Roosevelt not only sent his own commission to verify what Sinclair described but exchanged letters with the author to help validate the very details that frightened American consumers. Readers’ concerns from Sinclair’s novel soon became a political issue and escalated into a full-blown “meat scandal” in President Theodore Roosevelt’s administration. Sinclair happened yesterday, are happening today, and will happen tomorrow and the next day, until some Hercules comes to cleanse the filthy stable.” The action of the President … remove all doubt, and give the book very great importance … it is with nothing less than horror that we learn it to be true. The London Times’ 1906 literary review wrote about the novel’s real-world context: “Unhappily we have good reason for believing it to be all fact, not fiction. © Chaloner Woods breakingthewalls | adobe Stockįor most consumers, an initial exposure to the unseen dangers on their dinner plate came from Upton Sinclair’s 1906 novel “The Jungle” - specifically, two chapters in which he drew from his own observations of the Chicago meat-packing industry to describe conditions in which meat was prepared.
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