As the techniques for
food preservation steadily improved, prices decreased and food became more readily available. As more households adopted the icebox, the overall quality and freshness of this food was also improved. Iceboxes meant that people were able to go to the market less and could more safely store
leftovers. All of this contributed to the improvement of the population's health by increasing the fresh food readily able to be consumed and the overall safety of that food. However, with metropolitan growth, many sources of natural ice became contaminated from industrial pollution or sewer runoff. Thanks to the icebox manufacturing industry's efforts, a new innovative idea in cooling came about: air circulation. The idea for air circulation in refrigeration systems stems back to
John Schooley, who wrote about his process in the 1856
Scientific American, a popular science magazine. Schooley described the process as "Combining an ice receptacle with the interior of a refrigerator … a continuous circulation of air shall be kept up through the ice in said receptacle and through the interior of the refrigerator … so that the circulation air shall deposit its
moisture on the ice every time it passes through it, and be dried and cooled." This idea of air circulation and cold led to the eventual invention of the mechanical, gas-driven
refrigerators. As these early mechanical refrigerators became available, they were installed at large industrial plants producing ice for home delivery. By the early 1930s, mechanical ice machines gradually began to rise over the ice harvesting industry thanks to its ability to produce clean, sanitary ice independently and year-round. Over time, as the mechanical ice machines became smaller, cheaper, and more efficient, they easily replaced the hassle of getting ice from a source. For example, the (originally called the De La Vergne Refrigerating Machine Company) of New York could produce up to 220 tons of ice in a single day, from a single machine. With widespread electrification and safer refrigerants, mechanical refrigeration in the home became possible. With the development of
chlorofluorocarbons (along with the succeeding
hydrochlorofluorocarbons and
hydrofluorocarbons), that came to replace the use of toxic
ammonia gas, the refrigerator replaced the icebox, though
icebox is still occasionally used today to refer to mechanical refrigerators. Because of the
cookie dough being stored in iceboxes before baking, this kind of cookie got named
icebox cookie. == See also ==