Struggling to find a holiday gift for the person who has everything? Consider essence of beef. They probably don't have that.
This undated photograph is part of Hagley Library's collection of Carter Litchfield photographs and ephemera on the history of fatty materials (Accession 2007.227). In addition to writing and publishing about the history of fats and fatty materials, Carter Litchfield built an important collection on the subject. This collection of photographs and ephemera relates to Litchfield's activities as a scientist, historian and collector of the history of fatty materials.
Carter Litchfield (1932-2007) was an organic chemist who studied and specialized in edible fats and oils. This career began at Proctor & Gamble; during the mid- to late 1950s, Litchfield worked for the company in its Edible Research Section of the Chemical Division, which produced and developed shortening products like Crisco and margarine oils.
After Litchfield left Proctor & Gamble in 1960 to take a job as a research scientist at Texas A&M, his interest in the field continued and he soon undertook studies toward earning a doctorate in organic chemistry with a focus on fatty oils like olive, linseed, soybean, cottonseed, as well as lard, tallow, and other animal body fats.
These studies would continue throughout his career. During a nine year career at Rutgers University, Litchfield studied fatty oils in marine mammals and aquatic sponges. During this time, he also founded Olearius Editions, a publication company dedicated to the history of vegetable oil and fat production. He would continue to operate as a publisher after his retirement from Rutgers in 1979.
A number of items in this collection, including this one, were formerly owned by the Prussian chemist, Julius Lewkowitsch (1857-1913), whose collection Litchfield acquired.
This collection has not been digitized in its entirety; our Digital Archive offers a curated selection of items from the collection.