Sunday, November 23, 2025

The Milton Hershey Story - From Three Failures to a Chocolate Empire

This is the story of a man who failed three separate times… went bankrupt… started over again and again… and still found a way to build one of the most recognizable brands in history.

This story is about Milton S. Hershey, the founder of the Hershey Chocolate Company, the force behind the town of Hershey, Pennsylvania, and one of America’s greatest examples of determination, discipline, and heart.

HUMBLE BEGINNINGS

Milton Hershey was born in 1857 on a modest farm in rural Pennsylvania. His father, Henry Hershey, was a dreamer — full of ideas and ambitions — but rarely able to follow through on them. His mother, Fanny, was the opposite: strict, disciplined, and determined to keep Milton grounded.

Milton’s early years were unstable. The family moved often. His father’s ventures failed. Money was always tight. And school never came easily to him.

But one thing did stand out:

Milton was curious, observant, and willing to work.

At fourteen, his mother found him an apprenticeship with a local printer. It didn’t last long. Milton hated the work. He found it tedious and uninspiring. After a mistake that jammed an expensive piece of equipment, he was fired.

He could have been discouraged. But that failure was the beginning of the path that would define his life.

DISCOVERING A PASSION

After the failed printing apprenticeship, Milton’s mother arranged another opportunity — this time with a local candy maker in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

This changed everything.

For the first time, Milton discovered a trade he loved. Candy-making wasn’t just labor — it was creativity, craftsmanship, and science all blended together. He learned quickly. He experimented constantly. And he began to dream of owning his own shop.

But dreams, as Milton would learn, require risk.

And risk often leads to failure.

FAILURE #1: PHILADELPHIA

At just eighteen years old, Milton moved to Philadelphia — a bustling city filled with opportunity. He opened his first candy shop using borrowed money and sheer determination.

For six years, he fought to make it work.

He worked long hours.

He crafted recipes.

He delivered candy by hand.

But the competition was overwhelming, and Milton lacked business experience. Eventually, the debts grew too large, and the shop collapsed.

Failure number one.

He returned home with empty pockets… but not an empty spirit. He had learned the value of product quality, branding, and customer loyalty.

And he was not done trying.

FAILURE #2: NEW YORK CITY

Most people, after one business failure, would take a safer path. Not Milton Hershey.

He moved to New York City — the most competitive market in the country — and tried again.

This time, he experimented with new techniques and new products. He tried to innovate. He pursued wholesalers. He tried different recipes.

But once again, the business struggled. Manufacturing costs were high. Rent was expensive. The market was saturated. Eventually, Milton went bankrupt.

Failure number two.

He sold his equipment, paid what debts he could, and returned to Pennsylvania once more.

Most people would have given up by now.

Milton didn’t.

FAILURE #3: CHICAGO

Still determined, Milton headed west to Chicago, where he attempted his third business. He believed he had enough experience now to succeed — enough lessons learned, enough improvements in his craft.

But the third attempt failed as well.

Different city.

Same outcome.

Another collapse.

Three failures.

No money.

No success to show for nearly a decade of work.

But this time, something was different.

Milton realized he had developed a specialized skill — he had become exceptionally good at making caramel.

And that small detail… changed everything.

THE BREAKTHROUGH

Back in Lancaster, Milton decided to start small. Very small.

He borrowed money again, set up a modest workspace, and focused on perfecting caramel-making.

And in this moment, several pieces fell into place:

He perfected a recipe using fresh milk, creating a smoother, richer caramel than anything on the market.

He streamlined production techniques.

He focused on quality above everything else.

And he built strong relationships with local distributors.

People loved his caramels. Orders grew quickly.

Before long, Milton Hershey founded the Lancaster Caramel Company, and it became a booming success — one of the largest caramel manufacturers in the United States.

Milton, after three failures, had finally found his breakthrough.

But the world was about to change — and so was he.

DISCOVERING CHOCOLATE

While attending the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893, Milton watched a demonstration of German chocolate-making machinery.

He was fascinated.

He bought the equipment on the spot.

