bin? Magnet/sensor on the curtain?
I was working on that as yesterday met today but I didn't expect to be asking for advice here!
@@matthewellisor5835 Google your model number and "service manual" manitowoc has really good diag write ups in thir manuals.
👍🏼Stay cool! 😎✌🏼
I have done some preventative maintenance on some commercial ice machines and the worst part of it is seeing the slime come out of the water pan.
@@robertoswalt319 Even though we clean it weekly and more often in summer-time, it's still disturbing seeing the gunk that lives on it.
My dad still calls a refrigerator an "ice box". Our ice came from places like Boca Reservoir via the Transcontinental Railroad before refrigerators.
At my sister's wedding , we chilled her wine, in a cave with a spring that ran thru the back. It was 90 degrees, we checked the wine after four hours, and it was starting to freeze. Lol , cool Mountain spring water.
Common in rural hills - the Spring House was used, not only as a source of drinking water, but to store milk, butter, cheese, meats, and drinks to be served cold. These huts had roofs to keep out debris, a shelf above the waterline to store food, and sometimes hooks from the overhead beams to hang meat and cheese.
Yes. We always called in the cave. Built into the side of a mountain. Thirty feet deep and twelve feet wide. Lined with shelves and a trough at the end, with the spring running thru it. A cool drink in the hottest days. Built for the Mann family, of axe makers. A large and wealthy family.
What year?
1975
My father, his brothers, and some of their friends were some of the last Ice Harvesters in Southern New Hampshire, cutting ice until the late 1940s. My family had been harvesting ice since roughly 1920. It's interesting to note that at a time when we had developed nuclear power, supersonic flight, and were preparing for space travel, that we were still cutting ice as we had for more than a century.
What is fascinating about transporting the ice such long distances in sailing ships was that the chips themselves did not require special construction or preparation. The ability to cut the ice into large, uniform blocks, insulated between layers, and packed closely in the holds kept the ice from melting, and, perhaps more importantly, the load from shifting in heavy weather - loose ice could easily capsize a ship, or even punch through the hull.
While rural electrification spread the use of mechanical refrigerators, there are no-moving parts systems that require just an external heat source. They are in use today in RVs, and in remote locations where electric power is generally not available.
Albert Einstein and Leo Szilard invented a non-electrical refrigerator in the 1920s. Their design is still in use in systems like nuclear reactor cooling systems, where simplicity and reliability are paramount. (That story may be history that's worth remembering.)
Very interesting experiences your family had! By the way, one of the innovations the Ice King was responsible for was making double-walled hulls on his ships to transport ice; he filled the space between the wall/hull with straw to insulate the ice en route to India.
There are lava tubes in New Mexico (and probably elsewhere) that have ice in them even in the heat of summer.
Really? Sounds interesting!
@@nickraschke4737 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandera_Volcano_Ice_Cave I've been there. I believe there are others as well.
@@stevedietrich8936 gosh. That’s amazing. Thank you!
Many in Idaho.
Nice and cool.down in those caves. The green ice looks neat. It's interesting to hear that they don't know how they exists. There are theories but none are totally agreed on.
I remember learning about John Gory because, as a Floridian, he was one of our state’s statues in Washington, DC. Even though he was cheated out of his fair recompense, he’s still a hero for me. He began developing a cooling machine to save the lives of his patients with yellow fever in Florida, noticing that patients in cooler temperatures healed better and faster, and with cooled air, there were less deaths. And from there, we Floridians and everyone else who enjoys air conditioning, have benefited from his design. He’s a hero to me every time I walked into an air conditioned building from our 90+ degree temperatures!
You could do a whole episode just about all the things that have been invented by Scotland!
Scotch????👍🥃
telephone
Technically Kelvin was Irish and Ulsterman of Scottish parents
Golf?
@John Barber Touché
3:00 The really amazing thing to me is, such buildings would have to be deliberately designed to produce this effect.
You might design a building that provides some cooling by accident, but then, how do you improve the design to make the effect stronger.
You'd need to have an understanding of what parts of the accidental design worked to create the cooling effect and for that you'd need an understanding of how evaporative cooling actually worked.
I remember visiting Scotty's Castle in Death Valley. Most of the rooms in the house had these little water falls, fountains that allowed a thin sheet of water to trickle over a tile surface on the wall. These fountains would cool the room with evaporative cooling. They were quite effective.
Keep up the good work THG!!!
finally a history guy with a pleasant voice and just the right tempo.
Does anyone else find it ironic that by making these videos, the History Guy is cementing his own place in history? Keep up the good work mate
That's not what irony is.
@@bkbj8282 Wikipedia defines irony as "what on the surface appears to be the case or to be expected differs radically from what is actually the case".
On the surface it appears that History guy talks about historical people. The irony is that by doing this he himself is becoming part of history. I think it fits the definition well enough.
Noone likes a smart alec anyway
I do think about that.
Cheers! Another interesting one, thanks.
The first refrigerator (complete with a tiny ice maker) in our family was bought by my parents when I was born in 1955. It was in fact gas powered but converted to electricity later.
Fascinating history. Now I'm gonna have to research those Persian evaporative coolers.
They are called Yakhchāl, and several examples still exist.
I heard about them from a sustainable building project magazine.
The building was going to use some of the same principles to maintain the internal temperatures.
One of the reasons they quit being used was the introduction of contaminants into the ice such as sand.
The book Racing Alone was where I first learned of desert cooling and freezing systems. Worth a read.
My wife's grandfather had the icebox that we still have in our living room. It's a gorgeous piece of work in oak with cast (Bronze?) latches and hinges. We use it for storing CDs, DVDs and digital media. First time over, our guests always point at it with the "what's that?" question. THG explains much better than we ever could!
Around 1958, I was in third grade and read a story called "Hot as Summer, Cold as Winter." The short version is that a bored prince ordered his staff to come up with something to present to him that was "hot as summer and cold as winter." The staff presented him with a hot-fudge sundae.
I also read that story! about the same time I think too
I used to run a Victorian house museum; on tours, when grandparents saw the icebox in the kitchen, they loved to share the stories of growing up with ice delivery to the grandkids they brought with them. I pretty much let them lead the kitchen tour, since they had seen it all!
I’m impressed that ice could be form outta evaporative cooling at all. Ian’s I was under the falsehood that coolers were invented using ammonia.
Dr Gorrie's icemaker did use ammonia. It is still listed as a refrigerant R717.
Well it's going to kill a lot of people who's been worried what the pyramids were for when it comes to find out they were nothing but elaborate ice machine, 😂
If you put a styrofoam cup of water under a bell jar and turn on the vacuum pump, the water will start to boil at low temperature and you can see the vapor leaving the water. As you continue running the vacuum pump the water gets colder and in a flash turns to ice. I was surprised the first time I saw the demonstration.
A fun science experiment with a kid is to put a bowl of water outside on a chilly, clear night. Like lows in the upper 30s. And go out and see how much ice is on it, even though it didn't get below freezing.
There's ways to set it up to maximize success, and maybe have the kid try to come up with his/her own way to get the most amount of ice. Have them set up multiple experiments in one night, and weigh the results.
This got me thinking of the Crosley icyball.
I made one when I was in my early teens. I don't know what happened to it.
::Sarcastic Voice:: "Great! Now I need to make a new one."
Great episode! James Harrison invented his mechanical refrigerator in my home town of Geelong, Victoria, Australia. One of his original machines sits on display Deakin University where I studied (sadly not well preserved). He is well celebrated in Geelong for his many achievements , with a major bridge named in is honour.
I read somewhere that Albert Einstein and Leo Szilard patented a method of making ice with methanol. It worked fairly well but the increased demand for methanol for other purposes raised the price until it became uneconomical.
Yes you can look up the design online.
I have seen the illustrations of the device.
Almost any gas can be used. Some are more efficient and safer than the others.
@@shawnr771 Indeed. I used to have a camper, and the refrigerator inside was cooled with propane. Ingenious, considering you already carry a tank of the stuff to run the stove and furnace.
Cool.
3:54 If you take a digital spot thermometer, and point it up at the clear sky, you will find that the sky is quite a bit colder than you'd expect. It's usually quite far below the freezing point. If you point at a cloudy section of the sky, you'll find the cloud produces an insulating effect, and is much closer to the ambient ground temperature. This is why it's important protect yourself from exposure by getting underneath some sort of shelter if you're ever lost in the wilderness.
This was truly great to see on a 95° day, and I bless Mr Carrier and all of his descendants for commercializing air conditioning.
Cold beverages of any kind in the middle on a scorching hot day in the middle of summer is an almost indescribable pleasure that we take for granted. But during a power outage on a hot humid day and suddenly air conditioning and refrigeration become priceless commodities.
There are advantages of cutting blocks of ice from a lake though, it is very hard to get totally clear ice from a refrigerator.
Dave Arnold explains the process and how to actually make clear ice in his book "Liquid intelligence", I recommend it.
However, while I did bother to make some really clear ice it was more work then it was worth even if it made a GT look extra awesome.
The existing market for natural ice is for ice sculptures, because the ice is so clear.
@@BruceLortzHI The thing is that ice naturally freezes from above on a lake and it tend to push all gas and other junk below making it crystal clear.
When you freeze ice cubes it freezes from all around, trapping any gas (and whatever else you have in your tapwater) in the middle, giving you that ugly thing in the middle.
Now, if you isolate everything but the top the ice get clear but not all the way, you will still have to cut away the bottom of the cube to have it really clear.
There are professional places that make ice this way but I am not sure how LG get the pollutants out of the water.
Ice is certainly nice (it is really hot here today) and I am going to use it for a drink soon. :)
@@BruceLortzHI That makes sense, if you can filter out any pollutants and gas and freeze it slowly it would get pretty clear.
Still, I used more then 3 2" cubes today already by myself so I don't think it is a perfect solution, you have to save up quite a lot for a cocktail party.
Ice is pretty fascinating and I don't want to live without it during summer days like this. Well, I guess I could buy an AC but I live so far up north that the idea seems a bit ludicrous to me.
@@loke6664 Boiling water drives out dissolved gasses. Don't know if LG boils the water before it freezes.
@@pauleohl It does but if you stick in hot water and cool it down fast you still get a really muddy ice cube.
Boiling or just having really warm water and first let it cool down in room temperature before freezing it do help but it still wont get totally clear.
What I did instead was taking a large square form about 3" deep and isolate it on the sides and bottom. Once it freezes the top 2" will actually get perfectly clear, the problem is that I have to first cut away the last " and then cut them into squares.
That is a whole lot of work but work it does and I didn't boil it first, it is possible that there would be less to cut away then.
Great historical facts to know. I think this should be shown at our schools for modern design. Great information. Thank you very much.
This episode is so well researched, it gave me chills!
I recently moved to the Kennebec River Valley in Maine. The ice industry is part of history here.
We all know that Dr. Emmitt Brown was the first to create a machine that produced cubes of ice, after his strange involvement with the McFly family.
I'm an hvac technician. The ability to control pressure to create temperature differences is a fascinating story. Some of the brightest minds in history contributed to it. Newton, Faraday, Edison, Tesla, even Einstein. Every day I stand on the shoulders of those people and try really hard to understand it.
I’m in my 50’s, and my great grandpa was known as the ice man where he was from in Texas. He used to pull a ice wagon with a team of horses around town. My brother has some of his ice bags and tongs. He worked into his 70’s and toward the end of his career there was a featured article in the newspaper about him titled, “The Ice Man Cometh”, detailing his daily life. I’ll never forget him and my great grandma. They retired, then fished and “worked” in their vegetable garden well into their 90’s.
I know a descendant of Tudor. The family is proud of their connection to this innovative entrepreneur!
What is an ice bag?
I was very happy with this addition on Ice. My childhood was full of 'Ice Houses' in Long Island , NY. Every pond or lake had it's ice house at it's shores. By the 1950's these were subject to disuse, vandalism, and fires. My Dad was the fire chief and I could ride along to the latest ' big blaze' of the past night. Because of the insolation being saw dust, these ice houses would flare up again and again. So much so that it caused me to be turned to 'ice making' and 'solar heating'.
When I was a kid people still called refrigerators "Ice Boxes." Ice used to be delivered to houses in large blocks and the block was put in the top of an icebox. as the ice melted the chilled air would go down in the box it would cool whatever was put in it. My Dad worked in an ice house in the 1940s before he enlisted in the Marines. When I was a kid we bought ice in blocks or cubes from the ice house where we lived.
We will likely do a separate episode on the history of refrigeration.
@@TheHistoryGuyChannel I will be looking forward to that.
@@TheHistoryGuyChannel please do! It'll be as cool a topic as this video.
Thank you so much, HG, for always bringing me fascinating and compelling stories. Your voice means I’m going to learn something new that day, and is a great comfort for this old man.
Ohhhhh Lance, if ever there was "history worth being remembered," this is it! Great video! As a resident of the Gulf Coast, I'm familiar with the Gorrie Museum in Apalachicola - and his invention - which was intended to provide cool air for the sufferers of yellow fever. So he really invented two things: Air conditioning and the ice machine!
Back then, there were "ice cartels" similar to the oil cartels of the 1980's. The smear campaign against Dr. Gorrie was effective. Even the New York Times ran a scoffing article about Dr. Gorrie with the headline, "Only God Can Make Ice." Which wasn't true, of course. As you mentioned, Dr. Gorrie died broke and humiliated. His patents expired, later to be picked up as the air conditioning industry took off.
Every time we drink a frozen margarita down here (which we do a lot!), we toast to our hero, Dr. John Gorrie, who made it all possible.
I live in Nicaragua. As an American expat I have a refrigerator and freezer. Many down here do not. 1 liter blocks of ice can still be commonly found sold in the local Pulperia or convenience type store operated out of people’s home. Most neighborhoods, even the poorest, usually have a pulperia and there they buy “homemade” block ice.
Such a COOL piece of history!
🤦♂️This comment hurts. I better put some ice on it. Ice❄️ 💍
That's chilling.
@@HM2SGT Chill Out Bro! 😎
I-ceeeee!!! 👁
@@lachlanwelsh5880 brain freeze
As a HVAC and Commercial Refrigration guy I find this most interesting. Having a lot of experience with commercial ice making equipment since 1975 and seeing the progress of ice making and freezers.
Though all manufacturers of ice making equipment do the same task of making ice and the process is the same each equipment design is different.
Whether it’s flaked, crushed, small cubes or large cubes.
Ice is now a big business especially in warmer climates like where I’m at. People often it for granted. Large ice making plants supply many markets and newer machines in supermarkets make and bag ice mechanically. One particular machine even makes both cubed and crushed ice from the same machine simultaneously.
My father told me..they cut out blocks of ice...from there frozen lake...and covered them with saw dust. Giving them Ice well into summer. Free! Just a lot of labor..and storage in a cellar...or barn.
Minnesota circa 1930’s.
My Dad said having ice cream long into summer depended on how long the ice lasted. N. Dak.
Hey! I did an internship with a professor in my history department on the history of Anheuser-Busch in Texas, and this topic came up quite a bit and I found your video helpful. To all the ice novices out there, I highly recommend giving it a watch.
Refrigerated air and ice makers are the only reason people are living in Phoenix now.
Natives inhabited that region for centuries before colonialism
I work at a family owned popcorn and ice cream stand open since 1885 in Salem, MA. And they have the saws they used to cut ice blocks with in the winter for the old time walk in freezer. My boss now uses them to keep his ice rink crisp in the winter.
I have slept many nights on the ground in deserts and awakened with frost on my sleeping bag.
Great video. There’s an excellent Harvard Business School case taught about Tudor (the Ice King). He did quite a bit of innovation in creating insulated ships to carry his ice and insulated buildings to store it. Just down the street from Harvard is “Fresh Pond,” one of many Boston area ponds that were sawn up and stored in ice houses every winter!