You’re probably wondering why I chose to write about the inventor of the Pringles can dying, and not Yves Saint Laurent’s death. Well, it’s obviously because this is much more interesting.

Anyways. Fredric J. Baur, of Cincinnati, died at age 89. Apparently he was so proud of his invention that a portion of his ashes was buried in one of the cans. What flavor? I don’t know, but I sure hope it was the Pizzalicious flavor!
Baur’s children said they honored his request to bury him in one of the cans by placing part of his cremated remains in a Pringles container in his grave in suburban Springfield Township.
Source: http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/06/02/pringles.burial.ap/index.html
It sounds to me like his family just didn’t want to “pop” for the bill, and decided to get him a $1.00 urn from the local deli instead.
During my research on Fredric Baur, I came across an interesting page that documents the packaging of Pringles around the world. You can view Pringles from Japan, Europe, North America, Malayan, and more at Marc’s International Pringles Can Collection.
Tags: burial, death, fredric j. baur, invent, invention, pringles








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3 Comments
His family did “pop for the bill”. the remainder of his ashes was buried alongside the can in a conventional urn as the NY Times story reported.
Welcome to America…
Is the Pringles guy related to the Monopoly dude or the Esquire dandy?