1865 San Francisco Directory – All Quiet before the Quake

1865 San Francisco Directory

All Quiet before the Quake

SAN FRANCISCO – 1865

27 December 2012
SteamerDay1865

Steamer Day in San Francisco – 1865 – From a lithograph by E. Jump, a noted caricaturist of the era. On Steamer Day, which fell on the 13th and 28th of each month, all accounts were supposed to be paid. The lithograph shows the excitement and confusion which occurred as the ship from the East was about to arrive. – sfmuseum.org

Interesting to look at the innocence of an 1865 San Francisco business directory right before the first great earth quake. With all of the great advertisements, the city must have been prospering and booming. I wonder how many bottles spilled from shelves?

1865_SF_waterfront

Broadway & Front, foot of Telegraph Hill, c. 1865 or Warehouses at the foot of Telegraph Hill, c. 1865, Collection of San Francisco Public Library

GENERAL EFFECTS OF THE SHAKE

October 8, 1865. From The Daily Alta California

At precisely fifteen minutes to one P.M. Oct. 8th, 1865, the City of San Francisco was visited by the heaviest Shocks ever felt in the vicinity by “the oldest Inhabitants.”

1865EQ_SF_Twain

The first great quake happened in 1865, and though its memory has faded somewhat, the coincidental presence of the young Sam Clemens (or Mark Twain, as the nation would soon discover) in San Francisco has preserved it.

THE SHOCKS

The first shock occurred as above stated, and lasted perhaps five seconds, the ground undulated violently, the waves of motion seeming to be, as usual, from northeast to southwest, although many person, noted for careful observation, declare that it was the reverse, or from west to east. This shock made the windows rattle, and sent nearly everybody into the streets, and away from the vicinity of high-walled buildings, but did no serious damage.

The second shock, which was far more severe, followed in about five seconds, and accompanied by a loud sliding noise, partially due to falling walls, glass and plastering, and particularly, apparently originating in the earth.

The vibration of this shock was very severe, and high walls waved and swayed in the air like willow branches in the wind. Window, wherever pinched or slightly strained, were wrecked in an instant; plastering came down in showers, bells rung, walls cracked and general consternation ensued.

The latest shock lasted, perhaps, six or seven seconds, vibrating east and west, and then all was over.

DAMAGE GENERALLY

This is but a beginning of the amount of the damage done. Scarcely a house in the city that does not show some mark of the visitation, in cracked walls, open joints, flaked plaster, or a cranky position and many of the old heavy brick structures are so shaken up and twisted as to be dangerous to the occupants. On the low made ground in the southern portion of the city the effect was particularly visible. The vicinity of Howard street, from Fifth to Eighth, exhibited lively signs of caving in. In some spots the streets and lots adjoining, sunk, and in others rose. A lot on the southwest corner of Seventh and Howard streets, sunk 14 feet, leaving a sewer bare and broken; and where Saturday was a dry bank of sand, to-day a flock of ducks are disporting themselves in a pond of water, illustrative of the trite old saying “It is an ill wind that blows no good” that is, supposing a duck to be somebody. At Sixth and Howard, Mission and Beale, and divers other places, the ground opened, while great volumes of water were forced up into the air, in some instances as high as fifty feet. On Tehama, Howard and Mission streets, the ground has become slightly undulating, where it was perfectly level. A fissure opened west of Fillmore street, extending transversely with and crossing the Bay-shore Road. This effect was also produced in other localities.

The City Hall building, which is badly damaged. The front walls show but few cracks, but at the top the wall is so badly sprung as to let the rafters out in several places. The inner walls are badly cracked and shattered, and large cracks appear in the rear wall, on the northeast corner near the area. The oscillation of the wall was so great as to cause the fire bell to strike once quite distinctly. Until the building has been carefully examined by architects, it is perhaps not work our while to pass an opinion as to its safety and the extent of the repairs which may be necessary.

The large brick block at the southeast corner of Battery and Washington streets, extending along Battery street, from Merchant to Washington, is very badly damaged, so much so that its tearing-down is probably rendered necessary. The rear walls are very seriously injured and the entire front is in such a condition that its fall may be looked for at any moment, should another shock occur; a person on the roof being able to look clearly through to the basement the entire length of the block. In fact, the building is, apparently, “essentially used up.”

The house of the California Engine Company No. 4 on Market street between Sansome and Battery, is so badly damaged that the Chief of the Fire Department has ordered the engine to be removed to the Corporation Yard for safety. It will not be taken back until further notice. It was the impression, last night, that the whole building would have to come down.

1865 San Francisco Directory

SF_lxxii_1865

Nice full-page advertisement for Thomas E. Finley who caries just about everything for family and medicinal purposes including Pacific Congress Water, Sonoma Red and White Wines, J.H. Cutter’s O.K. No. 1 Bourbon Whisky and Havana cigars.

SF_xxxii_1865

A wonderful Pacific Glass Works advertisement on the top half of this page. Manufacturers of all kinds of Light, Green and Black Glass. Bottom half of page advertisement for Mercado & Seully with a mysterious (at least to me) listing for Sainsevain’s California Wine Bitters.

SF_49_1865

Francis Cassin of CASSIN’S GRAPE BRANDY BITTERS fame (see bottle picture below) name really jumps out on this page.

