Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

First Broiler House

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Area
  
0 acres (0 ha)

NRHP Reference #
  
74000607

Added to NRHP
  
3 July 1974

Built
  
1923

Opened
  
1923

First Broiler House

Location
  
University of Delaware Experimental Station, Georgetown, Delaware

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The First Broiler House, also known as Mrs. Wilmer Steele's Broiler House, is preserved at the University of Delaware Agricultural Experiment Station near Georgetown, Delaware as an example of a chicken house that was widely used to raise broiler chickens in Delaware during the 1920s. An example of an individual-colony house, the 16-foot (4.9 m) square wood frame building housed 500 chickens. It was provided with a coal stove.

Celia Steele of Oceanview, Delaware was the first person in Delaware to raise chickens specifically for meat production, separately from her laying flock that was primarily meant to produce eggs. The wife of a Coast Guardsman stationed at the Bethany Beach Lifesaving Station, she raised her first flock of 500 in 1923, selling 387 two-pound chickens for 67 cents per pound. In 1924 she started 1000 chickens. In 1925 Mrs. Steele started 10,000. The industry expanded from there, reaching 3 billion chickens per year fifty years later in 1973.

The broiler house has been moved from its original site at the Steele farm and has been repaired. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on July 3, 1974.

References

First Broiler House Wikipedia