Barrel Series – Out of the Ashes, the Wolford Z – Whiskey

Barrel Series – Out of the Ashes, the Wolford Z – Whiskey

23 September 2016 (R•092416 – Z Solved)

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Apple-Touch-IconAI guess my biggest question here would be why Jacob A. Wolford would put a “Z” on his figural barrel whiskey bottle? Does it mean Zebra, Zorba, Zion, Zipper or something else? Who knows? Mr. Wolford was born in Baden-Baden, Germany in 1846 and was married to a woman named Mary who was three years older. Maybe her maiden name started with a “Z”? They lived in Chicago, Illinois as Wolford came to Chicago from Buffalo, New York in 1869.

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Update: The letter Z is a stock market ticker symbol for miscellaneous or the month December for futures trading. – Marianne Dow

Update: I think the following articles will explain the “Z” that is embossed on the WOLFORD bottle. – Best Regards, Corey Stock

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The Eaton (Ohio) Democrat, Thursday, December 19, 1878

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Daily Globe (St. Paul), Monday, June 8, 1885

In 1870, Jacob was a young twenty-five and conducted a saloon called Wolford’s on Clark Street near Foley’s Billiard Hall. This site would eventually become the Grand Opera House which was built upon the original site of Bryan Hall and Hooley’s Opera House.

J. A. Hamlin and brother (L. B. Hamlin) purchased the property in January, 1872 and erected the first building that was completed upon that block after the Great Chicago Fire. In 1873, the Hamlin Brothers built upon the rear lot what was subsequently known as Foley’s Billiard Hall, which was at the time the largest billiard hall in the world, containing thirty tables on one floor. In 1874, the billiard hall property passed out of the hands of Mr. Foley into the hands of Hamlin Bros., and the billiard business was discontinued after a few months and the hall re-constructed, with an additional building added to the east end, and for some two years was occupied as a garden, after the style of Gilmore’s Garden of New York, with fountains, waterfalls, vocal and instrumental music, and all kinds of refreshments.

Wolfords chief patrons at his saloon were traders on the Chicago Board of Trade, which was then a block away. This relationship would pave the way for his occupation in later years as Wolford was an original member of the Board of Trade which was established in 1848. The Board of Trade is one of the world’s oldest futures and options exchanges.

The Temperance Movement gave Wolford some problems at his saloon and the adjacent billiard hall so he opened up a liquor store at 123 Clark Street in 1872.

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Wolford also had to deal with The Great Chicago Fire which was a conflagration that burned from Sunday, October 8, to early Tuesday, October 10, 1871. The fire killed up to 300 people, destroyed roughly 3.3 square miles of  downtown Chicago (see map below) and left more than 100,000 residents homeless. The above is an artist’s rendering of the fire, by Currier and Ives; the view faces northeast across the Randolph Street Bridge.

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Wolford ordered his figural barrel bottles in amber from A & D H Chambers (Alexander and David. H Chambers) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1871 or 1872. Both bits of information are embossed on the bottle which also has this really cool glass screw thread stopper.

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I can only find two visual references of this bottle so it must be pretty rare. Te above example is a low resolution image from the 1st Chicago Bottle Club. The example below was offered in the recent Glass Works Auctions, Session 1 from the great Bob Ferraro Collection. Bob (pictured above) is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King”. Many times I would come across an obscure barrel only to find that Bob would have an example. You can actually see Bob’s example at the 2 o’clock position in the above picture.

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“JACOB A. WOLFORD – CHICAGO / WOLFORD / Z – WHISKEY”, (Denzin, WOL-41), Illinois, ca. 1870 – 1875, orange amber barrel, 8 3/4”h, “A & D H CHAMBERS / PITTSBURGH PA.” on smooth base, applied internal screw threaded mouth, original “PAT AUG. 6, 72” embossed glass screw thread stopper. About perfect, (a pinhead in size flake is off the outer edge of the lip, another is off the edge of the closure). Purchased from Jim Hall in 1989. – Glass Works Auctions – Bob Ferraro Collection (Session 1)

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Map of the Rebuilt Downtown; from New Chicago, 1872 – #25 Position – Jacob A. Wolford Liquors

We can find many references for Mr. & Mrs. Jacob A. Wolford in the society pages of the Chicago Daily Tribune in later years as Wolford made a fortune in his wholesale liquor business. As noted earlier, he is best known as a pioneer with the Chicago Board of Trade. Mrs. Wolford would later have a clock tower built in her husbands honor after his death in late 1917. The tower was built in 1931 and stands today. It is pictured below with a story of her inspiration.

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Wolford Memorial Clock Tower, Waveland Park Field House, Lincoln Park east of North Recreation Drive Chicago, Illinois.  Tower tubes by Deagan, a memorial to Jacob A. Wolford (1846-1917), an original member of the Chicago Board of Trade. Restored by local efforts in 1987-91, but now defunct; possibly restorable.

Wolford Clock Tower: From A Chicago FirehouseStories of Wrigleyville’s Engine 78 – Karen Kruse, Arcadia PublishingApr 12, 2001

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Select Listings:

1870: Jacob A Wolford, Saloon Keeper, 25, Birth Year: abt 1845, Wife: Mary, Birthplace: Baden, Germany, Home in 1870: Chicago Ward 1, Cook, Illinois – 1870 United States Federal Census

1871-1878: Listed in Chicago city directories, Jacob A. Wolford, Liquors, 123 Clark Street (also 223 Washington 1871), Chicago, Illinois

1872: Notice: Jacob A. Wolford will Open His New Establishment

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Chicago Tribune, 23 November 1872

1879-1880: Jacob A. Wolford, Wholesale Liquor Merchant – Annual Report of the Board of Trade of the City of Chicago

1882: Jacob A. Wolford, living 217 Dearborn Avenue, Chicago – Chicago, Illinois City Directory

1884: Jacob A. Wolford, Commercial Merchant, 65 Chamber Commerce, house 217 Dearborn Avenue – Chicago, Illinois City Directory

1886: Commercial Merchant, house 552 N. State – Chicago, Illinois City Directory

1894: Jacob A. Wolford, 8 Board of Trade Building – Chicago, Illinois City Directory

1899: Mr. & Mrs. Jacob A. Wolford, 552 N. State Street, left on Wednesday for Virginia Hot Springs, Lakewood, New Jersey, and Old Point Comfort – Chicago Tribune

1918: Obituary in Chicago Daily Tribune on o2 January 1918.

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Read more about barrels:

Barrel Series – Old Sachem Bitters and Wigwam Tonic

Barrel Series – Turner Brothers New York & San Francisco

Barrel Series – The Mysterious Blue Barrel

Barrel Series – Original Pocahontas Bitters

Figural Barrel Series – Hall’s Bitters

Greeley’s Bourbon Whiskey Bitters – aka Vertical Greeley’s

Peach colored Bourbon Whiskey Bitters added to Color Run

Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters – A Great Boston Bitters Barrel

The earliest and latest with the blue W. Wolf’s Pittsburgh barrel

Barrel Series – Brent, Warder & Co. – Louisville

Barrel Series – I. Nelson’s Old Bourbon

Barrel Series – B.M. & E.A. Whitlock & Co. – New York

Bennett & Carroll – Figural Barrel Series

Barrel Series – Liquore del Diavolo Figural Barrel

Barrel Series – Crow’s Celebrated Tonic Bitters

Barrel Series – Chapin & Gore – Chicago – Sour Mash

Barrel Series – Bininger Old Kentucky Bourbon

Barrel Series – Columbus in a Barrel

Barrel Series – W.C. Bitters

Barrel Series – Stillman & Breen

Barrel Series – Ben Franklin Bitters

Barrel Series – Highland Bitters and Scotch Tonic

Barrel Series – Smith’s Druid Bitters

Barrel Series – Roback’s Stomach Bitters (the smaller ones)