Cassin.s

CASSIN.S GRAPE BRANDY BITTERS (note placement of apostrophe)

SF_253_1865

M. Keller, of CALIFORNIA WINE BITTERS Los Angeles listing. A very desirable bottle (see picture below)

C 024 California Wine

CALIFORNIA WINE BITTERS / M. KELLER / LOS ANGELES

SF_266_1865

LOUIS LACUOR & CO. of LACOUR’S BITTERS SARSAPARIPHERE fame really jumps out on this page (see picture below).

Lacour's_Run

LACOUR’S BITTERS SARSAPARIPHERE

SF_412_1865

Here we see the very elusive and mysterious VINCENT SQUARZA name with the unique shaped bitters bottle (see below)

VSquarza

V. SQUARZA (Vincent Squarza), Presumed Bitters not listed in R/H. Cobalt blue pint, applied square collar. Labeled Bitters. No many known examples.

SF_488_1865

The Bitters listing in the San Francisco Directory. Slim pickings. Obviously more bitters could have been listed here. Nice to see the N. Jacobs listing for ROSENBAUM’S BITTERS (see picture below)

RosenbaumsBitters)

ROSENBAUMS / BITTERS // SAN FRANCISCO /
N. B. JACOBS & CO

SF_642_1865

Super illustration of a interior view of Quartz Mills for Silver, Miners Foundry and Machine Works

SF_646_1865

Spectacular layout showing a wide variety of typestyles for PHILADELPHIA BREWERY – Hoelscher & Wieland. Announcing new and extensive buildings, right before the earthquake.

SF_658_1865

Two advertisements sharing the same page. Nathaniel Gray Undertaker not knowing some serious business is headed his way. Wine Biters noted in the Hoadley & Co. advertisement on the bottom. Which Wine Bitters (see above)?

SF_675_1865

The Vincent Squarza advertisement (see bottle picture above).

SF_676_1865

For Gentlemen only??? Bizarre advertisement for PACIFIC MUSEUM ANATOMY AND SCIENCE. “The Wonders of the World and Beauties of Nature”. Look at all the women is long open casket boxes!

SF_678_1865

Cool, full page, DOW’S DISTILLERY advertisement. The typography is off the charts for the distillery name. Notice the difference between the top of bottom typestyles.

Posted in Advertising, Ales & Ciders, Bitters, Breweriana, Glass Companies & Works, History, Liquor Merchant, Medicines & Cures, Mineral Water, Museums, Spirits, Whiskey, Wine & Champagne | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Bottle Collector finds Huge Cache of Silver Coins in Piggy Bank

SilverCoins_MCU_8

Michael Urbanski

MichaelCobainUrbanskiGood Evening!:

I was wondering if you do articles on your site other than bottles, I just metal detected a piggy bank cache with 346 silver coins in it, would that be a good story for the site?
thanks, Happy New Year! Mike (Michael Urbanski)

 

So heres the story,

I went metal detecting since my other plans for the day got cancelled. Hour 1: nothing (when I say nothing, I mean some clad and junk) Hour 2: nothing. End of hour 3: … things got interesting.

I saw an old tree, started detecting and my signals spiked. I dug out an old lead figure, no paint on it, about the size a melon. Thought nothing of it at first since I’ve found lead figures and toys both big and small in the past so I put it in my bag, finished detecting around the tree with no luck, went to my car and drove home because by that point my hands had turned bright red from the cold.

I get to the garage, I did have shelves for smalls (and where I unload my gear) and was about to put the figure up on one of them. Then I noticed some dirt spilled out, I see that on the side it has a small hole, most lead figures even small ones are hollow. I decided to take it home to rinse it out through that small hole (let it fill up with water, then let it drain out). After the first cleaning I noticed that it was still heavy and that no dirt was coming out of it anymore, heavier than it should be. I let it dry and took a look in the hole. I noticed that there was something shining inside. I looked on the back and to my surprise I noticed a slit on the neck of the figure which turned out is a piggy bank. I look in the hole again with a magnifying glass and noticed that there were a few ribbed coins with white sides, that looked like silver dimes.

Grabbed the camera, and by that time my dad was home, he filmed, I opened and the result was… well see for yourself…ALL SILVER, NO CLAD!!! Another good thing, after i pried open the iron cap at the bottom, it was still salvageable, and the piggy bank is still whole and usable! I plan on repainting it over the summer along with another one I found a year ago that was empty and will make a video on those as well. Two years ago I found a gold coin, once in a lifetime find, now a coin cache… hopefully more to come soon. HH!

Read More: Mike AKA Chinchillaman1 AKA Mike’s Bottle Room

SilverCoinsVideo

(See opening of Piggy Bank Video)

Here are some pictures including a picture of the original bank, Mike

“newest coin in the bunch as far as I’ve seen is 1952, oldest is 1909 Barber”

Looking for any New York City 5 boroughs blob tops, any Franklin Furnace NJ bottles, any Coney Island bottles, Anchor Brewing Co / Dobbs Ferry NY / New York Dept, The Bronx Co Mount Vernon, Henry Elias (amber)

SilverCoins_MCU_2

SilverCoins_MCU_3

SilverCoins_MCU_4

SilverCoins_MCU_5

SilverCoins_MCU_6

SilverCoins_MCU_7

SilverCoins_MCU_9

Posted in Currency, Digging and Finding, News | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Charles Flint Glass Blowing Images

CharlesFlintMugCharles Flint posted some really great pictures last week of early glass blowing techniques. I have nested these together and archived. Hope you enjoy. Thanks Charles!

