Every Peach Stone Counts
By Ms. Christy Lindberg
Article published on: December 3rd 2024, in the Army Chemical Review 2024 E-Edition
Read Time: 5 mins
Historic photo of a peach stone collection barrel
In September 1918, “Save Our Soldiers From German
Gas By Saving Peach Stones!”1 was
the immediate response
to General John J. Pershing’s plea for more gas
masks. Pershing was commander of the American Expeditionary
Force during World War I, and newspapers across
the country quickly spread the word for this wartime need.
Many companies soon sponsored the collection of all kinds
of fibrous materials: “Save American lives by saving Peach
Stones, Apricot, Cherry, Plum, Prune and Olive Pits, Date
Seeds, Walnuts, Hickory Nuts, Butternuts and also the
shells of these nuts!”2 In a
classified advertisement, Frank
R. Jelleff, Inc. offered,“ Dry the stones and bring them to us.
We will deliver them to the government for you.”3
The Red Cross, schools, churches, and other civic
organizations and groups reacted with great patriotic fervor.
The Boys Scouts of America “pledged themselves to
100 percent patriotism in winning the war.”4 One little boy
even wrote a letter to the “Aunt Anna’s Little Letters” newspaper
column that said:
“I have a brother in France, and I am saving all the peach
stones I can to help make gas masks. I hope all the cousins
[readers of the column] will save all they can. I get my playmates
and we go around the streets picking the seeds up.
I have gathered and had given me over 800.”5
Historical advertisement for peach pit collection
Considering that it took about 200 peach stones or approximately
7 pounds of nut shells to produce enough of the
porous carbon necessary to outfit one gas respirator to save
one American Soldier, this effort required unwavering support.
It was estimated that more than 500,000 tons of fruit
stones, nut shells, and seeds would be required each month
to make enough charcoal to produce an adequate number of
gas masks. Coconut shells yielded the most porous carbon;
however, shortages of ships available to import the coconut
shells often forced the hand of American ingenuity. Candy
makers declared their intention to explore all possible uses
for coconuts so that more shells would become available. The
U.S. Food Administration contributed to the effort by ensuring
that makers of coconut products had plenty of sugar,
and consumers were encouraged to have that second slice of
coconut pie.
In a letter to city and county school superintendents in
the state of Illinois, Alfred J. Benson, chairman for the state
of Illinois war saving societies, wrote:
“Poison gas was one of the first fruits of kultur. It stings,
blinds and kills. Charcoal, or carbon, made from fruit pits
and nut shells, is used to neutralize it. The government
needs carbon. It asks the boys and girls to save pits from
these fruits: peaches, apricots, plums, cherries, prunes, and
the shells of hickory nuts, walnuts, and butternuts.”6
The Gas Defender, a newsletter distributed by the Gas
Defense Division of the Chemical Warfare Service, detailed
the process of turning fruit and nuts into lifesaving carbon:
“All the peach pits, shells and stones that are now being
collected in New York and throughout the rest of the country
are converging on the several carbon plants of the Chemical
Warfare Service . . . about 8 tons a day are being yielded
from the various hotels, department stores, restaurants and
schoolhouses.
As the shipments arrive at the wharf of the plant the
various kinds of pits and shells and other carbon producing
substances are conveyed to hoppers, from which they are fed
into a grinding machine which breaks them into more or less
uniform sizes. Thus far the following materials have been
used: Cocoanut shells, apricot pits, peach pits, cohune nuts
. . . and cherry pits
Historical advertisement for peach pit collection
After being sized through the foregoing process, the material
is conveyed to retorts, where it is carbonized and all
the volatile gases driven off . . . From here the carbon . . .
is carried on cars to the treaters. The mass is still hot from
the distilling process and it is therefore necessary to reduce
its temperature to prevent the mass from . . . burning like
charcoal.
The treaters are immediately adjacent. Above them are
grinders and screens, where the material is further reduced
in size before entrance . . . The carbon enters at the top
and comes out the bottom, where it is caught in 225-pound
drums . . . This is the finished product.”7
At the Astoria Light, Heat, and Power Company in New
York City, New York, 1,500 personnel, including 600 officers
and enlisted men of the Chemical Warfare Service, worked
around the clock to convert fruit pits and nut shells into carbon
for the gas masks used by deployed Service members
and their British allies.
Americans united in patriotism and dedication to the
cause. In just a few short months, several states posted notices
that read, “Need No More Fruit Pits; To Use Those On
Hand Here As Fuel.”8 The materials
were then transferred
to the Red Cross. In addition, private companies sold their
supplies of tropical nut shells and peach pits, advertising
them as a great fuel source. Even small children participated
in the effort. Ms. Elizabeth Farson, Principal, Hamilton
School, Chicago, Illinois, summarized the benefit of teaching
lessons from the Peach Pit Campaign:
“The newer teaching may easily connect the collecting,
scrubbing, and drying of these [peach pits] not only with
arithmetic and language lessons but also with the larger
lesson of social significance – What can I do to win the
war? How many [S]oldiers’ lives can I have the privilege of
helping to save? If our room, our school, our city, [and] our
Nation all work in unison in such projects, how much have
all the power to do?”9
Ms. Farson’s writing is just one example of how Americans
rose to the challenge and responded to the introduction
of chemical warfare with ingenuity and gusto. Through
the Peach Pit Campaign, U.S. citizens rallied together in a
unique and widespread common effort to save American Soldiers.
Endnotes
1.
Classified advertisement by Frank R. Jelleff, Inc., Washington Post, 8 September 1918.
2.
Ibid.
3.
Ibid.
4.
Boy Scouts and Peach Pit Saving,” Christian Science Monitor,
1 October 1918.
5.
“Little Letters,” Washington Post, 20 October 1918.
6.
“Seeds and Nut Shells Mean Life for Troops,” Chicago Daily
Tribune, 31 August 1918.
7.
The Gas Defender, 1 October 1918.
8.
El Paso Herald (El Paso, Texas), 2 December 1918, p. 8.
9.
“Peach Pit Problems,” Chicago Daily Tribune, 15 October
1918, p. 8.
Author
Ms. Lindberg is the branch historian for the U.S. Army Chemical,
Biological, Radiological School, Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri.
She holds a bachelor’s degree in history, humanities, and
political science from the University of Northern Iowa, Cedar
Falls, and a master’s degree in history from Missouri State University,
Springfield.