Barrel Series – Roback’s Stomach Bitters (the big boys)

Barrel Series – Dr. Chandler’s Jamaica Ginger Root Bitters

Barrel Series – Favorite Bitters & Peoples Favorite Bitters

Barrel Series – Wormser Bros San Francisco

Barrel Series – Keystone Bitters

The Robinson & Lord Figural Barrel – Baltimore

The James A. Clark barrel from Louisville

The Hull Brothers barrel from Detroit, Michigan

Posted in Collectors & Collections, Figural Bottles, History, liquor, Liquor Merchant, Spirits, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Hull Brothers barrel from Detroit, Michigan

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The Hull Brothers barrel from Detroit, Michigan

22 September 2016 (R•102416)

Apple-Touch-IconAHere is a new barrel post for the extremely rare Hull Bros. from Detroit, Michigan. In fact, this is the only example I have ever seen. The amber bottle was offered in the recent Glass Works Auctions Session 1 from the great Bob Ferraro Collection. Bob is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King”. Many times I would come across an obscure barrel only to find that Bob would have an example. Like I said, the Barrel King.

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John and William Hull were the Hull Brothers and were established grocers located at the corner of Monroe Avenue and Campus Martius in downtown Detroit. This location was also called the Opera House block. You can see a listing below from the J.W. Weeks & Co.’s annual directory of Detroit for 1876-77.

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The following pictures show Bob’s bottle from the auction and the building which was occupied by the grocers for decades. They sold just about everything and probably had a bottle made up to sell a bitters or some other type of spirits. This probably would not have been a medicine. Hard really to say without a label or advertisement for the specific product.

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“HULL BROS. / DETROIT MICH”, (Denzin, HUL-11), Michigan, ca. 1880 – 1885, medium orange amber barrel, 9 1/8”h, smooth base, applied mouth. Perfect condition. In the mid-1880s the Hull Brothers were listed as ‘dealers in fancy and staple groceries, located at opera house block, Detroit’. Purchased in 1986 at a Robert W. Skinner auction, lot 292. – Glass Works Auctions – Bob Ferraro Collection (Session 1)

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24 October 2016: I am proud to report that I was the winning bidder on this barrel, bringing it back to Michigan for the first time since at least 1986 when Bob bought it from a Skinner auction. Now, for the first time since the 1880s, Bob’s amber barrel has been reunited with it’s brother, the CLEAR example of this bottle, which I was able to purchase in 1997 from the Dick and Ted Kinney collection. Both of these are one of a kind, as far as I know. You can see that they have different neck lengths and different types of applied lips, but it looks like they were made in the same mold, based on a detailed review of the embossing. – Jeff Scharnowske

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“HULL BROS. / DETROIT MICH”, (Denzin, HUL-11), Michigan, ca. 1880 – 1885, clear – Scharnowske Collection

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Monroe Ave. from City Hall Town, Detroit, Mich., Includes Hull Brothers Grocers; Chas. H. Werner Crockery and Glassware; Staplin Florist; American Music Company, Michell’s. Stamped on verso: Alvord & Co., 55 Rowland St., Detroit, Mich. – Monroe Collection – 1890

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View of Hull Brothers Grocers and other businesses at Campus Martius, unidentified bust in foreground. Image is circular. Recorded in lantern slide ledger: “D/Streets-Campus Martius.” – before 1883

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Hull Bros. advertisement – Detroit Free Press, Sunday, May 19, 1872

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Hull Brothers advertisement – Michigan Argus, May 30, 1879

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Notice that the Hull Brothers feature a Tuft soda apparatus from Boston. – Detroit Free Press, Sunday, May 17, 1885

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Hull Bros C. advertisement – Detroit Free Press, Sunday, March 31, 1895

Read more about barrels:

Barrel Series – Old Sachem Bitters and Wigwam Tonic

Barrel Series – Turner Brothers New York & San Francisco

Barrel Series – The Mysterious Blue Barrel

Barrel Series – Original Pocahontas Bitters

Figural Barrel Series – Hall’s Bitters

Greeley’s Bourbon Whiskey Bitters – aka Vertical Greeley’s

Peach colored Bourbon Whiskey Bitters added to Color Run

Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters – A Great Boston Bitters Barrel

The earliest and latest with the blue W. Wolf’s Pittsburgh barrel

Barrel Series – Brent, Warder & Co. – Louisville

Barrel Series – I. Nelson’s Old Bourbon

Barrel Series – B.M. & E.A. Whitlock & Co. – New York

Bennett & Carroll – Figural Barrel Series

Barrel Series – Liquore del Diavolo Figural Barrel

Barrel Series – Crow’s Celebrated Tonic Bitters

Barrel Series – Chapin & Gore – Chicago – Sour Mash

Barrel Series – Bininger Old Kentucky Bourbon

Barrel Series – Columbus in a Barrel

Barrel Series – W.C. Bitters

Barrel Series – Stillman & Breen

Barrel Series – Ben Franklin Bitters

Barrel Series – Highland Bitters and Scotch Tonic

Barrel Series – Smith’s Druid Bitters

Barrel Series – Roback’s Stomach Bitters (the smaller ones)

Barrel Series – Roback’s Stomach Bitters (the big boys)

Barrel Series – Dr. Chandler’s Jamaica Ginger Root Bitters

Barrel Series – Favorite Bitters & Peoples Favorite Bitters

Barrel Series – Wormser Bros San Francisco

Barrel Series – Keystone Bitters

The Robinson & Lord Figural Barrel – Baltimore

The James A. Clark barrel from Louisville

Barrel Series – Out of the Ashes, the Wolford Z – Whiskey

Posted in Advertising, Collectors & Collections, Figural Bottles, History, liquor, Liquor Merchant | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The James A. Clark barrel from Louisville

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The James A. Clark barrel from Louisville

21 September 2016

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Apple-Touch-IconAI have put out many barrel posts before but I missed the Clark barrel from Louisville, Kentucky. You see, there are only two examples, the last coming from the recent Glass Works Auctions Session 1 from the great Bob Ferraro Collection. Bob is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King”. Many times I would come across an obscure barrel only to find that Bob would have an example. Like I said, the Barrel King.

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Connie & Bob Ferraro

James A. Clark was a long-time grocer selling wines, liquors, tobacco, cigars, oysters, raisins, sardines, pickles etc. in Louisville, Kentucky. His Clark & Company address at one time was 219 Third Street which is embossed on the barrel though an advertisement in 1866 differs and says #73 Third Street (Old No. 219). We can find listings for him centered from 1864 to 1868. His partners were George W. Morris and Charles L. White. In 1868, White leaves and Clark takes on O. A. Knapp as a partner. The bottle most likely contained a bitters or bourbon, probably both as a label would state.

Mr. Clark was born on October 9, 1838 in Massachusetts and died on July 10, 1913 in Jefferson County, Kentucky.

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“JAS. A. CLARK & CO / 219 THIRD ST / LOUISVILLE KY”, (unlisted), Kentucky, ca. 1865 – 1875, yellow amber barrel, 9 1/9”h, smooth base, applied ring mouth. A 2 1/4” vertical stress crack on a mold seam travels from the top of the lip down to the second ring. One of only two known examples and the first one to be offered at auction. Fortunately the damage cannot be seen when viewed straight on. Purchased from Steve Keith in 1997.