Read More: Boys in Glass Houses – Taking on the Mannerisms of Men

Read More: Glass Works and Glass Factories – Hell on Earth?


Charles Flint Postings

Pouring glass onto a table to be rolled out for plate glass.

Pouring glass onto a table to be rolled out for plate glass.

WindowGlassBlowing_Flint

Window Glass Blowing, Blowers with partly finished cylinder.

WindowGlassBlowing2

Window Glass Blowing, Blowing the Ball. Finished Cylinder.

FinishingCylinder_Flint

They are making cylindrical glass tubs. They will cut the two ends off then make a cut down the center and flatten it to make window or plate glass.

GlassBlowersNewCastle

Glass blowers at New Castle, Pennsylvania in 1897

GlassCutter_Flint

Glass cutter and cutting machine.

Glassoven_Flint

Glassoven, blowing department

Glass blowing Gent

Glass blowing Gent

He is making a clay crucible for the glass making factory. One of the most important jobs at the factory. If they didn't get all the air pockets out it could blow up the furnace and often did.

Building up a Melting Pot. He is making a clay crucible for the glass making factory. One of the most important jobs at the factory. If they didn’t get all the air pockets out it could blow up the furnace and often did. – Charles Flint

MkeeBrosLetter_Flint

M’KEE & Brothers Flint Glass Manufacturers

Posted in Blown Glass, Early American Glass, Freeblown Glass, Glass Companies & Works, Glass Makers, History, Windows | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters Stamp Question

Greeley'sStamp1

GREELEY’S BOURBON BITTERS STAMP

25 December 2012

Hi Ferdinand and Elizabeth.

I have been enjoying your Peachridge site ever since finding this item and looking for information. The basics are: It appears to be a stamp for Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters. I would assume a wax seal marking. Appears to be lead block and copper stamp top. Approximately nickle sized. Found by myself in my home town of Shasta, California. Gold Rush era community in the woods. I am sending a cell phone picture, but would love to talk more about this. Let me know if you would like me to send you better pictures. I ]would love your advice. I am going to be leaning towards selling this item at some time, but also might like to collect Greeley’s bottles to display with this! They are beautiful! I have not found any yet however. Something tells me I might be warm though. Thanks, Jon K.

Hi Ferdinand.

I did clean it up a little, but won’t be doing anything else to it. It’s a sturdy little slug and there are no nicks or dings in the face. So I’m wondering if Greeley’s used sealing wax and stamped their bottles?

Thanks and Happy Holidays,

Jon K.

Jon: I am not familiar with a wax stamp for Greeley’s but I bet someone out there is. I do know that some of the medicinal products related to bitters such as Roback’s Blood Pills were sold in a box with wrappers sealed in wax.

Read More: Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters – A Great Boston Bitters Barrel

Read More: Double Pontiled Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters

Read More: Killer Green Greeley’s Barrel found the Old Fashioned Way

Greeley'sStamp2

Greeley'sStamp3

Greeley'sStamp4

G101 | GREELEY'S BOURBON BITTERS Color Run - Meyer Collection

G101 | GREELEY’S BOURBON BITTERS Color Run – Meyer Collection

Greeley's Bourbon Bitters Label

Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters Label

GreeleysAdWestCoast

Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters advertisement noting on bottom that the GWB’s were “Put up in Quart Bottles, in cases of one and two dozen and for sale by Druggists and Grocers everywhere. GEO. W. SNELL, Sole Agent for California and Oregon, 130 Washington Street, San Francisco. – The Golden Era – San Francisco, California – Sunday, February 24, 1861

Posted in Advice, Bitters, Bourbon, Digging and Finding, Figural Bottles, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

XR Clarke’s Vegitable Sherry Wine Bitters sells on ebay

C158Cropped

ONLY 70 CTS, CLARKE’S VEGITABLE SHERRY WINE BITTERS

Vegetable is misspelled

25 December 2012

[Jeff Burkhardt] You might consider a posting on Bob Strickhart’s superb run of CLARKE’S SHERRY WINE BITTERS per last month’s Antique Bottle & Glass Collector magazine. Bob just added the missing link; the 70C. size, embossed “VEGITABLE”(sic), with full label no less. Purchased last week off of eBay, this puppy was hammered-downed at $5,251! Bob’s a true collector and wasn’t about to let this one get away…a variant he’d searched for years to acquire.

C158_Clarkes0

The Carlyn Ring & W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

C 158  ONLY 70 CTS /  CLARKE’S / VEGITABLE / SHERRY / WINE / BITTERS / SHARON MASS // f  // f // f //
Rectangular, Aqua, Extremely rare
Vegetable is misspelled

C158_Clarkes1

The listing from grahamlouise in Mystic, Connecticut is as follows:

Large Antique Bitters Bottle Clarkes Sherry Wine Bitters With Original Label

Excellent Original Condition!!

