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By Alfred L. Cralle
Born in Virginia shortly after the Civil War, Cralle attended Wayland Seminary before settling in Pittsburgh. While working as a porter at a hotel, he noticed that servers struggled significantly with ice cream: it stuck so firmly to spoons that they had to use two hands and multiple utensils to serve a single portion. Having been interested in mechanics since his youth, he decided to engineer a more efficient and hygienic solution.
On February 2, 1897, Cralle was awarded U.S. Patent No. 576,395 for his "Ice Cream Mold and Disher." His invention featured a scoop with a built-in metal scraper activated by a trigger mechanism in the handle. This design allowed the user to cleanly separate the ice cream ball from the scoop in one motion, ensuring the food did not need to be touched by the server’s hands.
Cralle’s impact is permanent: his functional design remains the direct ancestor of modern ice cream scoops used worldwide. Although his invention became a global standard, he never realized a major financial profit from it. Beyond his mechanical work, he served as the general manager for a prominent Afro-American financial and business association.
Alfred L. Cralle is recognized as one of the most influential Black inventors of the post-Civil War era. His journey from a carpenter’s son to a patented inventor and business leader illustrates technical ingenuity applied to everyday life. He died prematurely in a car accident in 1919.