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“JAS. A. CLARK & CO / 219 THIRD ST / LOUISVILLE KY” figural barrel – Kentucky collection

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Jas. A. Clark & Co. Advertisement – 1864 Louisville, Kentucky City Directory

Select Listings:

1866: Charles L. White connected with James A. Clark & Co. listing.

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Louisville Daily Courier, Tuesday, January 9, 1866

1866: James A. Clark Notice & advertisement.

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Louisville Daily Courier, Friday, February 2, 1866

1868: Clark & Co. changes partners:

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Louisville Daily Courier, Thursday, August 27, 1868

1880: Jas. A. Clark, Wholesale Liquors, living in Louisville, Kentucky, age 41, born in Massachusetts about 1839, married to Fannie A. Clark – 1880 United States Federal Census

1900 Jas. A. Clark, Wholesale Liquors, living in Louisville, Kentucky, age 61, born in Massachusetts in October 1838, married to Fannie A. Clark – 1880 United States Federal Census

Read more about barrels:

Barrel Series – Old Sachem Bitters and Wigwam Tonic

Barrel Series – Turner Brothers New York & San Francisco

Barrel Series – The Mysterious Blue Barrel

Barrel Series – Original Pocahontas Bitters

Figural Barrel Series – Hall’s Bitters

Greeley’s Bourbon Whiskey Bitters – aka Vertical Greeley’s

Peach colored Bourbon Whiskey Bitters added to Color Run

Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters – A Great Boston Bitters Barrel

The earliest and latest with the blue W. Wolf’s Pittsburgh barrel

Barrel Series – Brent, Warder & Co. – Louisville

Barrel Series – I. Nelson’s Old Bourbon

Barrel Series – B.M. & E.A. Whitlock & Co. – New York

Bennett & Carroll – Figural Barrel Series

Barrel Series – Liquore del Diavolo Figural Barrel

Barrel Series – Crow’s Celebrated Tonic Bitters

Barrel Series – Chapin & Gore – Chicago – Sour Mash

Barrel Series – Bininger Old Kentucky Bourbon

Barrel Series – Columbus in a Barrel

Barrel Series – W.C. Bitters

Barrel Series – Stillman & Breen

Barrel Series – Ben Franklin Bitters

Barrel Series – Highland Bitters and Scotch Tonic

Barrel Series – Smith’s Druid Bitters

Barrel Series – Roback’s Stomach Bitters (the smaller ones)

Barrel Series – Roback’s Stomach Bitters (the big boys)

Barrel Series – Dr. Chandler’s Jamaica Ginger Root Bitters

Barrel Series – Favorite Bitters & Peoples Favorite Bitters

Barrel Series – Wormser Bros San Francisco

Barrel Series – Keystone Bitters

The Robinson & Lord Figural Barrel – Baltimore

The Hull Brothers barrel from Detroit, Michigan

Barrel Series – Out of the Ashes, the Wolford Z – Whiskey

Posted in Bitters, Bourbon, Collectors & Collections, Figural Bottles, History, Liquor Merchant | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Great English Tonic Rothery’s Appetizer and Stomach Bitters

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The Great English Tonic

Rothery’s Appetizer and Stomach Bitters

21 August 2016

Apple-Touch-IconAA couple of weeks ago I received a phone message from Adam Koch up in Ohio who said that a shard of an unlisted color for a bitters was found back east. The name on the shard was “The Great English Tonic Rothery’s Appetizer and Stomach Bitters”. Pretty amazing that the shard contained the full name. Doesn’t usually happen that way. I talked with Adam and he was going to get a picture and send me.

A few days passed and then I received an email from Jim Bender in New York saying “I thought you may like to see this bottle Jim Healy dug last week. It is listed as Extremely Rare in amber. As you can see this one was yellow.”

Actually this bottle does exist and an example was auctioned off by Jim Hagenbuch at Glass Works Auctions a few year back. It is pictured further below. There are three different listings in the Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham Bitters Bottles book as follows:

R 103.5  THE GREAT ENGLISH TONIC / ROTHERY’S ( au ) APPETIZER / AND STOMACH / BITTERS // f // f // f //
8 x 3 1/4 x 3 (6)
Rectangular, Gold, STCR, Tooled lip, Extremely rare
R 104  ROTHERY ( au ) / THE GREAT ENGLISH TONIC / BITTERS ( ad ) // f // f // f //
8 x 3 1/4 x 3 (6)
Rectangular, Amber, STCR, Tooled lip, 1 sp, Extremely rare
R 105  ROTHERY’S BITTERS ( ad ) THE GREAT ENGLISH TONIC / CHICAGO, U.S.A. // f // f // f //
8 x 3 1/4 x 2 3/4 (5 1/2)
Rectangular, Amber, STCR, Tooled lip, 1 sp, Rare
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“THE GREAT ENGLISH TONIC / ROTHERY’S / APPETIZER / AND STOMACH / BITTERS”, (R-104) should be R 103.5, American, ca. 1880 – 1895, straw yellow, 8”h, smooth base, tooled lip has some neck crazing lines. Rated as extremely rare in amber and not listed in this possibly unique, attractive color! (incorrect) – Glass Works Auctions

Here is an amber example pictured below of a different mold, R 105. Note the typography difference in straight lines with Chicago noted.

Rothery's Amber

R 105: ROTHERY’S BITTERS ( ad ) THE GREAT ENGLISH TONIC / CHICAGO, U.S.A., Rectangular, Amber, Tooled lip and rated Rare.

“ROTHERY’S BITTERS / THE GREAT ENGLISH TONIC / CHICAGO, U.S.A.”, America, probably 1900 – 1910. Golden amber with a slight orange tone, rectangular with rounded corners, tooled square collar with ring – smooth base, ht. 7 7/8″, near mint; (a shallow bubble with a 1/8″ opening in the cover glass, otherwise attic mint). R/H #R105. A very scarce to rare bitters. The proprietor of this unusual Chicago bitters was also a longtime saloon keeper. – American Glass Gallery | Auction #22

These bitters were produced in Chicago around 1905 by Herbert V. Rothery as you can see from the advertisement below. Mr. Rothery was a long-time saloonkeeper and betting room operator who appears in various locales and once served time in a penitentiary in Iowa for switching diamonds in a transaction. He also ran in to problems with various “charity” events where money seemed to be directed to him. He was also involved in ring fighting and other betting sidelines from many articles I read. Later he organized a ball club in Edison Park.

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Advertisement for Rothery’s Appetizer and Stomach Bitters – Herb Rothery, 41 LaSalle St., Chicago – Chicago Daily Tribune, Sunday, April 9, 1905

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Dubious Rothery “charity” event – Chicago Daily Tribune, Wednesday, October 22, 1913

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Digging and Finding, History, Liquor Merchant, Medicines & Cures, Scams & Frauds, Tonics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Koopmann’s Bitters dug in Savannah

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Koopmann’s Bitters dug in Savannah

21 August 2016

Apple-Touch-IconAPretty exciting bitters here submitted by Robert Biro. Looks like a beauty to me! I’ll check it out in the Ring & Ham books. Notice the backwards “S” on “Koopmann’s”. Ah-so… I’ve written about this bottle before but I have not seen an example.

Read: Koopmann’s Bitters, for use in Marshy and Swampy Districts

Ferdinand…. Here it is the KOOPMANN’S BITTERS that I dug in Savannah, Georgia. I regret to say that this bottle will not win any beauty awards.

The bottle is deep aqua, 8-1/4 inches tall 3 inches by 1-3/4 inches wide. It has a single applied tapered top. The bottom is a smooth base hinged mold. It is embossed on the sides only as you can see in my photos.

