1893 - Bees at the Columbian Exposition


When you read the old magazines, no matter what the focus of the periodical is, you eventually read about the Columbian Exhibition of 1893/'94.  The excitement of having all the best and new gathered in a magical temporary kingdom still comes through in the faded photos and lists of exhibitors!  I scattered some bee engravings on this souvenir fan so I could share it with you :-)


The honey and beeswax and apiary suppliers were there.  Due to a lack of floor space the honey exhibits were controlled in their size and styling by being inside of  glass cases which were placed on the second floor of the hall. 


 


 "Under this plan the following States made exhibits of honey and beeswax: California, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New York, Ohio, and Wisconsin. In two or three instances (notably New York) exhibits of bees were kept contiguous to the honey exhibit. The whole section devoted to this industry was exceptionally attractive and highly creditable."


EXHIBITS AT THE WORLD'S FAIR.
The exhibits in the apiarian department of the Columbian Exhibition were mostly installed in the east gallery of the agricultural building.  Glass cases were provided by the States and provinces competing, under the direction of the Agricultural Department. These cases were uniform in size and were about 5 by 20 feet, 6 feet high, inside. 
A glance, through this gallery revealed the fact of tons of honey displayed in every conceivable form that the fancy of the producer and the ingenuity of the superintendent could dictate. Besides the glass cases were many exhibits of bee keepers' appliances, consisting of hives, supers, honey extractors, sections, foundation mills, machines for putting sections together and automatically fastening the starters, smokers, honey knives, escapes, etc. Some old-fashioned round straw hives, so familiar in illustrations for the past hundred years, were there to show the methods employed by bee keepers of past generations. Alongside of these were exhibited the modern movable frame hive with various contrivances for obtaining honey in its purity and in the best marketable shape.

The comb honey on exhibition was mostly in 1-pound section boxes, made of white poplar or linen, some of which were glassed on both sides, but whether glassed or not generally built between separators, giving to the finished product an even and handsome appearance, no matter what the source from which gathered. There were many fanciful designs and mottoes worked out by the bees in comb honey.
Extracted honey was shown in large quantities. The style of receptacle varied from the small large-mouthed bottle to the large long necked decanter—in packages adapted to retail trade and in cases suitable for shipment—in its liquid state as taken from the combs, and in granulated form (a condition which most extracted honey assumes when long removed from the hive and exposed to changes of climate).
In addition to the exhibit of honey and appliances there were a number of colonies arranged along the east wall of the building with exits for the bees outside and far above the crowds of people on the ground below. These colonies were successfully managed during the .summer and stored a fine lot of honey. They were Italians and Carniolans.
Of the glass cases above referred to, New York filled three with exhibits, besides many fixtures shown outside;  Illinois, two, and  Ontario,  Ohio,  Michigan,  Iowa,  Nebraska, Indiana,  Minnesota, and  Wisconsin each, one.   States and Territories having entries in smaller quantities, and in some instances shown in their agricultural sections below, were California, Washington, Nevada, Colorado, and Maine.

 Many of the States had superintendents in charge of their apiarian exhibits whose pleasure it seemed to be to impart instruction to the interested visitor. Much useful information was no doubt disseminated thereby.
The exhibits from the States did not adequately represent the industry in all parts of our vast domain. The reason for this lay chiefly in the fact that the State appropriations for the fair were in many cases too small to properly represent all the industries. Many States noted for their fine and large crops of honey made no exhibit or only a few samples from some patriotic apiarist.
Only those States which granted a liberal sum to the bee keepers were creditably represented.  A minor reason probably influenced the bee keepers in some of the States to withhold exhibits.  As before hinted, the yield and quality of honey being largely due to climatic influences, and the conditions in 1892 not being favorable, they lost interest in the matter because they could not show what they deemed worthy of exhibition.


FOREIGN EXHIBITS.
Aside from the fine exhibit from Ontario, which showed that the bee keepers of that Province were among the foremost in the world, the foreign exhibits were mostly confined to liquid honey and apiarian appliances, and were not shown in the east gallery of the agricultural building, but were among the foreign exhibits, either in other parts of the agricultural building or in other parts of the grounds. 
The British bee keepers society had a large and exceedingly interesting collection of extracted honey from different localities in England, Scotland, and Ireland, put up in bottles of uniform size and style and made attractive by finely printed labels. The other countries exhibiting honey, or appliances, or both, were: Italy, Greece, Russia, Ottoman Empire, New South Wales, Ceylon, Siam, Spain, Argentine Republic, Republic of Ecuador, Guatemala, Brazil, Costa Rica, Haiti, Mexico, and Venezuela.
These foreign honeys were subjected to the disadvantages of change of climate, want of freshness (as they were all of 1892 crop or earlier), and lack of persons in charge who understood how to properly care for them, but much fine honey was shown in spite of unfavorable conditions.

Russia exhibited a very interesting collection of hives and models of hives, and implements used in the apiaries of that country, showing that modern ideas have taken root in the minds of the Russian bee keepers.

World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Ill., 1893, Volume 2


Not honey, but a delightful exhibit, here is a grain decoration in the PA exhibit.

And what about a horse made of grain!!!  I do wish I could find more honey exhibit photos.


This was a Missouri exhibit.   I  love the train with corn in the coal car :-)  

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