Chewing Gum: Everything You Wanted to Know

During the 1960’s, a popular song asked, “Does your chewing gum loose its flavor on the bedpost overnight?” If you were living prior to 1880, the answer would have been “Yes!” Thanks to William White who solved the flavor problem in 1880, today’s chewing gum holds its flavor.

History of Gum

Since prehistoric times, people have chewed gum as evidence shows our ancestors chewed tree resin for enjoyment. Greek cultures chewed resin form the mastic tree to freshen their breath. The ancient Mayans chewed chicle sap from the Sapodilla tree that is the forerunner for today’s modern chewing gum.

Spruce tree resin and beeswax were popular to chew by the Native Americans and the early settlers. In 1848, John Curtis made the State of Maine Spruce Chewing Gum using the resin from the spruce tree. The gum was sold in lots of two hunks for a penny. Later, paraffin wax replaced spruce as a base for gum. William Semple was granted the first patent for chewing gum in 1850.

In 1880, Santa Anna sent his friend, an inventor named Thomas Adams, some chicle sap from Mexico. Adams and Santa Anna were trying to find a way to make money by using the chicle sap. Adams tried mixing it with rubber to make a better tire; however, he decided the mixture was useless. When he overheard someone ask for gum while he was in a drug store, he tried using just the chicle sap to make chewing gum. He created Black Jack Gum which was licorice flavored and was hugely popular. This was the first gum to be sold in sticks. The only problem was that the flavor could not be maintained.

While experimenting with adding corn syrup and sugar to the chicle gum, William White, an employee of Adams, found the solution to the flavor problem. He added peppermint flavor and it did stay on the gum. In 1888, Adams’ gum, Tutti-Frutti, became the first gum sold in vending machines found in the New York subway system.

In the 1900’s, William Wrigley promoted chewing gum by advertising on billboards and newspapers. His sale of spearmint gum surged. Today, to grow the mint that Wrigley’s needs for its mint flavored gums, it would take 53 square miles of farmland. That equals about 30,550 football fields. All the spearmint grown for Wrigley’s gum is grown in the United States. If each stick of gum that is produced annually was laid end to end, it would circle the world 19 times.

During WW II, chewing gum, believed to reduce tension, promote alertness and improve morale, was used by soldiers and its use spread around the world. Sugar free and sugarless gums were added in the 1950’s. Today, sales of sugarless gums outsell regular.

According to The Chewing Gum Book by Robert Young, studies have indicated that gun chewing relieves stress. Some people use gum to try to break bad habits such as smoking or overeating. And did you know that detectives can identify a suspect by matching chewed gum with dental records?

Bubble Gum

The first bubble gum, called Blibbler Blubber was never sold by its inventor Frank Fleer. However, an employee of the Fleer Company, Walter Diemer, perfected bubble gum when he was experimenting with different gum recipes. Bubble gum is pink because the manufacture only had that color available. The color was popular so most bubble gum today remains pink. The Fleer Company mass produced this form of chewing gum under the name of Dubble Bubble. People were taught by salesmen how to blow bubbles.

After WW II, The Topps Company added Bazooka bubble gum with “Bazooka Joe” comics. In 1953, the company added baseball cards packaged with the bubble gum.

How to blow a bigger bubble:

Chew gum until the sugar is gone as sugar will not stretch.

How is Chewing Gum Made?

Every type and brand of chewing gum has a specific recipe. All gums use a base either a resin from tropical trees, wax or synthetic products. Sugar, corn syrup, and flavoring are added. These secrets are carefully guarded by manufacturing companies. Ingredients are heated until the mixture is thick like maple syrup. Sorbitol, mannitol or other sweeteners are added to make sugarless gum. The liquid then is cooled and goes through a roller to flatten it for stick gum. Coated gum has an additional process of being cut and then coated with powdered sugar. It sits for 48 hours prior to being candy coated.

Gum Trivia

In 1994, Susan Montgomery Williams blew the largest bubble on record with a diameter of 23 inches.

Gary Duschl of Virginia holds the Guinness World Record for the longest gum wrapper chain. On March 11, 1965 the official length was measured at 46, 053 feet using 1,076, 656 gum wrappers. He continues to add to this chain and on July 11, 2005, the chain was 46, 733 feet using 1,092, 996 wrappers. Duschl began his wrapper in 1965.
It takes 50 wrappers to make one foot of chain.

Steve Fletcher holds the record for the largest gum wrapper collection with 5,300 packets.

The largest piece of chewing gum produced was equal to 10,000 pieces of gum. This was presented to baseball’s Willie Mays in 1974.

Cinnamon, spearmint and peppermint are the most popular flavors.

One half billion dollars is spent on chewing gum per year by North American kids.

The average American chews 300 sticks of gum per year. The age group of 12 -24 chews more gum than any other.

Of the 20 manufacturers of gum in the United States, Wrigley is the largest. The country with the most gum manufacturers is Turkey which has more than 60 companies.

It does not take 7 years for swallowed gum to pass through the human digestive system. If swallowed, the indigestible ingredients take the same amount of time to pass through the digestive system as any other food that is eaten. Gum is made with indigestible ingredients and should not be swallowed.

Why Do We Chew?

Modern psychologists state that the tendency to chew begins in infancy with the urge to suckle milk or a pacifier. As we grow, we substitute a thumb, blade of grass, a piece of hay, or pencils. Eventually, a better substitute, good flavored chewing gum, was created.

Top Ten Benefits of Chewing Gum

Relieves tension and stress
Relaxing
Freshens breath
Helps one to resist the urge to smoke
Moistens a dry mouth
Reduces ear discomfort when flying
Satisfies snack cravings
Cleans teeth after meals
Tastes good and has only a few calories
And the #1 reason: It’s fun!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


two × 4 =