This bottle was dug in a Confederate Civil War age dump in downtown Savannah. What a killer dump it was. Dug it with a lot of other fine bitters, sodas, medicines, stoneware and other pontil bottles. I can’t find it listed in any of the bottle books or in our bottle world. Later…. Robert Biro    

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Posted in Bitters, Digging and Finding, Medicines & Cures, News | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Daily Dose | August • September 2 0 1 6

August September  |  2 0 1 6

24 September 2016

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Wolford Z Whiskey mystery solved. “Hey Ferd, I think the following articles will explain the “Z” that is embossed on the WOLFORD bottle. – Best Regards, Corey Stock”

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Eighth in a series of figural barrel re-posts in honor of the great Bob Ferraro who is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King”. As some of you may know, his collection is being auctioned off by Jim Hagenbuch at Glass Works Auctions in three sessions. The first session closed a week ago Monday night and had many of Bob’s extraordinary figural barrels. This post represents the Highlands Bitters and Scotch Tonic from Memphis, Tennessee. They come in a few colors and Bob sure had a nice one which is being sent my way. Make sure you follow the link to see the full historical post that has been updated with Bob’s bottle from the auction. Read: Barrel Series – Highland Bitters and Scotch Tonic

23 September 2016

I found this advertisement searching for something else in this 1870 Philadelphia City Directory. Never heard of a “Becker’s Genuine Robert Whytt Herb Bitters”. I expect that it is listed as I am not that experienced in the bitters area. Thought you may be interested in the ad though. – Harry E.

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{PRG} Guess what Harry?, you have found an unlisted bitters. Bill Ham will pick it up for BBS2. Congratuations! This should not be confused with R. H. Becker’s Celebrated Russian Bitters.

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Seventh in a series of figural barrel re-posts in honor of the great Bob Ferraro who is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King”. As some of you may know, his collection is being auctioned off by Jim Hagenbuch at Glass Works Auctions in three sessions. The first session closed a week ago Monday night and had many of Bob’s extraordinary figural barrels. This post represents the Turner Brother’s barrel from New York. They come in great colors and Bob sure had a nice one. Make sure you follow the link to see the full historical post that has been updated with Bob’s bottle from the auction. Read: Barrel Series – Turner Brothers New York & San Francisco

22 September 2016

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How do you spell CELERY? I am at Richard Siri’s. Richard promised to send you a pic of this bottle over a year ago and he finally found it in his vast collection. I have a feeling that the mold maker thought the word was actually spelled this way. 

Eric M (McGuire)

Read More: Paine’s Celery Compound – Makes People Well

Read More: Big Advertising Pays for Paine’s Celery Compound

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Sixth in a series of figural barrel reposts in honor of the great Bob Ferraro who is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King”. As some of you may know, his collection is being auctioned off by Jim Hagenbuch at Glass Works Auctions in three sessions. The first session closed a week ago Monday night and had many of Bob’s extraordinary figural barrels. This next one is the mysterious blue barrel which is unlisted. Many collectors desire and collect this large barrel. Make sure you follow the link to see the full historical post that has been updated with Bob’s bottle from the auction. Read: Barrel Series – The Mysterious Blue Barrel.

21 September 2016

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Fifth in a series of figural barrel reposts in honor of the great Bob Ferraro who is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King”. As some of you may know, his collection is being auctioned off by Jim Hagenbuch at Glass Works Auctions in three sessions. The first session closed this past Monday night and had many of Bob’s extraordinary figural barrels. This next one is the I. Nelson’s Old Bourbon from Maysville, Kentucky and is quite rare. A shorter and wider form with a bunghole impression like a circular Hall’s. Make sure you follow the link to see the full historical post that has been updated with Bob’s bottle from the auction. Read: Barrel Series – I. Nelson’s Old Bourbon

20 September 2016

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“Out digging the other day with my digging partner Bill Riley and found this Northwestern Bitters. Can’t find out much about it. Any ideas?” – Scott Hendrichsen

{PRG} This appears to be unlisted. Great find. Will need msmts and listing by Bill Ham in BBS2. *** UPDATE *** See below.

N 41.5 NORTHWESTERN / BITTERS // f // sp // f //
9 x 2 3/4
Square, Aqua, LTC, Applied mouth, Extremely rare
Dug in Allegan, Michigan

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Fourth in a series of figural barrel reposts in honor of the great Bob Ferraro who is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King”. As some of you may know, his collection is being auctioned off by Jim Hagenbuch at Glass Works Auctions in three sessions. The first session closed this past Monday night and had many of Bob’s extraordinary figural barrels. So let’s continue with Hall’s Bitters. Bob had a straight line H 9 in the first auction. Make sure you follow the link to see the full historical post that has been updated with Bob’s bottle from the auction. Read: Figural Barrel Series – Hall’s Bitters

18 September 2016

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Third in a series of figural barrel reposts in honor of the great Bob Ferraro who is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King”. As some of you may know, his collection is being auctioned off by Jim Hagenbuch at Glass Works Auctions in three sessions. The first session closed this past Monday night and had many of Bob’s extraordinary figural barrels. So let’s continue with a great one, Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters. Make sure you follow the link to see the full historical post that has been updated with Bob’s bottles from the auction. Read: Greeley’s Bourbon Bitters – A Great Boston Bitters Barrel

17 September 2016

osgridfb

Second in a series of figural barrel reposts in honor of the great Bob Ferraro who is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King”. As some of you may know, his collection is being auctioned off by Jim Hagenbuch at Glass Works Auctions in three sessions. The first session closed this past Monday night and had many of Bob’s extraordinary figural barrels. So let’s continue with my favorite, the Old Sachems Bitters and Wigwam Tonic. Gotta luv that name! Make sure you follow the link to see the full historical post that has been updated with Bob’s bottle from the auction. Read: Barrel Series – Old Sachem Bitters and Wigwam Tonic

16 September 2016

mistofthemorning_fb_grid

I’m going to pay homage to the great Bob Ferraro who is known as Mayor Ferraro and the “Barrel King” in a series of repost updates. As some of you may know, his collection is being auctioned off by Jim Hagenbuch at Glass Works Auctions in three sessions. The first session closed this past Monday night and had many of Bob’s extraordinary figural barrels. So let’s start off with the Mist of the Morning which is a bitters folks. Bob had both variants which is quite extraordinary. Make sure you follow the link to see the full historical post that has been updated with Bob’s bottles. Read: Barrel Series – Mist of the Morning

15 September 2016

lyonssac

For those who don’t know what tickles my fancy, well…. I like color runs and it doesn’t have to be bitters where I can slay. I have beer, fruit jar and lightning rod ball runs too. Anyway, I ran into this fellow in Sacramento at the national and he took me outside and we sat under an umbrella in the beautiful weather and we talked about Lyon’s Powders. He had brought along a box and we carefully unwrapped all of his little poison bottles within. I loved them. I even started my own collection when I picked up three at the show (bottom picture).

threelyonspowders


robacks_ferrarogwa

News on a couple of barrels from Session 1 of the Bob Ferraro Collection with Glass Works Auctions. The deep olive green Dr. C. W. Roback’s figural barrel sold for $13,000 plus auction house premium. It is pictured above. I remember how excited Bob was when he was bidding on this bottle back in 2008. We both spoke on the phone that evening. This barrel is similar to the outstanding example in the Jeff Burkhardt collection (pictured below). If I am not mistaken, this is Jeff’s favorite bitters barrel brand. Read More: Barrel Series – Roback’s Stomach Bitters (the big boys)

jeffsrobacks

Hi Ferd, I wanted a bitters from our friend Bob’s collection. I snagged the W.C. Bitters Brobst & Rentshler, Reading, Pa. barrel. I am so happy to get it. I don’t think a lot of people know how rare it is? Best Regards, Gary [Beatty]

wc_bitters_ferraro_beatty

14 September 2016

Look at this Freakasaurus Rex on ebay!!!. Bill Ham tipoff. It’s even photographed on reptile skin. Too cool.

