Pop up toast came from Stillwater

Grants | Legacy Digitization |
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If you're eating toast with your breakfast this morning, you can thank a man from Minnesota. On this day in 1919, Charles Strite filed a patent for the first pop-up toaster. During World War I, Strite worked at a manfuacturing plant in Stillwater, and got tired of getting burnt toast from the cafeteria. So he developed a toaster that didn't require a person to watch it. Brent Peterson wrote about Charles Strite and his invention for the St. Croix Valley Press, and he joins us now. That's Brent Peterson who has written about Charles Strite the inventor of the pop-up toaster.

Funders

Digitization made possible by the State of Minnesota Legacy Amendment’s Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund, approved by voters in 2008.

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