Photo of the Day
Julia Child - Favorite Moments from The French Chef
Americana
CBS Sunday Evening News Reports on the Beatle Invasion
1950s ROCK AND ROLL
The Good Humor Ice Cream Bar is created
Ice Cream On-A-Stick Celebrates It’s Fifth Birthday
Youngstown, Ohio
1926
It’s a Big Birthday for one of our favorite treats, and we cheer Good Humor founder Harry B. Burt, Sr. the owner of an ice cream and candy business in downtown Youngstown, Ohio for creating a smooth chocolate coating that was compatible with ice cream. The story goes, that Burt’s daughter declared the frozen samples too messy to eat. Burt Sr. borrowed a frozen wooden stick from his father’s previous invention the Jolly Boy Suckers. The stick was frozen in to the vanilla ice cream bar, thus creating the “Good Humor” bar.
It wasn’t easy, it took three years and a personal trip to Washington D.C. by Burt himself with a five gallon pail of “Good Humor” bars to finally secure the exclusive rights to ”ice cream-on-a-stick.” Within days,12 chauffeur-driven ice cream trucks were selling the bars to kids all over Youngstown. The trucks all had bells, including one from Harry Jr’s. Bobsled. The white clean uniformed look of the drivers, and the unique product has been an immediate success. Expansion is going very well, and you can now buy a franchise for
$ 100. Happy Birthday to Our Favorite Afternoon Treat.
Explore America
YELLOWSTONE PARK
Yellowstone National Park - A vast wilderness of natural beauty
On March 1, 1872 President Ulysses Grant signed into existence the world's first national park, Yellowstone National Park. The 2.2 million acres of wilderness was "set apart as a public park or pleasuring ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people."
Yellowstone's name is historically credited to the Native Americans. The name is derived from the Yellowstone River, which has high yellow rock cliffs along its banks.
In 1872 the vast wilderness of the west was viewed by most Americans as something to be tamed, to be explored, settled, mined, logged, ranched and farmed. The west was not valued for its wilderness. It is remarkable that during such an age Yellowstone was set aside as the world's first national park, clearly an illustrative indicator of how unique and magnificent Yellowstone was perceived to be, even then.
In 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt visited Yellowstone and was awed at the beauty and wildness of the Park. The railroads were catering to Yellowstone tourists, taking visitors by the carloads to the Park.
In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson signed into existence a new government agency, the National Park Service, forever changing the administration of our national parks.
In 1917, only two years after the first automobile entered the Park, some 5000 people entered Yellowstone during the summer season.
Home overlooking the coast
"As The World Turns" was airing on CBS the afternoon of November 22, 1963, Walter Cronkite broke in to tell the nation that President Kennedy had been shot
Classic Scenes from Maine
Documentary of the Day
Walter Cronkite Profile: Early Days of Radio and Television Broadcasting

Collectible Editions
You have a choice of three versions of our collectible edition to select from. 52-pages, 100-pages (special oversized edition) and our 104-page version (hard cover). Enjoy your stroll down memory lane!
Learn More »
Looking for More?
Fret not, we've got more! Pick a category below to see what we've got.