Shane Confectionery
{{Short description|American confectioner in Philadelphia}}
File:Shane Confectionery - Philadelphia.jpg
File:Ryan Berley Pouring Candy Molds CHF-First-Friday-December-2012-011.JPG]]
{{external media | width = 210px | float = right | headerimage= | video1 = [https://www.marthastewart.com/969056/shane-confectionery “Shane Confectionery”], Martha Stewart Living}}
Shane Confectionery is an American candy shop and candy producer, located at 110 Market Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.{{cite news|last1=Lidz|first1=Franz|title=America's Oldest Sweet Shop Gets a Hipster Makeover|url=http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/americas-oldest-sweet-shop-gets-a-hipster-makeover-74097295/|accessdate=27 April 2018|work=Smithsonian|date=June 2013}}
Currently owned by Ryan and Eric Berley, it is considered the longest-running confectionery business in the United States. The original confectionery business at the location opened in 1863.{{cite journal|title=Heritage Sweets|journal=Martha Stewart Living|date=2013|volume=April |page=111 |url=https://www.marthastewart.com/967557/heritage-sweets|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130601081606/https://www.marthastewart.com/967557/heritage-sweets|archive-date=2013-06-01|accessdate=27 April 2018}}
They are known for making traditional specialties including previous owner Edward Shane's buttercream chocolates and Pennsylvania clear toy candy.
History
Since 1863, candy and candy-making materials have been made or sold in the premises at 110 Market Street (originally known as the High Street), in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The location was part of an active candy-making industry that grew up around the sugar trade. In 1910, Philadelphia was home to as many as 1,200 confectioneries.
Members of the Herring candy-making family operated several properties in the area beginning in the 1840s. Samuel L. Herring opened a wholesale confectionery supply business at 112 Market in the 1850s, expanding to 110 Market Street in 1863. After the American Civil War, his son Benjamin W. Herring took over the business. He eventually went into partnership with one of his father's employees, confectioner Daniel S. Dengler. The partners sold wholesale confectionery goods at 110 Market until Benjamin Herring died.
Daniel S. Dengler and his son, Frank Dengler, continued to operate the business until 1899, when they sold the building to William T. Wescott. In 1910, Wescott moved to New Jersey, selling the business to Edward R. Shane.{{cite news|title=Shane Confectionery Candy made on premises since 1863|url=http://www.gomc.com/firstpage/201304045.pdf|accessdate=27 April 2018|work=The Manufacturing Confectioner|pages=45–46|date=April 2013}} The family business was taken over by Edward's son Barry Shane in 1983.{{cite news|last1=Tracy|first1=Rachel|title=Sweet History|url=http://shanecandies.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/American_Spirit_Mag_14.pdf|accessdate=27 April 2018|work=Daughters of the American Revolution|pages=34–36|date=2014}} The Shane family operated the location as a retail business for the next 99 years.
File:Shane Interior doorway DSCF2661.jpg
In 2010, the business was bought by brothers Ryan and Eric Berley. They chose to retain the "Shane Confectionery" name. They have restored the building and its contents, including vintage features such as the scales and the cash register. They use restored original machinery and traditional artisanal confectionery recipes to make many of the sweets they sell. For example, their cast-iron buttercream churn was used in the 1920s by Edward Shane.
The confectionery store is only a few doors away from their other restored business, a vintage ice-cream shop called the Franklin Fountain.
Specialties
Shane Confectionery makes traditional specialties including wrapped buttercream chocolates{{cite news|last1=Bond|first1=Liz|title=The Candymen Can – Shane Candies|url=http://thismagnificentlife.com/the-candymen-can-shane-candies/|accessdate=27 April 2018|work=This Magnificent Life|date=January 4, 2017}} and clear toy candy for Christmas and Easter.{{cite web|url=http://articles.philly.com/2014-04-15/news/49129656_1_easter-candy-candy-shop-barry-shane |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150919115849/http://articles.philly.com/2014-04-15/news/49129656_1_easter-candy-candy-shop-barry-shane |url-status=dead |archive-date=2015-09-19 |title=A visit to Shane's candy shop remains a sweet Easter ritual - Philly.com |publisher=Articles.philly.com |date=2013-04-01 |accessdate=2014-04-20}}
File:Filled Candy Molds CHF-First-Friday-December-2012-016.JPG
File:Clear Toy Candy Molds CHF-First-Friday-December-2012-018.JPG
File:Clear Toy Candy CHF-First-Friday-December-2012-075.JPG
File:Clear Toy Candy CHF-First-Friday-December-2012-038.JPG
References
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External links
- [http://shanecandies.com/ Shane Candies website]
- [http://shanecandies.com/blog/ Shane Confectionery blog]
Category:Brand name confectionery
Category:Confectionery companies of the United States