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thewoodenqueenx

Love these images of the wooden queen currently in Heckler Premier Auction #141. I combined all the images in photoshop. Makes a nice sequence like we are doing for the Virtual Museum. That process takes 36 successive images of a 360 degree spin.

12 September 2016

ginsengbitters_kingsbury

Mid afternoon now and about 35,000 feet over Louisiana headed to Baltimore. Glad these flight have Internet. Received the following email from Nick Wrobleski:

“Hi, I picked up this bitters last week and was wondering if you knew anything about it. ‘Ginseng Bitters Prepared and Sold By Dr. D. Kingsbury, –  Glastonbury, Conn’

Thanks!”

It appears the labeled bitters is unlisted. Bill Ham adds, “new listing in BBS2 (Bitters Bottles Supplement 2)…

G 44.5 L . . . Ginseng Bitters, Prepared and sold by Dr. D. Kingsbury, Glastonbury, Conn.
Oval, Aqua, NCS, Applied mouth

004a

Headed up to Baltimore for a couple of days here shortly. Sure missed being at the Downieville show this past weekend. Interesting that the Crows Celebrated Tonic Bitters is sitting at $9k this morning. The Glass Works Auctions – Bob Ferraro Collection – Session 1 concludes tonight. Should easily sell for triple that amount.

Read: Barrel Series – Crow’s Celebrated Tonic Bitters

11 September 2016

Never forget.

In regards to the T.F. Ryan Indianapolis bottle posted yesterday, Brad Seigler responded with “this bottle was made the same year as the super rare Galveston gin. They look very similar.”

galvestongin

10 September 2016

quakers_alex-taylor

I was looking at the labeled version of this bottle in the heckler auction and noticed that the label is different. Any info on the bottle would be much appreciated! – Alexander Taylor

[PRG] There are lots of versions of Quaker Bitters. Read: Dr. Flint’s Rhode Island Bitters Products

2017Springfield_Logo2_B2

Request from our 50th dealer! 

Today, we have received a contract request from our 50th dealer! You know what that means! As we promised, on Wednesday, the 14th of September, one lucky winner from the first 50 participants will be drawn to win a free two night stay at the Sheraton Monarch in Springfield during the Federation of Historical Bottle Collectors 2017 Springfield Expo and Convention. Didn’t get your contract in yet? What are you waiting for? Tables are going fast and the banquet room is filling up! Get up and get going! Remember, when we reach the first 100 dealers, we’re going to draw another lucky winner for a free one night stay at our host hotel! A splendid time is guaranteed for all!

Bob Strickhart
Springfield Co-Chair

SPRINGFIELD LINK

ryansbb1

T.F. Ryan bottle

I am going to send you pictures of this new bottle I just got. This is a T.F. Ryan bottle. Ryan was in the bourbon business in Indianapolis, Indiana. In 1871, he is listed as a manufacturer or something like that. Also the same year there is an ad for a Ryans Bourbon Bitters. This bottle could be the bourbon bitters. Ryan was only in business in 1870 -1871 and then he was listed with a partner as a distributer for a couple years. I have more info but I want to write an article.

There are no examples of the Bourbon bitters so we dont know for sure. He also could have bottled Gin, Whiskey or some other medicine. However I’ve only found his ad for Ryans Bourbon Bitters. I wish this bottle had a label.

PS: Four of these bottles were dug, two were cracked and two were good…

Martin Van Zant

07 September 2016

WampooDug_Biro

Ferdinand… Here is something I posted on my Facebook page. I thought you might want to post it in your world. Once again Rob Biro.

I dug this really crude looking ~ WAMPOO BITTERS ~ in a early 1870s dump in downtown Savannah, Georgia. The bottle is so crude looking. Even the word Bitter’s is not even. The whole bottle is out of square. The two un-embossed sides are full of uneven whittle. I have decided to leave the bottle in it’s original condition. I think it looks the best the way it is. I have seen a few others that were in mint condition but not in this crude condition that gives it character. It looks like it could tell quite a story the way it is.

[PRG] I totally agree. Leave the bottle as it is. Not all would do so but your thinking is sound.

WampooSideBiro

TopSideWampoo_Biro

06 September 2016

BiningersOldDominionWheatTonic_Ferraro

Updated my Bininger Gallery page to include three of Bob Ferraro’s super examples in the current Glass Works Auctions #112 (Bob Ferarro Session 1).

HandledBininger_Ferraro_046

05 September 2016

Unknown

Chillin’ at the house all weekend. Here it is Labor Day, the first Monday in September. A day to celebrate the creation of the labor movement dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers. It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country.

Labor day has its meaning here too as we toil to empty the first water breached storage pod to assess damage or clean and retain. Lots of mold and wasps nests. House starting to look good again with partial restored furniture delivered, most appliances in and 95% construction complete. Hanging pictures. Bottles still in deep storage.

Love this 3 Queens picture from the Heckler Premier Auction 141.

3Queens141

Read More: H. Pharazyn Indian Queen – PhiladelphiaLooking closer at the Brown’s Celebrated Indian Herb BittersAmethyst Indian Queen Found in SeattleMohawk Whiskey Pure Rye Indian QueenE. Longs Indian Herb BittersThe Indian Herb Bitters Prepared by Drs Dickerson & StarkWhy do we call the bottles the ‘Indian Queen?’The Rubenesque QueensBarrel series – Original Pocahontas Bitters

Labeled TaylorLater

Looks like that labeled E. H. Taylor Jr. Co. whiskey (Read two posts below) found in Holland probably is a fake. Label appearing on other commercially sold bottles.

04 September 2016

OFCx

Looking at the post from yesterday on the labeled E. H. Taylor Jr. Co. whiskey found in Holland (read below from 03 September), Bruce Silva replies:

Hi Ferd: Spotted the post about the E. H. Taylor Jr. labeled cylinder this AM. Short of having the contents analyzed, there’s no way to tell for sure which of the products shown on the label were in the bottle. But odds, are, it was one of the three listed. Interesting in that the product was packaged in what we normally think of as a European scotch neck cylinder whiskey bottle. Maybe the product was shipped in bulk (hogsheads) across the Atlantic, to European liquor dealers, where it was bottled and subsequently resold. A 180* reversal from what occurred on the west side of the big pond.

I’m attaching a couple of photos of a large (23″ x 35″ incl. frame) litho on tin sign, from my collection, which advertised the OFC brand. Being a westerner, who lived and worked in the high Sierra Nevada’s back in the late 60’s, and early 70’s, the almost impressionistic scene of the freight wagon winding its way up a steep mountain pack trail, with elk in the foreground (drinking OFC Whisky), holds special memories. Thought your writer may also find it interesting.

Bruce (Western Whiskey Gazette)

OFC close2OFC close1

03 September 2016

Here is a really cool labeled whiskey with a Taylor book cover used as a label. Anyone seen this before. No embossing that I am aware of.

LabeledTaylorWhiskeyX

Hi my name is Ron Kercher and I am living in Europe – Holland. We collect old and rare whisk(e)y, most of it is from scotland but once and a while we stumble over a old odd one. This bottle was bought and shipped from Italy to Holland. The label says from E.H. Taylor Jr. Co. There is no indication of what it is, no vol. or contents and the label looks the same as the back book cover (on a previous web post you did: Read: A question regarding an “Old Taylor” find). I don’t know when the book was released and or if the bottle was made for marketing purposes. If you could help me unravel this puzzel I would be very grateful. Thanks.

