Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 17
D.F. Stauffer Produced First U.S. Animal Crackers in 1871, Predating Barnum’s
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 17

D.F. Stauffer Produced First U.S. Animal Crackers in 1871, Predating Barnum’s

2 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 17
  • D.F. Stauffer Biscuit Company began making animal crackers in York, Pennsylvania, in 1871, making it the first known U.S. producer before Nabisco’s Barnum’s version arrived decades later.
  • Animal crackers originated in England in the mid-1800s and were imported to the United States before baker David F. Stauffer started local production as demand for the snack grew.
  • Stauffer initially sold the crackers from barrels by weight and reportedly delivered them around town by wheelbarrow before expanding to horse-drawn wagons and rail shipments.
  • Stauffers, now a subsidiary of Meiji America, still makes animal crackers in York, while Barnum’s circus-train box later turned the snack into one of America’s most recognizable grocery staples.
How did a copycat snack in a circus box become more famous than the American original?
After 150 years, why did America's original animal cracker just get a complete modern rebrand?