At the time, chocolate was a luxury — expensive, difficult to produce, and enjoyed mostly by the wealthy. Milton wanted to bring it to everyone — the everyday person, the working family, the farmer, the child.

He believed chocolate could be more than a treat.

It could be a joyful part of life.

So he began experimenting with milk chocolate — a difficult recipe to perfect.

He failed repeatedly.

But unlike before, he did not consider these failures defeats — only steps forward.

Eventually, he created the smooth, creamy milk chocolate that would become the foundation of his empire.

And in 1900, Milton Hershey sold his caramel company for one million dollars — an enormous fortune at the time — and used the money to focus entirely on chocolate.

HERSHEY, PENNSYLVANIA

With his newfound resources, Milton purchased farmland in rural Pennsylvania and built the Hershey Chocolate Company. But he didn’t stop there.

He built housing for workers.

He built schools.

He built churches, parks, transportation lines, and recreational facilities.

He didn’t just build a factory.

He built a community.

The town of Hershey, Pennsylvania became known as “The Sweetest Place on Earth.”

It was a bold, compassionate idea — a company town built around fairness, opportunity, and quality of life. He believed that workers who were treated well would produce better products, live better lives, and build stronger communities.

His belief proved true.

THE LEGACY

Milton Hershey became one of the world’s most successful entrepreneurs.

But his greatest legacy wasn’t chocolate — it was generosity.

He and his wife, Catherine, had no children of their own, so they founded a school for orphaned boys — later called the Milton Hershey School. He placed nearly all of his fortune into a trust to support the school.

Over the decades, that trust has grown to billions of dollars and continues to change lives to this day.

Milton Hershey may have failed three times… but because he refused to quit, millions of people have been fed, educated, employed, and inspired by his work.

LESSONS FOR ENTREPRENEURS

Milton Hershey’s story teaches us several powerful lessons:

Failure is not final — unless you stop trying.

Iteration creates mastery. Each failed business taught him something he needed to know.

Your breakthrough often comes from a specialty. For Hershey, it was caramel — a skill refined over years of setbacks.

Success is multiplied when you lift others with you.

Great businesses are built on great products — not shortcuts.

These lessons still apply today, especially in the global marketplace and entrepreneurial communities we’re building together. 

 

Trade Meet Global

 

 For more stories, and for business networking and resources, please visit our networking site at Trade Meet Global and our Global Wholesale Marketplace at Trade Market Global.  If you would like to hear stories like this narrated, you can find the audio versions on our Podcast on Podbean and other Podcast sites.  We look forward to seeing you there!

 

 

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Introducing the New Global Business Ecosystem

The new global business ecosystem consists of a synergistic pairing between Trade Meet Global, which is the free and open Business Networking Site, and Trade Market Global, which is the Global Wholesale Marketplace.  By combining both systems, business professionals, entrepreneurs, and more, can gather and discuss business deals and business topics, and also promote, list, and sell their products and services.  It is a truly unique business networking and marketplace ecosystem that can bring businesses from all over the world together.  


 


For more information, please visit TradeMeetGlobal.com or TradeMarketGlobal.com 

Both sites are linked together, and have links leading back to each other in the main menus on each site.


 

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

The Steel Visionary – The Inspiring True Story of Andrew Carnegie

The Steel Visionary – The Story of Andrew Carnegie

Born in 1835 in Dunfermline, Scotland, Andrew Carnegie began life in poverty. His father, a weaver, struggled as industrial machines replaced handcraft, and the family emigrated to America in search of opportunity. They settled in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, where young Andrew took a job as a bobbin boy in a cotton factory for $1.20 a week.

Through relentless curiosity and a hunger to learn, Carnegie taught himself telegraphy and soon caught the attention of Thomas A. Scott, a rising figure in the Pennsylvania Railroad. Under Scott’s mentorship, Carnegie absorbed the mechanics of business, investing his small savings into railroad ventures and later into iron bridges—laying the foundation for what would become a steel empire.