OldTaylorBookCover

02 September 2016

A nice picture of both California Herb Bitters variants from the Chip Cable collection. Read: The California Herb Bitters from Pittsburgh

CaliforniaHerbBitters_bothVariantsX

01 September 2016

MD's McKeever's Army Bitters_Dickman

Hi Ferd,

I recently acquired a McKeever’s Army Bitters for my collection (photograph attached), which is a bottle I’ve wanted for years.

In researching my new bottle, I was struck by how little factual information is out there. Who was McKeever? Where were he and his company located? We apparently don’t even know what region of the country he hailed from. Jane Spillman, former curator of the Corning Museum of Glass who authored a 1983 Knopf publication called Glass Bottles, Lamps and Other Objects which often contains little-known facts about specific bottles, writes only that McKeever’s Army Bitters was from the East or Midwest, circa 1860-70, which is a pretty broad geography. The bottle is so elaborate and unique, and must have taken such a great deal of time and expense to create, that I wonder if its design might have been patented?

I’m curious whether you (or anybody else) has seen a labeled example or knows anything more about the man and/or his bottle? Perhaps you could post my letter on your Peach Ridge Glass site to see if we can get some additional information. Thanks!

Best regards,
Mike Dickman

[PRG] Mike, Congrats, great bottle and one of my favorites too. There are 260 or so McKeever’s in the Civil War though Chauncey McKeever stands out. I will research. Great questions.

28 August 2016

MVC-031S

Holy Cow!!!!!!

Good morning Mr. Meyer, Barney xxx here in xxx. This bottle was hidden away in an early house wall for over 150 years. It is just like the day it was made with no high point wear and great whittle. Thank you for your interest. I have been a bottle collector for about 3o years. This is a recent find here in the xxx area. I think you will like my pictures. If you are interested we can talk. Sincerely xxx. 

Read: Masury’s Compound Extract of Sarsaparilla and Wau-A-Hoo

Melliston4Grid

Hey Ferd,

Hope things are beginning to settle back to normal after the terrible aftermath of the flooding and all the commitments to the National convention. It has certainly been an eventful year for you and your family.

Thankfully, not too much drama going on in my life. I have, though, added a number of cards to my collection including the ones I have attached. Thought maybe you could use them as illustrations in your Xander post? The backsides of the cards are blank. (They are the same cards that appear in Ham/Ring).

Regards and best wishes………….Joe (Gourd)

Read: Christian Xander and his Melliston Bitters, Wild Cherry Bitters & German Aromatic Bitters

26 August 2016

Lima_Locomotive_Works_postcard

Spent quite a bit of time in northern Indiana this week. When I was driving on Lima Road in Fort Wayne I thought of the great Lima Locomotive Works. You see, this road led to Lima, Ohio. The Lima Locomotive Works manufactured railroad locomotives from the 1870s through the 1950s and was named after its main shops location in Lima, Ohio. The shops were located between the Baltimore & Ohio’s Cincinnati-Toledo main line and the Nickel Plate Road main line and shops.

25 August 2016

Three bottle communications from my friend Gary Beatty:

Beatty1Hey Ferd, I love to rescue bottles. I found this 3-piece mold, applied lip whiskey in a junk shop for $5. It was stained badly and someone had varnished or shellacked it. I tumbled it and the light does not do it justice. I believe it is a New England glasshouse bottle. Best regards, Gary 

GarysSas

Hey Ferd, I picked up this “DR. GUYSOTT’S COMPOUND EXTRACT OF YELLOWDOCK  & SARSAPARILLA” at an antique shop. As you can see, a nasty crack. However, it is one of the crudest and best I have ever seen. The color is actually more green than aqua. Nice iron pontil, wavy glass, and look at that applied top, shaped almost into a band. I paid $50 bucks for it and wouldn’t take $200. I have a few of these wounded great bottles and count myself fortunate that somebody passed them up. Best regards, Gary

KurnitzkisWireGrassTonic

Hi Ferd, here is a Dr. Kurnitzki’s Aromatic Wire Grass Tonic I picked up at a flea market. I am not a tonic collector so I don’t know anything about this bottle. It does not give a city but I found it at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Maybe a tonic collector will see this and be able to say if it is common, rare, or unique? Best regards, Gary

23 August 2016

To: Martin Van Zant, FOHBC BOTTLES and EXTRAS Editor

This year I went to my first National Convention (after collecting bottles for over 50 years) and I was just amazed at how much fun it was. While at the convention I purchased a reasonably priced bitters bottle, as it had only a paper label, no embossing in the glass, OR SO I THOUGHT. The majority of my collection consists of medicine bottles with the original contents along with their paper labels, which for years I have been preserving by spraying the labels with “Krylon UV-Resistant – Clear Acrylic Coating” which I would highly recomend to anyone who wants to preserve their labels. This brings me to the point of my story. I had masked off the label on my newly acquired “Star Kidney & Liver Bitters” and sprayed the label when suddenly I realized that there was embossed writing under the label. After turning the bottle in the light I was TOTALLY SHOCKED to find that the Star Bitters label was put over a “Dr. J. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters” embossed bottle. How can this be??

Star Bitters_Small

As far as I know, the two companies are not related in any way. So, I would like to know if any readers of “BOTTLES and EXTRAS” have come across a similar item?

Please see the above photos that I have taken. One just highlighting the “Star” label and one with the Hostetter’s embossing showing through. I can only speculate on whether Star bought “extra” bottles that the manufacturer had for sale or was there something else involved. Any light on this issue would be appreciated.

Allan Pollard

[Martin Van Zant] Hey Allan, I will send this in the news section and see what kind of response it receives. In my opinion they company just reused or stole the hostetters bottle and used it for themselves. I’m glad you had a great time at the convention. Their may be some better alternatives to the Krylon spray, hopefully some members will chime in. Thanks and have a great beginning of the week. 

Martin Van Zant

21 August 2016

I think many of you remember when I posted the pictures further below from 25 July 2016 when the Big Sur Soberanes fire was fast approaching our dear friends Jerry & Helen Forbes homestead that they had constructed by hand, piece by piece, over a 40 year span. Well, again, as many of you know, they lost their home but were able to join us at the recent FOHBC 2016 Sacramento National Antique Bottle Convention & Expo. Jerry commented about the show:

“Helen and I would like to say that this show was the best ever and it was just what we needed. The exhibition displays in the many rooms were spectacular, the auction was fun, though I did not stay for the whole thing.

My hat goes off to Richard Siri for chairing the show and his lovely wife Bev for all the work she and others did. All and all, the best time that I have ever had at any show I have attended. We were around good friends and good glass that kept our minds off of the loss of our wonderful home that burned in the huge Big Sur fire.

There are just no words to describe how we feel. We built the house 40 years ago and the last thing we completed was the point deck. Now we would like to thank the FOHBC for a wonderful show and our thanks goes out to everyone and to our good friends Ferdinand and his sweet lady Elizabeth. We now have to return to sift through the ash with hopes to find something. Thanks again to all. Our son Aron and his wife are coming to help and I will send some photos.”

Gerald and Helen Forbes (Big Sur, California)

ForbesSifting

Aron & Rose Forbes sifting through remains.

Read More: Forbes Visit, off the Pacific Coast of Big Sur

It is with great sadness that I report that Jerry & Helen Forbes, dear friends of ours, lost their house yesterday in the Soberanes Fire. Here is a PRG Facebook screen capture from last Saturday before they evacuated.