Wow! Here is a fantastic Antique Bitters Bottle for Clarke’s Sherry Wine Bitters. This large 2 quart bottle has most of it’s original label and is highly embossed on the back with large 1/2″ letters that say, ONLY 70 CTS, CLARKES VEGITABLE SHERRY WINE BITTERS, SHARON MASS. This bottle is 100% authentic and measures 11 1/2″ high, 5″ wide and 3 1/4″ deep. It is in excellent condition with no cracks, chips or damage. The corners of the bottle are all angled and it has an applied top. It is agreat aqua color and has bubbles in the glass. The bottle was not dug and was found in a wooden box with some others. Please e-mail any questions. US only thanks!! (See Listing)

C158_Clarkes2

C158_Clarkes3

C158_Clarkes6

C158_Clarkes7

C158_Clarkes4

C158_Clarkes5

C158_Clarkes8

Posted in Article Publications, Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Digging and Finding, Early American Glass, eBay, News | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Louise Hawkins – The “Sylph”

T h e   S Y L P H

A Sylph (also called sylphid) is a mythological creature in the Western tradition. The term originates in Paracelsus, who describes sylphs as invisible beings of the air, his elementals of air. There is no known substantial mythos associated with them.

LouiseHawkins

Louise “Lu” Hawkins aka The Sylph

There was a series of coded telegrams signed with the mysterious pseudonym “Sylph”. It soon developed that the real-life Sylph was a woman of easy virtue named Louise Hawkins, whose Cyprian charms had been made plus a cigar box full of thousand-dollar bills.

In investigating the appearance and demise of the Old Cabin Bitters and Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters (Read: Log Cabin Series – Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters) we came across the Great Whiskey Ring.

K 021 (Kelly's_A)

The exposure of the Great Whiskey Ring of 1875 rocked Washington D.C. and indeed the entire country like few national scandals before or since. On May 10, Federal agents stormed into the offices of nine St. Louis distilleries, seized illicit whiskey and box loads of records, and arrested their proprietors. Simultaneous arrests occurred in Cincinnati, Milwaukee and Chicago. Ultimately, indictments were issued against 240 whiskey-makers, government officials and others. In all, 110 were found guilty. There were actually forged U.S. Revenue stamps that were issued and distillers only paid taxes on one-third of their whiskey.

Most of characters went to jail. Thus ended a massive scheme to defraud the U.S. of excise taxes on distilled spirits. The fallout from the raids would roil the Nation for months and reach right into the White House. We also did not see any more new Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters being produced as liquor merchants and partners John H. Garnhart and James B. Kelly were put in prison.

PresidentGrant

President Ulysses S. Grant. Photo: Brady-Handy Photograph Collection (Library of Congress)

One of the words or names in all this high drama was “The Sylph”. This was the code name used by General Orville E. Babcock, who also happened to be a White House aide and personal secretary to President Ulysses S. Grant.

GenOrville_E._Babcock

Earlier photograph of General Orville E. Babcock – Brady-Handy Photograph Collection (Library of Congress)

“McDonald rightfully felt that the diamonds and the large sums of cash he gave to Babcock and the pair of horses with expensive harness to President Grant were a good investment.”

The first visible appearance of the Sylph word seems to come from a telegram referring to a woman of easy virtue named Louise “Lu” Hawkins. You see Babcock was informed by General John McDonald, Supervisor of the Internal Revenue in St. Louis that Federal agents were about to be sent to St. Louis to have a surprise look at his books. Basically McDonald asked Babcock to quash the investigation. Babcock went to President Grant and then triumphantly telegraphed McDonald “I succeeded, they will not go”. Babcock signed the telegram, “Sylph”.

Grant&BabcockCivilWar

Gen. Orville E. Babcock (right), aide to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant (seated) during the Civil War. Babcock, an 1861 graduate of West Point, joined Grant’s staff during the siege of Vicksburg, Miss, in 1863. Babcock was with Grant when Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered on April 9, 1865, at Appomattox Court House, Va., When Grant was elected president in 1868, Babcock followed him to the White House as his personal secretary. (Missouri History Museum)

“I succeeded, they will not go”. Babcock signed the telegram, “Sylph”.

GenJohnMcDonald

General John McDonald and the cover of his book, Secrets of the Great Whiskey Ring and Eighteen Months in the Penitentiary – 1880

A writer described Ms. Hawkins this way: “Her form was petit and yet withal, a plumpness and development which made her a being whose tempting luscious deliciousness was irresistible. ” McDonald also said, “she was the essence of grace, distilled from the buds of perfection, and with a tongue on which the oil of vivacity and seduction never ceased running; she was indeed a sylph and a siren, whose presence was like the flavor of the poppy mixed with the perfumes of Araby.” McDonald eventually served eighteen months at the Missouri State Penitentiary for stealing whiskey tax funds. He actually wrote a book about his experiences in 1880, Secrets of the Great Whiskey Ring and Eighteen Months in the Penitentiary (see above).

What McDonald did not say was that Louise Hawkins was a whore he provided to Babcock’s use when he was in St. Louis.

