It was 1847, and for months Oliver Chase of Boston had been tinkering with a brand-new invention. Soon it would change America and the world.
Chase wasn’t really an inventor. He was a pharmacist, a person who sold medicines. Like most pharmacists at the time, Chase made his own
Among his most popular were lozenges—small round discs made of mashed-up herbs and chemicals.
People bought them to cure their scratchy throats and aching heads. They didn’t really work, and they tasted disgusting. That’s why most lozenges were covered with a sugary shell.