Soberanes_PRG_Forbes

Posted in Advice, Daily Dose, News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

TeaKettle Ink Price and Reference Guide

TeaKettle Ink Price_Coversmall

TeaKettle Ink Price and Reference Guide

by Joe L. Mathews Jr. – 2016

26 July 2016

Apple-Touch-IconAAs noted within my Houston Antique Bottle Show report yesterday, I said I would be reporting on a new book by Joe Mathews called TeaKettle Ink Price and Reference Guide. Joe presented me with an advance copy draft and stated that he will be printing and binding 100 initially. The book is all color and printed on glossy paper, 60 pages.

“I have already pre-sold 20 copies to the UK and France collectors, 10 copies to Australia and New Zealand collectors and 8 to the United States collectors before any real advertising. It appears there will be a demand for more than 50 copies so I am now going to limit it to 100 copies.” – Joe

MathewsTeaKettlePose

Alicia Booth (left) Paulette Mathews and Joe Mathews. Alicia has the new book open in her hand.

The book will be published in a soft and hard bound format and contains information about the author, acknowledgments and sections on Teakettle Ink History, New Fountain Inkstands, Tealkettle Ink Rarity, Teakettle Ink Molds and Identification Numbers, Color, Neck Rings and Caps and great photo/description sections on Barrels, Beehives, Concave Panels, Cut Glass, Embossed Flowers, Fancy, Figural, Flat Panels, Freeblown, Imari/Ku Tani Japan, Pen Rests, Porcelain/Pottery, Unique/Unusual and Uranium Glass teakettles. There are also nice group photographs from collections.

For copies of this book contact: Joe Mathews, joe@mathewsgroup.org

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Posted in Advice, Collectors & Collections, Color Runs, Figural Bottles, History, Inks, News, Photography, Price Guides, Publications | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

2016 Houston Bottle Show fun as usual!

Star Bottling ColeSmall

2016 Houston Bottle Show fun as usual!

25 July 2016

HoustonPatchCircleThe Houston Bottle Show is usually a tough one for me because it is usually a week or two before the Federation National Show (FOHBC 2016 Sacramento National Antique Bottle Convention & Expo) where a lot of my attention has been focused. This year was no different but I must say, it was well worth setting up and visiting with the Texas and southwest bottle crowd. I even picked up a few pieces that will work their way into my house which is under major renovation from the Houston floods this past April and May.

Houston16

This past Friday started out early for me as I was in Dothan, Alabama for business the day earlier. I had a 6:15 am flight to Houston from Pensacola, Florida so I had to arise at 3:15 am and drive southwest. It now occurs to me that maybe I should have just stayed in Alabama and hit the 1st Tuscaloosa Antique Bottle, Pottery and Advertising Show. Nah, I had reserved a table in Houston and needed to stay the course. I did miss set-up and early admission on Friday night as getting around Houston during rush hour is a nightmare. There is construction everywhere and they had closed down all Easy Pass lanes to upgrade equipment.

Rooster

Kind of a sparse Meyer table this year as much is in storage from the floods while we restore and renovate our house. Check out that cool Edwin Meaders rooster in a dark green glaze.

Read More: Really glad I made it to the 2015 Houston Antique Bottle Show

Read More: Workin’ the 2014 Houston Antique Bottle Show

Read More: 2013 Houston Bottle Show Sightings

Read More: 2012 Houston Antique Bottle Show – Rain or Shine!

Read More: Meyer Table at the 2011 Houston Bottle Show

Saturday morning I got up around 4:30 am. Most of my bottles are packed up and in storage so I had trouble putting enough material together for a table. I usually get two tables and set up light boxes and display bitters and other figural color runs. You can see some previous table set-up at the links above. The material is not for sale, and just for fun as it draws people to the table where I have a table display rack of BOTTLES and EXTRAS and FOHBC memberships. I meet so many cool people this way.

Alton

Alton Neatherlin

This year my table was next to Alton Neatherlin who is a legend with the Houston bottle scene. I hope to do a story on him at some point. I also very much missed Dan Cowman who passed away earlier in the year. Dan was the king of bottle ephemera and had so many killer pieces of bitters material…and great bottles. Most is at auction now with Terry McMurray (McMurray Antiques & Auctions) in New York. The second Cowman auction had just ended a week before. Terry reported very strong prices which is good.

MathewsTeaKettlePose

Alicia Booth, Paulette and Joe Mathews.

I also ran into Joe and Paulette Matthews who presented me with a copy of their upcoming Teakettle Ink Price and Reference Guide. Alicia is holding the book. I will be doing a separate piece on this super book.

Alicia&Brad

Alicia Booth & Brad Seigler

FOHBC board member elects Alicia Booth (Public Relations Director) and Brad Seigler (Southern Region Director) were also present. Brad has a great collection of Texas bottles and had a table full of material including black glass from a collection he just picked up. He also had this killer Chippewa Salt framed advertising piece (pictured below) from Wadsworth, Ohio which I snatched up and I will hang at Peach Ridge when the time is right. Still painting and staining the walls for the next few weeks. Alicia Booth will be heading to Sacramento next week with us for the National. We leave on Tuesday, 02 August. Bags are packed. Elizabeth is also coming along with my granddaughter Isabella and Coco, my Weimie.

ChippewaSalt

Framed Chippewa Salt advertising from Wadsworth, Ohio.

The Houston Bottle Show each year is headed up by Barbara and Kathy Puckett (pictured below). Barbara always does a great job as Show Chair. I especially like the carpeted floor and fully covered tables. I wish more bottle shows would consider the full coverage as it hides valuables and other material beneath the tables. It also makes for better pictures.

Chairs

Kathy Puckett (left) and Barbara Puckett.

Also spotted in the crowd were a number a familiar faces such as Jay Kasper, Chris Renaudo, Earl McIntyre, Ronnie Britton, Henry Tankersley, David Cole, Robert Vaughn, Mike McGrew, Dee Mondey, Will Beauchamp, Courtney Frioux, Tracy & Barbara Bradford, Casey Roby, Phil Lambert, Jeff Yaun, Ronnie Britton and more.

Pyrex2small

Large PYREX insulator in pale orange carnival (one piece) to go with my smaller one. Kinda cool. Raw on my Saltillo tiles as my house being renovated.

I was able to pick up this large PYREX insulator in a light orange carnival color from Chris Renaudo which will go with my smaller one. Thanks Chris. I put them on some raw butcher block on my raw Saltillo tiles at home. Made for a nice picture.

Casey Roby reports that he is building a bottle making museum in East Texas, I hope to do a separate story on that too.

Anyway a fun day. I even asked a select few if they would be interested in putting together a proposal to bring the FOHBC National Convention to Houston in 2019. The answer was always a strong yes. You see, at one time in the 1970s or so, Houston was the epicenter of bottle collecting. Could it be again?

Whistle

A smiling Phil Lambert… just whistle

Caps

Soda bottle caps always make a nice graphics display. I’d keep em’ all and hang on a wall framed!

DiamondDyes

I wonder if Jeff Yaun was playing Pokémon GO? Actually I really liked the Diamond Dyes Box. Great condition.

Earl

Earl McIntyre…proud as a 5c Peacock

DavidCole

Texas bottle KING, David Cole. Hoping to do a story on David too. Saturday was his birthday!

Will

I thanked Will Beauchamp for wearing a shirt that went so well with his bottles! Will is a Houston anchor.

Persian

A super Persian Saddle flask showed up. A quick check with Phil Culhane up in Canada proved this to be an original.

Hat

Ronnie Britton with a table full of bottles.

CaseyRobey

Casey Roby on the right. Misplaced the gentleman’s name on the left. Gonna do a post on Casey’s museum project.

Sandwich

I was able to grab a few of my Sandwich monument colognes. Always striking. Would have looked better on my light box!