During the second two weeks of August 1880, many of the national newspapers wrote about The Great Whiskey Ring. I suggest you read one of the articles below for a better grasp and understanding of the story. There are also many books and articles that explore the subject including:

Fraud of the Century: Rutherford B. Hayes, Samuel Tilden, and the Stolen Election of 1876, by Roy Morris

Secrets of the Great Whiskey Ring and Eighteen Months in the Penitentiary  by John McDonald (Gen)

Presidential Payola, by Joseph Cummins and Thomas J. Craughwell

Grant, Babcock, and the Whiskey Ring, Part 2 by Timothy Rives

GENEVA GAZETTE

THE WHISKEY RING

Startling Revelations by Gen. John McDonald

Friday, August 13, 1880

(Read Article online or get PDF)

Section1

THE WHISKEY RING (Article Section 1)

Section2

THE WHISKEY RING (Article Section 2)

Section3

THE WHISKEY RING (Article Section 3)

WhiskeyRingLancaster

TE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER – Monday, August 9, 1880

Posted in Article Publications, Bitters, Civil War, Figural Bottles, History, Liquor Merchant, Spirits, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Pictures of the Week 12-22-12

This is the third weekly round-up of some really nice photography from various facebook and other glass web sites. 

Make sure you visit the Fresh Peach Gallery which represents the best of the best pictures from 2012.

P H O T O    G A L L E R Y


MarblesWichmannPart1

Collecting Marbles – Part 1 – HandmadeJeff Wichmann

SnowWindow_Bottone

Some of my snow lit bottles…Merry Christmas allJoseph Bottone

McDonald_Jackson

C. McDONALD GINGER BEER – Simon JacksonBottle Diggers and Collectors

PitkinLineup_Marshall

Pitkin Flask Line-up, 4.5 – 7 inchesTom Marshall

EarlyFragments_Rae

Whilst we are still looking at early fragments here is my contribution. All recovered from some dredgings on the river Waveney in Suffolk a couple of years ago. I did find a few common codds and gingers but all the early bottles were broken. – Angus Rae – Bottle Diggers and Collectors

WesternKillers_Mlasko_9

Some Outlandish Western Bitters Dale Mlasko

AmazingGroup_DavidWalkerBarker

Amazing Group – David Walker Barker

VirginiaEarlyGlass_Leveille

Early Virginia Glass – Tom Leveille

RicksBottleRoomXmas12

Art from RicksBottleRoom.com Christmas Card – Rick DeMarsh

ChestnutandSnuff_Marshall

Green Chestnut and Snuff – Tom Marshall

NewEnglanders_George

Couple of New Englanders… Michael George

UdolphoWolfeReflection_Doligale

Udolpho Wolfe’s – Merry Christmas everyone – Tom Doligale

BlueDemijohnReflections_Santos

We went on the quest ( a 200 mile round trip drive) and acquired this Prussian Blue demijohn today. Its about 20 inches tall. The third picture on the top right and the fourth picture on the bottom left capture the true color. – Dale Santos

PaperweightCollection1212

TAKE A LOOK AT THIS COLLECTION. Normally, we’d post the entire Blog, but this photograph of an actual paperweight collection is in an online advertisement for a real estate agent. The agent had a client whose uncle collected paperweights. So the agent posted an image of the client’s uncle’s collection in a Blog ad. The agent writes a little bit about the paperweights and is impressed with the value of some of the pieces advising that people might want to do some research if they’ve got some paperweights sitting around their homes. As for the collection, it’s quite good, and the manner in which the client’s uncle displays them is interesting. – Glass Paperweight Group

Posted in Ales & Ciders, Bitters, Chestnut, Collectors & Collections, Color Runs, Demijohns, Digging and Finding, Early American Glass, Flasks, Marbles, Paperweights, Photography, Schnapps, Snuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

An Alarming Trend with Bottle Clubs

BaltimoreBottleClubMeeting

Where are we without our bottle clubs?

See a Listing of affiliated FOHBC Bottle Clubs

FOHBCFaceBookArtThis is the second e-mail that I have received from one of our important bottle clubs that concerns me greatly. I was able to touch on the topic in my latest FOHBC President’s Message (see below) in the latest issue of Bottles and Extras. I would like to hear your thoughts. Thanks

Ferdinand Meyer V (FOHBC President)

Communication 1

To whom it may concern,

The Apple Valley Bottle Collectors Club (AVCC), after almost 40 years, is disbanding. With a lot of our older members dying off and not able to recruit new members, we have decided to close the doors. We through a big Christmas Party, but still have some funds left over that we would like to donate to FOHBC.

Please let me know where I can send a check.

Thanks,

Rich
President, Acting Treasure, Show Chairman and Newsletter Publisher
Apple Valley Bottle Collectors Club
Winchester, Virginia

Communication 2

Alan (DeMaison – FOHBC Business Manager),

Not sure if you are the right person to contact or not. If not, please pass on accordingly. I am the current President of the Pennsylvania Bottle Collectors Association. A club that “back in the 1970’s had over 200 members. I recently acquired a first year collection of newsletters revealing how dynamic the club was in the beginning. We are down to “about” 20 members. Maybe 10-12 are active? Most are getting up there in years and have been instrumental in keeping the club alive. At 46 years old, I am probably the youngest member. I “desperately” need to develop a “realistic” plan to grow our membership before we disappear entirely. My first approach is to develop a simple web site so we can post meeting dates/times, location etc… As we gain interest from someone, we will have somewhere to direct them for information about our club. Does the FOHBC provide any assistance with the development of a web site? I am even willing to personally pay for this development. I doubt we have enough members to come up with the needed funds. Can you point me in the right direction?

