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Monday, April 20, 2015

Delmarva Chicken Industry History Documentary Premieres Planned

World Premieres of New Documentary on History of Delmarva’s Chicken Industry
Cluck, Pluck, and Luck Planned for Salisbury, Maryland and Georgetown, Delaware

After nearly a year of research, interviews, production, and editing, the new documentary about the early years of Delmarva’s chicken industry soon will be premiered at two locations.  These showings are open to all.   

Produced by 302 Stories, Inc. and  Berkana, Center for Media and Education, Inc., this hour-long documentary will show highlights of the early years of the local chicken industry, from its improbable formation in the 1920s through the 1960s.  Photographs, early motion pictures, and interviews with persons knowledgeable about the early years are sure to make this an interesting and entertaining film. 

Cluck, Pluck, and Luck will be shown for the first time on Thursday, April 23 at 7:00 p.m. in the Wicomico Room of the Guerrieri University Center on the  campus of Salisbury University.  Hosted by the Edward H. Nabb Center for Delmarva History and Culture, the viewing is open to the general public.  Parking is available in Dogwood Parking Lot D off of Dogwood Drive.  Seating is limited to the first 150 people who arrive.

The following Monday, April 27, the documentary will be shown at 6:30 p.m. in the Theatre of the Arts and Science Center on the campus of Delaware Technical and Community College at Georgetown.   Hosted by Delmarva Poultry Industry, Inc., this showing also is open to the general public.  Seating is limited to the first 350 persons to arrive.

The production of this documentary has revealed a lot about the early years of Delmarva’s chicken industry, with much of the information not previously captured by historians. 

This documentary should be of interest to anybody on Delmarva, whether they are long-time residents,  veterans of the chicken industry, or persons just curious about the history of this hugely important local industry.

No reservations are needed and it is first come-first admitted.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Do all of the positive pr you want, the facts don't change. Perdue kills chickens, they pollute the soil, and then they put happy chickens in commercials.

SU Perdue Business School, kids in business attire, in a education monument built on a pile of chicken shit.

Anonymous said...

Propaganda. A more interesting
documentary would be called "Past and Present-The Change From the Family Farm to Industrial Factory Farming."

Anonymous said...

Hey, the phosphorus is on the house. Drink up!