Henry

Henry Tankersley down from the Tulsa. Representing the Tulsa Antique Bottle Club. They have a show each year. Another anchor down this way.

DecoPerfume

Someone brought over this deco perfume and said if it wasn’t broken it would be worth a fortune. I could not identify it but will contact the International Perfume Bottle Collectors Assoc. Would love to have an Indian Queen or Old Sachem’s in that color!!!!

ArtDecoBottles_ReneSaenz

Rene Saenz with a table full of Art Deco bottles.

MarshallTex

I really like this hand holding a bottle. What a great marketing piece from Marshall, Texas.

LotsOfBottles

A zillion Three Rivers Texas bottles.

LoneStarBrewery

Just a KILLER Lone Star Brewing piece. Love it! Color and condition outstanding.

LoneStarBeer

Can’t remember this guys name. Please wear your badges and help me out 🙂 or maybe I should do a better job!

AnheuserBuschPrint

Dynamite Anheuser-Busch piece. Cropped a bit tight but striking none-the-less.

Tracy&BarbaraBradford

I met Tracy and Carol Bradford for the first time. What great people. Postcard dealer at his first Houston show. Talk about coordinated shirts!

HiloDrugCo

Alton Neatherlin let me photograph his extremely rare drug store bottle from Hilo, Hawaii.

Insulators

Super insulator display case on Chris Renaudo’s table.

ACL_Don_Wininger

ACL sodas on Don Wininger’s table.

Posted in Advice, Bottle Shows, Club News, FOHBC News, Insulators, News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Daily Dose | July 2016

July  |  2 0 1 6

28 July 2016

It is with great sadness that I report that Jerry & Helen Forbes, dear friends of ours, lost their house yesterday in the Soberanes Fire. Here is a PRG Facebook screen capture from last Saturday before they evacuated.

Soberanes_PRG_Forbes

24 July 2016

Consumed with the Sacramento National. Houston Bottle Show yesterday. That was fun. Started out Friday in Pensacola and headed back late. Missed Friday evening Early Admission. Off to Baltimore this week for meetings.

DevilsBittersShot

Hi Ferd. Found this in an old bottle collection and have never seen one. Thought it may interest you! – Mark Newton

Reminded me of a pic I had from a previous Glass Works auction.

DevilsBittersShotsGroup

Friday, 15 July 2016

A nice piece below that Richard Sheaff sent me that he recently came across during some research on S. O. & W. L. Richardson.

Read More: S.O. Richardson’s South Reading Mass Bitters Bottle + letter Civil War 34th Reg

Read More: W.L. Richardson’s Bitters – South Reading

Read More: Dr. S.O. Richardson’s Jaundice Bitters – South Reading

RichardsonsUpdate_Sheaff

Sunday – 03 July 2016

Hello F., Liberty can come with a steep price; something to remember on the Fourth of July. This ca. 1914 postcard brings to mind another liberty worth noting. – Ken Previtali Read: The Bust of Columbia Liberty Cap Eagle Historical Flask

Liberty4thKen

Was thinking about whiskey bottles yesterday and remembered a scene from the HBO Deadwood series where Al Swearengen (last names fits) discusses the merits of owning a saloon. Of course his language is a bit more colorful. Watch.

Fred Holabird reports that the 49er Bottle Jamboree has a number of whiskies in their auction including, “about 20 fifths and flasks. Includes his green Thos Taylor, VC; about 10 rare western flasks, from Washington to Nevada and California, with several unlisted.”

Swerengen in Saloon

Saturday – 02 July 2016

A series of communications from my friend, fellow bitters collector and FOHBC treasurer, Gary Beatty:

Hey Ferd, here is a blue bottle that I picked up at a thrift store. It is probably from the 1940s or 50s? It’s not valuable but it fits in my small “Blue” collection. Read the label, Ryd•D•ers Tar Solvent. I always used to use turpentine. Best Regards, Gary

RydDersTarRemover_Beatty

Hey Ferd, This is a WOOD’S TONIC & / WINE BITTER / CINCINNATI OHIO. It is W 153 in Ham’s Bitters Bottles Book, and listed as rare. I think should be updated to extremely rare. Dug by a St. Louis privy digger. I had to clean it. It has a 3″ crack on one shoulder but I am thrilled to have this Buckeye in my collection. Best Regards, Gary Beatty

WoodsTonicCropped_Beatty

Gary, here is my example. Difficult bottle to photograph.

W153_FLx

Hey Ferd: here are two great bottles found art an Indiana garage sale in the past week. A.G.W. Merchant Lock Port N.Y and a yellow Drake’s Plantation Bitters. Keep Looking Folks! Gary Beatty

IndianaFoundGary

Ferd, here is the bottle I won in the Antique Bottle & Glass Collector magazine for my article. Best Regards, Gary

Prize Bottle_Beatty

Friday – 01 July 2016

children-story-on-crocodile-attitude-clip-artOK, please pardon me for my absence this past month or so which has been extreme to say the least. Super busy and traveling with work and knee deep in alligators with all the details for the FOHBC 2016 Sacramento National Antique Bottle Convention & Expo and getting the contracts ready by 28 July for the FOHBC 2017 Springfield National Antique Bottle Convention & Expo. This period of time has been daunting. Throw in the renovations from two catastrophic 500 year floods on the property and house, just wow. As Chuck Thompson, a long ago famed Baltimore Oriole and Colt’s radio and television announcer used to say, “Ain’t the Beer Cold!

I’ll just start the month off here with the present FOHBC President’s Message as that recaps some of where we are at down here. Good progress. On any given work day we have pavers, pool repairers, roofers, drywallers, painters, carpenters and tilers. Fortunately we have a good general contractor. Today they started security wiring for cameras and alarms. Yesterday, Elizabeth picked out all new appliances. Painters will be here soon.

Pres_Message_July August 2016

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Lost California Bear found in North Carolina

WalkingBearDuo

Lost California Bear found in North Carolina

19 June 2016

Marty Vollmer, the South Carolina show chairman, called me and said a friend found an ad on Craigslist for a bottle with a bear on it. I asked if it was clear and he informed me that it was amber. I got on-line and the ad read;

“Antique Bottle $3000.00.”

There were several pictures that were not very good but I recognized it as the Wm. H. Spears & Co. Old Pioneer Whiskey.

I contacted the gentleman and we agreed to meet the next day in Charlotte to see the bottle. I walked into a McDonald’s in south Charlotte and met Mr. Donald Hurst, his wife Mary and his granddaughter who helped him post the ad and pictures. The bottle was red shading to honey amber in the shoulder and so heavily whittled that the “Sole Agents, S.F.” was almost illegible. The condition was almost mint. We agreed on a price and I purchased the bottle. I thought it would be best if Don wrote a history of the bottle.

May 25, 2016

My story begins in 1951, when I was on a trip to the beach with my family. I was digging in the sand for clams when I found the bottle. That was in Netarts, Oregon in Netarts Bay.

I kept it over the next 65 years, often showing it to friends. In 1980, my wife, children and I moved to Charlotte, North Carolina. It has always been kept in the closet, only bringing it out to show it off and telling people the story of how I found it.

Two weeks ago we had people over for a cook out and the right man was there. He had an app on his phone and found the bottle. Our Granddaughter listed it on Craigslist and from there it found a new home with David Jackson.

Foot Note: In 2008 we bought a beach house in Netarts, Oregon. The address is Whiskey Creek Road.

Best Wishes,

Don Hurst

I have collected bottles since 1975 and I never thought I would have the opportunity to add this bottle to my collection. Thank you Mr. Hurst, I promise to take good care of it.

David Jackson

Read More: David Jackson and his Applied Seal Bottles

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