Old West Bakeries
~ by Kristin Holt
Fans of the Wild West are familiar with most businesses on the quintessential Main Street of Old West Town, USA: Livery and Blacksmith, Land & title office, Hotel or boarding house, Restaurant, Jail, Mercantile, Saloon, Brothel, a Bathhouse, a Laundry (particularly on the West Coast where many Chinese immigrants opened these businesses out of necessity), maybe a doctor’s office, a dentist (if the town-folk were lucky), and more.
Add to this list: a bakery.
This photo of the 400 block of Oak Street (Minok, IL) was taken in the 1890’s. None of the buildings shown are still standing. On the corner is the McGrail Hotel. Other businesses in the block were a bakery and the OK Saloon.
Why did bakeries Prosper?
Men and women alike gladly paid reasonable prices for freshly baked bread, a staple of the Western diet. Few had the resources to bake bread in anything but a cast iron Dutch oven in a bed of coals, and some certainly did. Bakeries fronted the capital necessary to purchase large wood- or coal-burning iron stoves or build the kind of traditional brick ovens originating in Europe.
Bakeries specialized in large batches of bread of different varieties, cookies, cakes, pies, and other time-consuming perishables more expensive to make on a small scale.
Henry Joseph Walk (age 37) and 2 sons on Globe Bakery Wagon, circa 1892, Salt Lake City
My soon-to-be released title, The Drifter’s Proposal, is set in my fictitious town of Mountain Home, Colorado in mid-December, 1900.
The baker’s man is home for Christmas…
Spinster Adaline Whipple runs the family’s business, Whipple Bakery, since her father’s demise three months ago. She’s stunned by a surprise mortgage her father made with a bank in Denver City six months before he died. Now that the loan is sixty days overdue, the big-town banker wants his money. If the Whipples can’t pay, he’ll evict them. Little does he care Christmas is one week away and the widow and daughters have nowhere to go. Adaline’s sure the handsome drifter Malloy’s proposal of… marriage?… won’t do her any good. But his mere offer to help feeds the attraction she’s felt for him, and before she knows it, she trusts the one man who can break her heart.
This 25,000 word (100 paperback pages) novella is available now within the Silver Belles and Stetsons anthology by ten award-winning and bestselling authors. Release date, November 2, 2015. The single-title novella, with the cover pictured, above, is also available as a stand-alone novella, with a release date of November 16, 2015.
Copyright © 2015 Kristin Holt, LC
Kristin Holt is an author of Sweet (clean, wholesome) Historical Romances set in the 19th Century American West. Some are Mail-Order Bride, some Romantic Comedies, some Christmas novellas— all about love’s triumph over the odds.
She’s an active member of Pioneer Hearts and loves hearing from readers. Please stop by and say hello!
Kirstin can also be found on the Pioneer Hearts Bookstore online.
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Thank you to Cissie and Pioneer Hearts Blog for allowing me to share tidbits of my fascination with everything Old West… particularly the less-common. Bakeries may not be as romantic as a sheriff’s office, but love blossomed there, too.
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Wow, what an interesting post. We can’t live without our bread can we?
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Thanks, Margaret. It’s fascinating to me how long bread has been a staple in the diets of people all over the world. Literally thousands of years. Thanks for stopping by.
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I loved this book set and I always grab a new Kristin Holt release. Thank you for the history!
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Thank you, Cindy! I’m so glad you enjoyed SILVER BELLES AND STETSONS (I did, too). Thanks for the kind words, exploring Old West bakeries and commenting. Much appreciated.
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Thank you so much, Cindy Jones, for your generous support and kind words. Your glowing approval means the world to me. Thank you!
Kristin Holt
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I loved that story, Kristin, in SILVER BELLES AND STETSONS. I’m sure you’ll sell the Christmas story all year.
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Thank you, Caroline. So very kind of you to say so. With warm appreciation, Kristin
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I adored your story, Kristin in the “Silver Bells and Stetson” compilation. I do love a sweet Christmas tale of love triumphing over evil.
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Thank you, Carol. Your kind words feel so good! I’m very glad you enjoyed my story in SILVER BELLES AND STETSONS. It’s most kind of you to pop in and say so. =)
With heartfelt thank-you,
Kristin
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I loved your story, too, Kristin. The bakery setting was so unique and “in keeping” with the Christmas spirit. And your hero was to die for!
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Many thanks, Hebby. Your feedback has been so encouraging and helpful. I enjoyed working with you on this collection. =) Happy Holidays!
Kristin
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