By the 1870s, Carnegie had mastered both production efficiency and cost reduction, using the Bessemer process to make steel cheaper and stronger than ever before. His company, Carnegie Steel, revolutionized modern infrastructure—building America’s railroads, bridges, and cities. But what truly defined him was not only his wealth, but his belief that “the man who dies rich dies disgraced.”

After selling Carnegie Steel to J.P. Morgan for $480 million in 1901, he turned his focus to philanthropy—funding over 2,500 libraries, educational institutions, and cultural foundations. His “Gospel of Wealth” urged the rich to live modestly and use their fortunes to advance humanity.

Carnegie’s journey—from a weaver’s son to one of history’s greatest industrialists and benefactors—is a timeless reminder that true success isn’t only in accumulation, but in contribution. His legacy endures in the libraries that bear his name and in the enduring idea that wealth carries responsibility.

You can also here the audio version on the Trade Meet Global Podcast, Episode 20 on Podbean

 Add your own thoughts and discuss this story with other like-minded people on the Trade Meet Global discussion site

 

What's your story? If you’ve got one, we want to see it! Post it in this Space “Member Stories” ... which can be found at Trade Meet Global  

Monday, November 10, 2025

The Inspiring Story of Madam C.J. Walker

You can also hear this story on the Trade Meet Global Podcast, Episode 19 

Born Sarah Breedlove in 1867 on a Louisiana cotton plantation to formerly enslaved parents, Sarah's life started hard. Orphaned at 7, married at 14 to escape poverty, widowed at 20 with a daughter to raise. By 1905, she's in Denver, Colorado, taking in laundry to survive—$1.50 a day, fingers raw from lye soap, scalp itching from hair loss caused by the very chemicals she used to clean clothes. But Sarah wasn't one to suffer in silence. She experimented with homemade remedies: sulfur, coconut oil, and a dash of innovation. One night, a dream—yes, a dream—showed her the formula. She refined it, tested it on herself, and boom: Thick, healthy hair. At 37, she took a leap. Quit washing, started selling 'Madam Walker's Wonderful Hair Grower' from a satchel, $0.25 a jar. No fancy storefront—just grit. She knocked on doors in Black neighborhoods, churches, and beauty parlors, training other women as 'agents' to sell alongside her. These weren't just salespeople; they were entrepreneurs, earning commissions that lifted families out of poverty. Word spread like wildfire. By 1908, orders poured in from across the Midwest. Sarah—now Madam C.J. Walker, honoring her second husband Charles—moved to Pittsburgh, rented a factory basement, and scaled up. She sourced ingredients from suppliers in New York and Chicago, built a supply chain that shipped to agents in 30+ states. Her agents? Traveling sales forces, hosting 'Walker Clubs' for training—think masterclasses on product demos and business basics. Pittsburgh couldn't contain her. In 1910, she built a $10,000 factory (that's over $300,000 today) in Indianapolis—state-of-the-art, with labs, assembly lines, and a salon. Madam Walker became a one-woman trade empire: Manufacturing, distributing, even exporting to Cuba and Jamaica. At her peak, 40,000 women worked her network, each earning $5–$15 a day—life-changing money for Black women in Jim Crow America. But success? It came with fire. Competitors stole her formulas. Critics called her a fraud. She sued counterfeiters, won, and kept innovating: Added scalp massagers, curlers, even a home study course for agents. By 1917, she was a millionaire—self-made, no inheritance, no white male privilege. And here's the heart: Walker didn't hoard. She gave back. Built a $250,000 mansion in Irvington, New York—'Villa Lewaro'—as a symbol for Black excellence. Donated to NAACP, YMCA, and anti-lynching campaigns. At 51, just before her death in 1919, she hosted a dinner for 100+ guests, toasting the women who'd built her dream. Madam Walker's legacy? She proved trade isn't just about products—it's about people, persistence, and paying it forward. In a world closing doors, she kicked them open. You can hear it read on the Trade Meet Global Podcast at https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-4qrma-19b8566

What's your story? If you’ve got one, we want to see it! Post it in this Space “Member Stories” ... which can be found at Trade Meet Global