2. In 1933, you could buy one package for $0.23 or six for $1.24.
3. The cookies first started being commercially baked in 1934 and the Girl Scouts of Greater Philadelphia were the first to go that route.
4. During WWII when there were shortages of sugar, butter and flour in the U.S., the Girl Scouts sold calendars instead.
5. In 1951, the consumer had only three Girl Scout Cookie options: Sandwich (like an Oreo, I suppose?), Shortbread and Chocolate Mint, which we know as the Thin Mint today. By ’56, they had added a vanilla sandwich cookie as well.

7. Elizabeth Brinton is known as the “Cookie Queen.”She sold more than 100,000 boxes of cookies over her Girl Scout career and more than 18,000 in one season alone. She was the first to abandon the door-to-door method and set up a booth in a high-traffic area (the D.C. metro stations). When asked the secret to her success, one of her responses was, “You’ve got to look them in the eye and make them feel guilty.”
8. Girl Scout cookies are kosher.
9. Only two bakers in America are licensed to make the cookies: ABC/Interbake Foods and Little Brownie Bakes.
No comments:
Post a Comment