In addition…..any ideas with regards to attracting new members? I “personally” believe that my age group is probably a good target age for new membership. I am at a point where the kids have moved out, my career is stable and there is time to reflect back on American history and get back to hobbies. I’m not sure younger people would have an interest. Several club members have expressed a desire to bring back the “York” bottle show. I think this is a great goal but we currently do not have enough members to make this happen. I cannot do it on my own and I have a full time+ job. I did visit the Baltimore Bottle Club for ideas. They have strong membership numbers and enough people to keep the club dynamic. Any assistance from FOHBC to help save the PABCA is be appreciated.

Regards,

Tom Grove
Pennsylvania Bottle Collectors Association
Dover, Pennsylvania

Follow-up

I look forward to hearing some ideas. In this “day and age” a web site is almost a necessity “in my opinion”. Any local interest in bottles needs to be pulled to a site via a Google search. Currently an Internet search would track down a long time member and co-author of the York bottle book, Don Hartman at his home. This is good but a web site detailing what the club is all about would be better. I am not a web site designer. The new FOHBC web site is super!!

A few ideas for soliciting new members that other club members have expressed.

A weekend set up in Bedford Street Antiques in Carlisle, Pa with a focus on antique bottles.

A weekend set up at the local Mall or even Historical Society with a focus on antique bottles.

I “personally” continue to present a program called “Backyard Archeology” that has been well received but generates new privy digs not club members. To date I have given this to several Historical Societies, Senior Clubs and even an adult learning program for Penn State (OLLI). Google…Tom Grove…Privy Digger…and you should see a local Newspaper Article.

I would like to see an updated version of the York Bottle Book published. Club members feel it would be too much money.

Bring back the York bottle show. There are many folks who speak fondly of this event. I never experience this show.

Of course, if we start to pull in new members and do not have interesting programs, we will be back to square #1.

Thanks for getting the word out. I do not want to be the last President of the Pennsylvania Bottle Collectors!

Tom Grove

Response from Los Angeles Club President Dave Maryo

Hello Tom,

Our Los Angeles club had some membership problems over the last decade. I did not realize how close our club was to ending after so many years when I became president of the club. The membership had dwindled over the years when people moved away we did not get new members to replace them. We had a website at the time but it was rarely updated. I took over the website in 2009 and started updating the website with a new message every month. The website update takes time and effort. Ferdinand makes the website business look easy as he updates the Peachridge Glass and FOHBC websites on nearly a daily basis. But those updates take time and effort.

You are right that the website makes a difference. Over the last couple of years the Los Angeles club has picked up nearly a dozen members that found our club through the website. Some of the new members are much younger than I would have expected. We have two new members in our club that joined in the last couple years. One is a college student that is studying glassblowing and the other is a young lady collecting sodas that is just a few years away from being a teenager. Many younger folks are interested in bottles. Bottle shows also help keep the membership alive. The Los Angeles club has had 46 bottle shows since 1966.

Our website is hosted by IX Webhosting. They do a good job of hosting our site and have tools that allow me to update the website without expensive software that is required to manage some websites. They may be able to help you to create a website. There are other options like having a website on a some of the internet provider’s servers. I would not suggest using the internet providers “free” websites. The free sites are not protected and can be easily hacked and redirected. This can happen with a secure server too, but it is less likely. Our cost for the website with the secure server is around $200 dollars every two years. That includes the web address – in our case for the Los Angeles club it is LAHBC.org. In order to keep the web address we pay for the address every two years at about $20. The cost of the website is not cheap. Be prepared to spend a few hours a month updating the website if you start one. I work “full time +” as well and finding time for just a couple additional hours each month can be a challenge. You can have a website without updating it, but it does not draw as much interest as a site that has something new each time you visit. That is what makes Peachridge Glass such an active site.

If you would like to talk about the website and club membership issues give me a call on the weekend when I have more time. My time zone is 3 hours behind East Coast time.

Best Regards,
Dave Maryo
LAHBC President & FOHBC West Region Director
Los Angeles Historical Bottle Club

PM_JanFeb2013

Posted in Advice, Bottle Shows, Bottles and Extras, Club News, FOHBC News, News, Peachridge Glass | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Log Cabin Series – Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters

CabinSeriesKellysArt

Log Cabin Series – Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters

22 December 2012 (R•052714)

KellyStLouisArt


Bertrand_41

From The Bertrand Bottles – A Study of 19th-Century Glass and Ceramic Containers by Ronald R. Switzer. Published by the National Park Service (Department of Interior) in 1974. This book is one of the classic works in the field of historic archaeology as it pertains to bottles. This page is dedicated to the Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters that were found on the Bertrand

KELLY’S OLD CABIN BITTERS

Kelly Brand Development

Apple-Touch-IconAThe Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters is a dramatic example of a figural cabin with a story. With a number of great examples that have been found in mining camps, privies and shipwrecks, a Kelly’s is extremely desirable for all bitters and figural collectors alike. Just about every serious collector wants a Kelly’s at some point.

