George Crum (1824-1914)

June 06, 2020 
/ Contributed By: Creighton Reed

|George Crum and Wife Hester

Crum's Place historic marker

Photo by Peter Flass CC BY 4.0)

George Speck, later known as George Crum and long thought to be the inventor of the potato chip, was born on July 15, 1824 in Saratoga Country, New York to parents Abraham Speck, an African American, and Diana Tull, a Native American of the Huron Tribe. He had a sister, Catherine โ€œKateโ€ Speck. Both George and Kate Speck identified as members of the St. Regis band of the Huron. George Speck spent his youth as a guide in New Yorkโ€™s Adirondack Mountains from 1834 to 1850. He was an animal trapper specializing in capturing wild ducks and deer.

In 1853, 29-year-old Speck was hired by Moonโ€™s Lake House, an Adirondack resort on Saratoga Lake near Saratoga Springs that catered to wealthy vacationers from New York City. One regular patron, Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt, regularly forgot Speckโ€™s last name and called him โ€œCrum.โ€ Vanderbilt relayed personal food requests to โ€œCrumโ€ through the waiters and Speck eventually embraced the name, saying that”a crum is larger than a speck.”

The popular narrative is that George Crum invented the potato chip, a myth eventually debunked by his sister Kate Speck who claimed she invented what would soon be known as the famous Saratoga chips. She said she sliced off a sliver of potato and it fell into a hot frying pan by accident. George Crum tasted the sliced potato and gave his enthusiastic approval of the chip. Even her claim is undermined by the existence of cookbooks in the United States and Great Britain that described earlier versions of the chips that were called fried potato shavings.

There is no doubt, however, that Crum’s promotion of the chip help popularize it.ย  Wealthy visitors to Moonโ€™s restaurant soon spread the word about the Saratoga chips, often traveling from Boston and New York specifically for the delicacy. After an unsuccessful attempt to take credit for inventing the Saratoga chip, Cary Moon, the owner of Moonโ€™s Lake House, began selling them in boxes, the first attempt to merchandise the product beyond his restaurant.

In 1860, George Crum opened his own restaurant, Crumโ€™s Place, in Malta, New York, where he provided every table with a basket of chips. Crumโ€™s chip remained a delicacy for the elite until the 1920s when entrepreneur Herman Lay brought the chips to the South to introduce them to a wider audience. Layโ€™s mass production and worldwide distribution of potato chips soon overshadowed Crumโ€™s legacy. Nonetheless, Crumโ€™s Place was open until 1890, when he retired from the restaurant business.

Crum married Elizabeth Jarrett in 1853 and the couple had three sons, John, Gilbert, and William, and a daughter, Anne. They divorced in 1857.ย  He met his second wife, Hester Esther Bennett, who was a regular customer at Crumโ€™s Place. They married in 1860 and remained a couple until her death in 1906. George (Speck) Crum died in Malta, New York on July 22, 1914 at the age of 90.

About the Author

Author Profile

Creighton Edward Reed was born and raised in Seattle, Washington; raised by a single mother and grandmother in Everett, Washington for the first 12 years of his life. He moved to Shoreline, Washington to live with his father to add a metaphorical fresh coat of paint to his life. He would graduate from Shorewood High School with a 3.7 GPA. He graduated with honors from Shoreline Community College obtaining a degree in Digital Film/ Media with a 3.67 GPA.

Reed has given his time and service to the Student Conservation Association in Edmonds, WA in both 2016 and 2017 during the summertime, clearing out invasive species such as thorns that interfere with the touristsโ€™ enjoyment. He has worked as a dishwasher at PCC in Edmonds, WA. Reed is working with the YMCA as a camp counselor in the Seattle District.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Reed, C. (2020, June 06). George Crum (1824-1914). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/george-crum-1824-1914/

Source of the Author's Information:

Bennett, H. and Salem, U., 2020, “Hester (Esther) Bennett,” geni_family_tree, https://www.geni.com/people/Hester-Esther-Bennett/6000000011704908996; Famousinventors.org, 2020, “George Crum” | Biography, Inventions And Facts, https://www.famousinventors.org/george-crum; Iloveancestry.com, 2020: https://iloveancestry.com/topics/ancestry/north-america/african-native-american/george-crum-speck-the-real-inventor-of-potato-chips/; “George Crum” | Lemelson-MIT Program, https://lemelson.mit.edu/resources/george-crum; ThoughtCo, 2020. “Did George “Crum” Speck Really Invent The Potato Chip?” https://www.thoughtco.com/george-crum-potato-chip-4165983.

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