Welcome to the stage: the Spamettes!

Three women posing while wearing glamourous, glittery gowns featuring ruffled edging and large cartwheel hats. The woman in the foreground is seated with legs showing. The two women in the background are standing while holding the hems of their dresses.

The Hormel Girls at a training in Hollywood. Date unknown. Eleanor Jones Papers, McIntyre Library Special Collections and Archives.  

World War II was over, the economy was booming, and the airwaves were full of the latest songs. One of the most prominent radio sponsors of the day, Hormel Foods, piped ads for SPAM and Hormel Chili into living rooms across the country, along with exuberant performances from the Music with the Hormel Girls program.

From 1946 to 1953, a traveling musical troupe known as the Hormel Girls brought together a group of female military veterans to promote and sell Hormel products. Popularly referred to as the Spamettes, the women traveled across the country selling products in grocery stores, ringing doorbells, and performing in radio and TV specials.

What started as a drum and bugle corps created by company president Jay Hormel soon evolved into a highly successful advertising strategy for the company. But while Hormel may have monetized the women's military service and femininity, the women marched past societal and gender limitations of the era to achieve financial independence, forge life-long friendships, and travel the US from coast to coast. 

Follow the journey of the Hormel Girls through the experiences of Eleanor Jones, a Cornell, Wisconsin native who was forever changed by her experiences with the group. 

The Hormel Girls at a stage show in 1951; 11 women hold multi-cultural percussive instruments, among them bongos and a tambourine. The women wear matching ensembles of white lace trimmed blouses with long pinstriped A-line skirts.

Photo courtesey of Hormel Foods Corp. 

Flyer promoting the Hormel Girls’ June 4th radio and stage show for Boston, Massachusetts. The flyer is white with red text in a landscape orientation. The flyer says, "Tune in Hormel Girls' Corps, 12 noon - saturdays, WCOP, 115 on your dial; in person, in Boston, Boston Conservatory of Music Auditorium, 31 Hemenway Street, June 4, admission free."

Flyer promoting a Music with the Hormel Girls radio broadcast in Boston, Massachusets.  Eleanor Jones Papers, McIntryre Library Special Collections and Archives. 

 “S-P-A-M! The first meat of its kind in America preferred by most people! SPAM! Over eleven years ago the news sensation of the meat packing industry, SPAM. Today, this miracle meat of many uses continues to maintain its leadership from coast to coast.” 

                                     - 1948 radio advertisement for from Hormel Foods