Smith Brothers Throat Drop are a tasty lozenge-shaped
confection perfect for soothing your throat or simply enjoying as a
hard candy treat.
The classic packaging portrays one of the world’s
most famous trademarks - two bearded gentlemen. Known for
generations as Trade and
Mark Smith, the brothers did in fact really exist. Their names were William
(Trade) and Andrew (Mark) Smith.
Their father, one James Smith, had moved to Poughkeepsie, New
York from St. Armand, Quebec in
1847 to establish a restaurant. The legend of the story of the birth of the first cough drop
tells of a peddler stopping at the Smith restaurant and giving James the formula for
the cough
candy. James believed that the drops were needed in
the cold, windswept Hudson Valley and began making them on his kitchen stove.
The
drops were a big success and demand for them grew quickly.
By
1852, advertising began to appear in the
Poughkeepsie paper. It invited "all afflicted with
hoarseness, cough or colds" to test it.
Active in the business from the start, the brothers helped
mix the secret recipe and sold drops on the streets. Upon
James' death in 1866, the boys inherited
the fast growing business and the
company officially became known as Smith Brothers.
As sales grew, success was met with imitators. They decided to place their own pictures on their packaging.
At that time, this consisted of counter top glass bowls for display and small
envelopes into
which the merchant would package the sale.
This procedure had limitations in that there was no assurance
that the storekeeper would actually use true Smith Brothers
drops.
In 1872, to address issues of hygiene and fraud, they
developed one of the first factory filled packages. By chance, the word "Trade" appeared under the picture of William and the word "Mark" under
that of Andrew. Thus, it happened by a mere coincidence that the
famous Smith Brothers’ trademark was born and the Smith Brothers
became known to generations of Americans as Trade and Mark.
Andrew
(Mark) died in 1895. William (Trade) continued as president
of the company almost up to his death in
1913. He was
succeeded by his son, Arthur G. Smith, continued to grow the
company by adding Menthol drops (1922), a cough syrup (1926) and the famous Smith Brothers Wild
Cherry Flavor (1948). Arthur had two sons, William W.
Smith, II and
Robert. They carried on as the fourth generation of Smiths
to run the
company but sold out to pharmaceutical giant
Warner-Lambert in
1963.
F & F Foods, Inc. of Chicago acquired Smith Brothers
in 1977 and have thankfully been keeping this classic product alive ever
since. Each nostalgic styled box is 3/4" x 2" x 4",
contains about 14 drops, and is wrapped in a
cellophane / plastic covering. Perfect for purse or
pocket.