Kelly’s is also about two partners who dodged Federal taxes as they produced whiskey and called it bitters. These partners were in the thick the Great Whiskey Ring that involved President Grant in 1875 and this scandal pretty much ended the Kelly’s era.

The Partners

John H. Garnhart (sometimes spelled “Garnhard”, see below) began a wholesale liquor business in 1854. He was a whiskey man by trade. He was a “rectifier” who took raw spirits, added other ingredients and sold them. Among the spirituous products he apparently concocted with James B. Kelly’s collaboration was Old Cabin Bitters.

In 1862, Garnhart put out Old Cabin Bitters. Garnhart partnered with James B. Kelly of New York in 1863. This collaboration made the Kelly brand famous. Within one month of operation the Old Cabin Bitters name was changed to the Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters. This pretty much places the Old Cabin Bitters slightly ahead of a Kelly’s time-wise.

J. H. Garnhard (business timeline 1854-1869)

J. H. Garnhard (1854), John H. Garnhart (1857-1866), J. H. Garnhard & Co. (1869) 
185-188 N 2nd (1854-1859), 108 N 2nd (1866), 411-413 N 2nd (1869)

Garnhart & Connor, (John H. Garnhart and Benson G. Connor), domestic liquors, 188 N. 2nd

Note found: William H. Harlan, of John H. Garnhart & Company, doing business in Denver March ’59, (first) is “of St. Louis, Missouri” on this date, but gives Power of Attorney to John H. Garnhart to conduct his Denver business. Not sure whether this is a pioneer, or only a non-resident businessman of Denver in 1859. He could have been a resident in early part of year, and returned to States in February. This is interesting as Kelly’s have been found in Colorado, Montana and Texas.

Garnhart & Kelly (business timeline 1864-1874)

Garnhart & Kelly (1863-1865), John H. Garnhart (1867-1868), J. H. Garnhart & Co. (1870-1874) 164 N 2nd (1864), 108 N 2nd (1865), 411-413 N 2nd (1867-1872), 19-21 S 2nd (1874) *also 118 Liberty (see below)

Note found: Letter from B. General C. Sullivan to Provost Marshal, St. Louis: He is suspicious about shipped 80 bbl. whiskey, 1 box drugs, 10 oz. quinine, all shipped by Garnhart and Kelly and off-loaded from the “Belle Memphis” – Missouri’s Union Provost Marshal Papers – 04-15-1863

Some timeline reference from Pro-pro.com

The Kelly products were marketed all over the United States. They were bottled in New York and St. Louis and have been found throughout United States including Colorado, Montana and Texas. According to Steve Sewell, the bottles were made at the Whitney Glass Works in Glassboro New Jersey. (Confirmation required)

On March 22, 1870, John Garnhart was issued design patent 3,936 on his bottle. It seems another bottle very similar to his design turned up early in 1870. This bottle was embossed with the following Holtzermann’s Patent Stomach Bitters. The bottle like the Kelly’s was in the shape of and very similar in detail to their bottle. The Kellys Old Cabin Bitters lasted until 1874 when quite a few bitters and whiskey manufactures went out of business due to a great scandal.

K 021 (Kelly's_A)

Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters in amber – Meyer Collection

A National Scandal

The exposure of the Great Whiskey Ring of 1875 rocked Washington D.C. and indeed the entire country like few national scandals before or since. On May 10, Federal agents stormed into the offices of nine St. Louis distilleries, seized illicit whiskey and box loads of records, and arrested their proprietors. Simultaneous arrests occurred in Cincinnati, Milwaukee and Chicago. Ultimately, indictments were issued against 240 whiskey-makers, government officials and others; 110 were found guilty. Most of them went to jail. Thus ended a massive scheme to defraud the U.S. of excise taxes on distilled spirits. The fallout from the raids would roil the Nation for months and reach right into the White House.  (Jack Sullivan)

When the May 10 raid occurred, Garnhart was one of those arrested. His company disappeared forever from St. Louis city directories. For one year, Adler, Furst & Co. was listed in directories as “successor to J. H. Garnhart & Co.”, then it too disappeared. My research has failed to determine the fate of Kelly but his Cabin Bitters brand vanished about the same time. (Jack Sullivan)

Read: A Bitters Bottle, the “sylph,” and a President, by Jack Sullivan – Special to The Potomac Pontil – May 2006

Read: ULYSSES S. GRANT His Whiskey History, by Jack Sullivan – Special to Bottles and Extras, January | February 2007

Ring & Ham Listing

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in their Bitters Bottles Supplement is as follows:

K 21  KELLY’S OLD CABIN BITTERS, Circa 1863 – 1870

// s // KELLY’S / OLD CABIN / BITTERS // PATENTED ( au ) // 1863 //
KELLY’S / OLD CABIN / BITTERS // PATENTED ( au ) / 1863 //
L…Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters, J. B. Kelly & Co., New York
9 5/8 x 3 3/8 x 2 3/4 (5 1/4)
Cabin rectangular, LTC, Applied mouth, Amber – Common; Yellow, Yellow olive, Yellow green, and Deep olive green, Rare. Known with Metallic pontil mark

KellysPontil

Notes: Daily Illinois State Register (Springfield), July 3, 1864

Drug Catalogs: 1872 Melliers and 1878 CB & Co.

