June Boy Georgia Peanut Butter Label
Historic Overview
This rare peanut butter label comes from the Georgia Pickle Company of Cairo, Georgia and dates to the 1930s. The Georgia Pickle Company is really the W. B. Roddenbery Company, who packed syrup, peanut butter, and pickles. The label measures 1.8” Wide x 2.5” Tall and is in excellent condition. The label shows a young boy with his dog and a fishing pole headed to the local fishing hole. The company also has a pickle label that shows a pickle with a fishing pole. I guess here they went with a more traditional look.
Dr. Seaborn Anderson Roddenbery started his medicine practice in 1862 in a horse-drawn buggy. In the same year he purchased a farm and sold open kettle sugar cane syrup from his medical buggy as he made his rounds. By 1867 he had an office and a general store that sold syrup from large cypress barrels, and people would bring their own jars and fill them with his cane syrup. Within five more years he had acquired 1000 acres and started to reduce his medicine practice, since he claimed 90% of his patients didn’t pay him. In 1889 Roddenbery marketed the first pure Georgia cane syrup as "Roddenbery's Old Plantation Molasses." Around 1920 the business became known as the W. B. Roddenbery Company. It was 1934 when the company expanded their product line to include peanut butter and in 1936 they added pickles. They continued expanding their products adding boiled peanuts, watermelons, and even cigars under a variety of labels. By 1986, the company was producing 45 kinds of pickles, 12 types of syrups, 4 varieties of peanut butter, and millions of boiled peanuts. In 1993 Dallas-based Dean Foods purchased the W. R. Roddenbery Company and about ten years later they closed the Cairo facilities.
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