Pass the Salt, Will Ya?
Behold the lowly salt and pepper shakers: always there when you need them, and often in
a decorative or entertaining shape. Did
you know that the salt shaker got its big start in 1911 after the Morton Salt
company introduced an anti-caking agent (magnesium carbonate), which allowed
the salt to flow freely out of a container?
Shakers received a second boost a decade later when, during the
Depression, ceramics companies were looking for inexpensive items to sell, and
decided that salt and pepper shakers were an item all homes needed and could
afford. Then came the 1950s and the
American automobile culture, and the travel industry began offering shakers as
souvenirs.
If you would like to see a whole lot of shakers in one
place, go down to Gatlinburg where you will find the Museum of Salt and Pepper
Shakers! There, Andrea and Rolf Ludden
have on display their collection of over 20,000 shakers. And they have 20,000 more in a sister museum
in Guadalest, Spain! How would such a
thing get started? Well, according to
the museum website, Andrea was looking for a good pepper mill, but couldn’t
seem to find one that worked well, so as she would acquire one and subsequently
discard it, she’d set it on a windowsill, along with a few salt shakers that
were decorative. People thought she had
a collection, so they started giving shakers to her. Then her kids started to scour flea markets
for them, and the collection grew. And
since Andrea is an archaeologist, she became fascinated with the cultural
aspect of the designs, and decided that a museum was in order so others could
learn and enjoy.
According to an article in Smithsonian Magazine, if you have a set that’s labeled “Made in
occupied Japan,” you have something rare, as World War II nearly halted
production of consumer ceramics there, displacing Japan as the number-one
producer of shakers in the world during the 1920s through the 1940s (see
Smithsonian.com, January 23, 2012 article).
And what is the most-collected shaker set in the world? The Hummel figures, made by the renowned
German pottery maker Goebel. Their
Hummel shakers were introduced in 1935.
So pass the salt, will ya?