Design Patent: No. 3,926 dated March 22, 1870 by John H. Garnhart of St. Louis.

A number of specimens were dug in Montana, Texas and Colorado.

K 021 (Kelly's_B)

Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters in yellow olive – Meyer Collection

The Riverboat Bertrand

The Riverboat Bertrand bound for Ft. Benton, Montana, sunk north of Omaha in 1865. It was raised in 1968. Many cases of bottles were discovered. Among the salvaged artifacts were cases of Kelly’s Old Cabin Bittters, including a significant number of green examples, as well as Drake’s plantation Bitters, Hostetters Bitters, Schroeder’s Bitters and Schroeder’s Spice Bitters. Read: Looking at some of the Bitters Bottles on the steamboat Bertrand – Part 2

The Bertrand Kelly’s Bottles – Class III, Type 8:

All bottles in this type contain 25 ounces of 23 proof Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters and are molded to represent log cabins. The front and back sides bear three mold-impressed windows and a door. Corrugated roof panels which form the shoulders on the front
and back are embossed:

“KELLYS / OLD CABIN / BITTERS.” The remaining two
sides bear plain panels for labels, topped with five relief logs and a triangular-shaped space under the pitch of the roof embossed: “PATENTED / 1863.” The bottle necks are cylindrical.

Kelly’s bitters crates show some variation in stenciling; two consignees and one retailer are represented. The stencils appear as follows:

“KELLEY’S / OLD CABIN BITTERS / DEPOTS NEW YORK & ST. LOUIS”, sides: (red) eight point sunburst with a letter at the base of each ray, lettered: “O L D / C A B I N.” At the center of the sunburst appears the date “1863″. Some cases have no marks on their sides. Tops: “GLASS WEIGHT / THIS SIDE UP WITH CARE / G. P. DORRIS / VIRGINIA CITY / MONTANA, TY.”; or,

“WORDEN AND CO. / HELL GATE”; or, “FROM / H. A. RICHARDS / WASHINGTON / 57, / BOSTON / GIN COCKTAIL / WORDEN AND CO. / HELL GATE.; Dimensions, Type 8: height, 9 1/8 inches; base, 2 3/4 by 3 7/16 inches; diameter of neck (outside), 1 inch, (inside), 3/4 inch.

KellysGreen_ABA

Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters in mint green – American Bottle Auctions

Read More: A Tale of Two Cabins.

Read More: A Picture of a Picture of Two of Brad Francis’s Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters.

Collateral

Kellys_Revenue

The J.B. Kelly & Co. proprietary stamp was first issued in March of 1864, and last issued on December 3, 1870. 445,125 were issued, all on old paper. The item on the right is a plate proof. – rdhinstl’s Page

GarnhartStatement

Union Provost Marshals’ File Of Paper Relating To Individual Civilians – 1863 (In this letter, Garnhart mentions his partner James B. Kelley, note spelling of Kelley)

GarnhartListing

Trow’s New York City listing for John H. Garnhart, bitters, 118 Liberty, St. Louis – 1865

CabinTreadleMold

Original Booz treadle type mold in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The Mold boy has no heavy weight to lift other then the individual articles as they are removed from the mold and placed on the adjoining stand. Mass produced large in size heavy molds such as the Booz Bottle, Kellys Old Cabin Bitters, all of the Calabash flasks and some common whiskey bottles require the use of a treadle mold. The treadle mold is operated by the blower, opening and closing the mold by applying pressure to a lever with his foot. By using this method the mold boys job is much easier as the boys work is limited to removing the bottles from the mold as it is opened by the blower, in which the mold boy becomes a take-out helper rather then a mold boy. – Steve Sewell (Antique-Bottles.net)

K21_KellysGreen_BBS

Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters in green – Bitters Bottles Supplement

K21_Kellys_yellowolive_BBS

Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters in yellow olive – Bitters Bottles Supplement

Posted in Article Publications, Bitters, Bottles and Extras, Figural Bottles, History, Liquor Merchant, Spirits, Tax Stamps, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Incredible Dr. Pierce Collection – John Throop

JOHN THROOP

D R.   P I E R C E   C O L L E C T I O N

PiercesLinn Co, OrHi Ferdinand – Just saw your post about the Dr. Pierce barns – attached you will find a few more pictures of other Pierce barns/buildings. Also included some shots of my Dr. Pierce collection. Great website, always enjoy reading new posts!

John Throop
Ada, MI

ThroopDisplayCrop

PRG – Wow John…fantastic. I can not even begin to tell you how impressed I am with the quality, depth and presentation of your collection. Hats off.

MAKES BLOOD RED!

PiercesDouglas Co, OR

PiercesMishiwaka IN

PiercesThroop

T H E   C O L L E C T I O N

PiercesThroop3

Pierces_Throop1

PiercesThroop2

Read More: Looking at Dr. Pierce’s Barn Advertising

Read More: How to make an EXTRACT OF SMART WEED bottle look enticing

Posted in Advertising, Collectors & Collections, Display, Druggist & Drugstore, Ephemera, History, Medicines & Cures, Remedy, Tonics | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment