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1925: Hoagie Rolls
into County History
Delaware County TODAY©
You may not believe this but a gambler was responsible for the
creation of the Hoagie in my mother and father's grocery at 1212
W. 3rd Street in Chester's West End.
There was a pool hall about four doors up the street from Mom's
store and a group of gamblers held card games there from Thursday
thru Sunday every week.
One summer afternoon back in 1925 one of the men who cut the game
decided to take a break and he walked into the store to get a pack
of cigarettes.
MOM WAS COOKING in the back kitchen and the aroma penetrated throughout
the store.
The aroma apparently whet the man's appetite and he asked Mom if
she would make him a sandwich.
"OK, pick out what kind of lunchmeat you want," she said.
He looked into the case and with an Italian hand waving gesture
said:
"Put everything you have in the case on it."
Mom took a long loaf of Vienna bread, sliced it lengthwise and
proceeded to put on all of the lunchmeats.
INCLUDED were Proscuitto, Capicola, Salami, Hamcudighino, and Provolone
cheese. She also cut a tomato and onion and wet the roll down with
olive oil and sprinkled it with oregano and salt.
"What are you cooking that smells so good?" The hungry
gambler asked.
"I'm frying sweet and hot peppers," she replied and without
asking she put a few pieces of the pepper on the sandwich.
He left and an hour later the place was filled with hungry gamblers
asking for a sandwich. Mom sold out of everything that day. It was
the beginning of a new creation, soon to become known as the Hoagie.
THE NEXT DAY Mom went to Earo's Bakery, a shop in the basement
of the Earo home at 3rd and Broomall Streets. All bread then was
hand-rolled and cooked in a brick hearth oven and Mom asked the
baker to make a special roll one foot long and two inches wide.
She then started making Hoagies on her specially designed roll
not only for the gamblers but everyone else in the neighborhood.
The depression was on and not too many people could afford the
25¢ she
charged but for those fortunate to buy one, it was considered a
banquet. There was enough on the sandwich to feed four people.
IN 1932 with the war in Europe brewing, the
country started to slowly come out of the depression. Railroads
were moving again, the yarn mills were spinning the reels, the Ford
plant was making cars, and industry in general was on the upswing.
By word of mouth, workers heard of the Hoagie
and began buying them for their lunches. Some took them to their
jobs in Delaware, New Jersey, and Philadelphia. The Hoagies were
very popular with the many men working on the railroads at the time.
WAR BROKE OUT in Europe in 1939 and the draft
started in 1940, bringing service men into town looking for a Hoagie.
Mom's business was doing great. She had two
sons Joseph & John and four daughters Polly,
Anna, Rose, and myself. All of us made sandwiches which were still
25¢ for a large with Proscuitto costing 10¢ more. Eventually
Mom had a smaller roll made for the 15¢ sandwich and on Friday
she had Tuna Hoagie Specials.
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