Competitive eating is one of those activities that you either love or hate. The idea that people could compete to see who can eat the most is a concept that reeks of gluttony to the point of it being nauseating. Despite that, it’s a sport that's slowly gaining popularity and visibility in mainstream culture.
|
A watermelon-eating contest in Cincinnatti, Ohio, 1915. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
Juniors compete against each other on an Independence Day pie eating contest, July 4, 1919. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
Lois and Ruth Waddell devour a combined total of 204 oysters in 1920. The girls were crowned winners of the Great Oyster Eating Contest after they had finished. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
Four youngsters vie for first place during a doughnut eating contest held by the Salvation Army in May, 1922. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
Men tuck into a row of pies during a contest on a Navy Ship in 1922. |
Boys dunk their mouths into pies at Jefferson school, Washington D.C, 1923. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
A pie-eating contest at the World’s Fair in Chicago, 1934. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
A rice eating contest at the National Rice Festival, Crowley, Louisiana, 1938. |
Joseph Rubolotta, 12, is crowned world champion doughnut dunker at a competition in New York, 1939. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
A pie eating contest, at the 4-H Club fair, Cimarron, Kansas, 1939. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
Richard Baranski, 6, savors his victory after eating a 10-inch cranberry pie in 15 seconds, 1948. |
A six-year-old boy is pictured with food all over his face, as he recovers after eating a 10 inch cranberry pie in just fifteen seconds, 1948. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
In 1948, a clam eating contest was held at Ivar’s restaurant on the Seattle waterfront. The winner was Richard Watson, a local cabdriver, who gulped down 110 clams in 10 minutes and became the first ever World Champion Clam Eater |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
Broadway show girls compete in a hands-free spaghetti-eating contest, 1948. From the late 1910s to 1920s, eating contests became a fun way to draw a crowd, and establishments, from restaurants to movie theaters offered prizes to draw contestants and bring in business. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
A watermelon-eating contest in Rome, Italy, 1950. |
|
Boys practice for a pie-eating contest at the Los Angeles Food Show, 1950. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
|
London students attempt to eat potatoes hung on a line, 1952. |
|
|
Denver Patrolman Joe Hale poses with the winners of a pie-eating contest, 1954. |
|
Marion Todd, left, and Marge Kraus during National Hot Dog Month, posing with a plate of 60 hot dogs, which at the time represented what the average American ate in a year in Chicago, 1957. Their hats were accented with a band of hot dogs smothered with mustard. |
Amazing Vintage Photographs That Prove Eating Contests Have Been Popular in the Early 20th Century
|
Spectators look on as Joe Steele takes part in a food-eating competition, 1958. |