This is a timeline of selected events in the life and family of Robert Warren Bradshaw (1807-1898), the inventor of Pepsi in my revised history.
Bradshaw Family Timeline
1753
June 9
George Bradshaw is born in London to a family of wealthy merchants.
1773
June 28
George Bradshaw converts to Judaism following persuasion from some of his close friends, who were Jewish missionaries.
1774
June 13
George Bradshaw opens his own brewery in London, which becomes very successful.
1775
May 21
George Bradshaw marries Mary Craddock (born London, July 9, 1754), who had recently converted to Judaism to marry him.
1776
February 28
George Frederick Bradshaw, son of George and Mary Craddock Bradshaw, is born in London.
1777
March 10
Mary Anne Bradshaw, daughter of George and Mary Craddock Bradshaw, is born in London.
1778
October 9
Josephine Marie Bradshaw, daughter of George and Mary Craddock Bradshaw, is born in London.
1781
February 23
Richard Henry Bradshaw, son of George and Mary Craddock Bradshaw, is born in London.
1795
August 11
Mary Craddock Bradshaw dies of tuberculosis at 41 in London.
1802
September 3
Widowed George Bradshaw closes the Bradshaw Brewery to prepare to emigrate from England.
September 13
George Bradshaw immigrates to the United States, relocating to New York, NY.
September 20
George Bradshaw buys property in New York to reopen the Bradshaw Brewery.
October 4
The Bradshaw Brewery reopens in New York.
1803
August 14
George Bradshaw, 50, remarries to Elizabeth Warren (born London, August 6, 1772).
1804
December 15
Jane Louise Bradshaw, daughter of George and Elizabeth Warren Bradshaw, is born in New York.
1807
January 5
Robert Warren Bradshaw, son of George and Elizabeth Warren Bradshaw, is born in New York.
1809
May 10
Thomas James Bradshaw, son of George and Elizabeth Warren Bradshaw, is born in New York.
1824
February 8
Robert W. Bradshaw marries Martha Victoria Parker (born New York, February 4, 1808).
1825
January 28
Abigail Elizabeth Bradshaw, daughter of Robert Warren and Martha Victoria Parker Bradshaw, is born in New York.
1826
February 15
Robert George Bradshaw, son of Robert Warren and Martha Victoria Parker Bradshaw, is born in New York.
1828
January 19
Frederick Thomas Bradshaw, son of Robert Warren and Martha Victoria Parker Bradshaw, is born in New York.
September 5
George Bradshaw retires from the Bradshaw Brewery at 75, leaving the business to his son Robert.
September 8
Robert W. Bradshaw takes over his father’s brewery.
1836
July 19
George Bradshaw dies of natural causes at 83 in New York.
1837
Robert W. Bradshaw, who had been struggling with alcoholism since his teenage years (often becoming drunk from drinking too much beer and other hard liquors), takes the advice from a new doctor to stop drinking alcohol altogether. He also begins to attend synagogue more regularly, and becomes more religious.
Bradshaw begins to distance himself from the Bradshaw Brewery he inherited from his father, increasingly becoming nauseous at the very thought of drinking alcohol.
Bradshaw develops a deep love for soda pop, especially ginger beer, ginger ale, cream soda, sarsaparilla, and root beer, which he had been drinking since his teens, although he had never cherished soda pop that much until this point in life.
Bradshaw journeys to London to visit with his half-brother Richard, a pharmacist deeply interested in exotic herbs, spices, and other staples.
During his visit, he becomes fascinated with kola nuts (caffeinated seeds from kola trees in Africa), and decides he wants to use them in experiments to invent a new kind of soft drink, a sweet carbonated beverage designed to stimulate energy after being consumed, in contrast to alcoholic drinks.
September 8
Robert W. Bradshaw closes the Bradshaw Brewery permanently.
September 11-15
The old Bradshaw Brewery is transformed into a laboratory.
September 18
Work begins at the appropriately named Bradshaw Laboratory for experiments for a formula for Bradshaw’s ideal kola nut-based soft drink.
1839
May 17
After over a year and a half of experimentation, the formula for Robert W. Bradshaw’s kola beverage is finished, due mostly to the efforts of Bradshaw himself.
May-June
Ideas for a name at Bradshaw’s kola beverage pop up:
Peppy Cola – this was quickly rejected because it made the purpose of the drink seem too obvious
Pepsy Cola – this was actually a working title for the new drink
Pepsi-Cola – this was suggested by one of Bradshaw’s employees at the laboratory, further masking the obviousness of the drink’s purpose; this is approved
June 10
Robert W. Bradshaw gets a patent for Pepsi-Cola, and the following week, it is launched into the marketplace and at soda fountains, restaurants, and other dining facilities.
This process begins first in New York and its surrounding areas, and then spreads rapidly throughout the nation, and soon throughout the world, making the new soft drink a phenomenon.
June 10-14
The Bradshaw Laboratory is transformed into a soda pop factory.
June 17
The Bradshaw Laboratory is renamed as “The Pepsi-Cola Company”.
1840-1865
Early 1840
Pepsi-Cola surpasses soft drinks like ginger ale and root beer in popularity.
1861-1865
Pepsi-Cola is a hugely popular drink in the military, especially among Union soldiers and somewhat with Confederate soldiers, during the American Civil War.
1863
Pepsi-Cola changes its design for the first time since 1839.
Whereas the original Pepsi-Cola logo was initially bare and surrounded by an all dark blue background, the new logo was made in a red, white, and blue circle with the Pepsi-Cola lettering in the white stripe in between the red one on top, and the lighter blue one on the bottom.
This move was made to promote American patriotism during wartime, particularly for the Union side.
1854
January 20
Elizabeth Warren Bradshaw dies of natural causes at 81 in New York.
1868
October 12
Richard H. Bradshaw dies of natural causes at 87 in London.
1897
July 3
Martha V. Bradshaw dies of natural causes at 89 in New York.
1898
October 22
Robert W. Bradshaw dies of natural causes at 91 in New York.