Coons Homemade Candies - since 1917 !
You have to
go back five generations to 1917 to get to the roots of Coons
Candy. (photo at left is my dad J.E., my grandpa C.M., my great
grandpa J.A. and my oldest sister Joey). Joseph A. Coons worked
in a tile yard where they made field irrigation tile. He had
developed asthma and working in this dusty place only continued
to irritate his condition to the point his doctor told him to
find other work "or else". Sitting around the dinner
table, Joe and wife Nellie decided to go into business for themselves.
They would "go uptown", rent some space and start an
ice cream parlor. Uptown was a little berg in north ![]() central Ohio called Nevada with a population at that time of
around 700. Well, they found their little store front space,
began making one of Nellie's ice cream recipes and low and behold,
it sold like hotcakes. Middle of the hot summer, only ice cream
store in town - what do you think - good idea? They sold all
they could make and business was booming, then winter showed
up. Now back in '17 folks didn't have heaters in their horse
drawn carriages and traffic slowed to a trickle in their little
town. Joe and Nellie had a hard winter that first year. Back
around the family dinner table with son Charles (picture above)
the topic was, "what can we do in the winter to make a living
to get us through to summer"? As luck would have it, the
fellow who had sold Joseph his ice cream equipment happened by
and said he knew of an old German immigrant who had just arrived
in the states. This fellow was (of all things!) a candymaker
who spoke no English. The salesman suggested an arrangement where,
in exchange for room and board, Joseph A. and Charles M. could
learn the art of candy making from this new U.S. resident. And,
of course, the salesman had candy making equipment for sale,
too. After some thought, the two decided to give it a try. Into
their very home moves this fellow from abroad and as the months
pass, he learns to speak English and ![]() Joseph and son Charles
learn to make candy. Old Fashioned Candy ! From recipes
that went WAY back and way back to the old country ! The gentleman
moved on one day quite a few months later, seeking fame and fortune
with a new language as his tool. Behind he left an enterprising
family with a new learned skill. They had become Candymakers.
Joseph and Nellie, son Charles and his wife Edith now made ice
cream all summer and candy all winter. Time passes, business
grows, a grandson is born and named Joseph E. (photo at left)
after his Granddad. He grows up making candy, marries and begins
a family and assumes the leadership of the business. He names
one of his sons Charles W. after his father making the generations
go like this - Joe, Charles, Joe, Charles! (I'm the last Charles,
BTW, the fourth generation)
Greetings! I took up the reigns of the family
business in 1984 after watching ![]() and
helping my Dad and Grandfather make our candies since my childhood
way back in the early 50's! I've had the neat experience of watching
the business grow from one small retail
outlet into a national and international confectionery mail
order company. I've also had the pleasure of introducing the
fifth generation of Coons to the candy business. With two married
daughters, a son-in-law (and FIVE grand babies - possibly the
6th generation to be candymakers !!) already working in the business
and another single daughter, it looks as though there's no shortages
of candymakers on the horizon.
We still use the exact same recipes brought to us from the old world, and we still hand pack our boxed candies the way my Dad, Grandpa and Great Grandpa did. |
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