Anti-Malarial Bitters, D. T. Everts & Company – Petersburg, Virginia

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Anti-Malarial Bitters, D. T. Everts & Company – Petersburg, Virginia

29 September 2014 (R•093014) (R•100314)

Apple-Touch-IconATom Leveille sent me the below pictures of the only known example of the open pontil and triangular Anti-Malarial Bitters in a personal Facebook message yesterday. The bottle is in a private collection. It is rumored that a second example resides in the Hunter Cox collection. Boy this is an exciting bottle. Put out by D. T. Everts & Company in Petersburg, Virginia, this bottle is not even pictured in the Ring & Ham Bitters Bottles book though there is a newspaper reference. For Bill Ham, the third panel is blank.

A 75  ANTI-MALARIAL BITTERS
D.T. Everts & Co., Petersburg, Virginia
Lynchburg Daily News (Va.), May 29, 1867
Trade Mark January, 1, issued to S.O. McKerran, New Holland, Illinois (PRG: I do not think this is the same bitters)

[Updated] The new listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2 will be:

A 75  ANTI-MALARIAL BITTERS
ANTI-MALARIAL / BITTERS // D. T. EVERTS & CO / PETERSBURG, VA // f //
10? x ?
Tringular, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, Rough pontil mark, Extremely rare
D. T. Evert was a Civil War veteran and settled at 60 Sycamore Street in Petersburg, Virginia where he became a druggist and wholesale liquor dealer. Probably produced in 1867 and 1868 only.
The Progress-Index (Petersburg, Virginia), March 19, 1867 and June 8, 1868
Lynchburg Daily News, May 29 1867

CHILLS!   CHILLS!   THEIR CONSEQUENCES AND HOW TO AVOID THEM

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Anti-Malarial Bitters – Private Collection

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Anti-Malarial Bitters – Private Collection

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Anti-Malarial Bitters pontil – Private Collection

D. T. Evert was a Civil War veteran of some distinction as I see many military references. With the end of the war, Evert settled at 60 Sycamore Street in Petersburg, Virginia and became a druggist and wholesale liquor dealer. Kind of the same thing back then. The Anti-Malarial Bitters was probably only produced in 1867 and 1868 as you can see from the advertisements below. One advertisement showed that he was also selling the brand in North Carolina in 1867.

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Anti-Malarial Bitters by D.T. Everts & Co. advertisement – The Progress-Index from Petersburg, Virginia, Tuesday, March 19, 1867

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SIXTY. Anti-Malarial Bitters by D.T. Everts & Co. advertisement – The Progress-Index from Petersburg, Virginia, Monday, June 8, 1868

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D.T. Everts helping out with contributions to a Soup House in Petersburg, Virginia right after the Civil War. – December 6, 1865

Select Timeline:

1863: D. T. Everts, paroled, Camp Annapolis, February 1863 – U.S. Returns from Military Posts

1866: D. T. Everts, Virginia, Wholesale Liquors – U.S. IRS Tax Assessment List

1867: Anti-Malarial Bitters by D.T. Everts & Co. advertisement – The Progress-Index from Petersburg, Virginia

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Liquor Merchant, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Herman Rosswinkle’s Crown Bitters – Cincinnati

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Herman Rosswinkle’s Crown Bitters – Cincinnati

28 September 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAHere is another great bitters that I picked up as a floor sale at the 2014 Lexington National Antique Bottle Show. The Rosswinkle’s Crown Bitters. I had been tracking this example and was glad to bring it home. Highly whittled and a great color, it will proudly join my collection.

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

R 102  ROSSWINKLE’S CROWN BITTERS
ROSSWINKLE’S // CROWN // BITTERS // f //
8 7/8 x 2 5/8 (6 3/4) 1/4
Square, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, 3 sp, Extremely rare

RosswinkleOutdoorGWA

This bottle had previously shown up at a Glass Works Auctions event with the following description:

“ROSSWINKLE’S – CROWN – BITTERS”, (R-102), American, ca. 1865 – 1875, yellowish amber, 9”h, smooth base, applied mouth. Pristine perfect condition in a bright color and with highly whittled glass! We auctioned this bottle in 1996 and have not seen one since! Ex. Carlyn Ring Collection.

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I also had these pictures above that were in my files. I can not attribute them to any one person but I believe this is a different example.

I am going to go out on the limb here, but using the powerful search engines of Ancestry.com, I was able to enter “Rosswinkle” in the 1870 era and got a hit for a Herman Rosswinkle in Cincinnati, Ohio. He was at first running a coffee house and then was a saloon keeper for many years. I will hang my hat here unless some other door opens. With no advertising, trade cards or a label, this is a tough one.

Select Timeline:

1824: Herman Rosswinkle born about 1824 in Germany

1861: Herman Rosswinkle, coffee house, n.e.c., Broadway St Landing h 84 Pike – Cincinnati Ohio City Directory

1862: Herman Rosswinkle, coffee house, 1 Casilly’s Row – Cincinnati Ohio City Directory

1866-67: Herman Rosswinkle, saloon, Broadway & Levee – Cincinnati Ohio City Directory

1869: Herman Rosswinkle, 1 Casilly’s Row – Cincinnati Ohio City Directory

1870: Herman Rosswinkle, Cincinnati, Ohio, saloon keeper, age 46, birth Deutschland, wife Mary, children:  Mary, Elizabeth, Anna, Herman, Emma, Frances, Frederick – 1870 United States Federal Census

1871-81: Herman Rosswinkle, saloon, n.w.c. Front and Vine – Cincinnati Ohio City Directory

1883: Herman Rosswinkle, h. 54 Clay – Cincinnati Ohio City Directory

Posted in Bitters, History, Liquor Merchant | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

So who made Burkhart’s Homestead Bitters?

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So who made Burkhart’s Homestead Bitters?

27 September 2014

Apple-Touch-IconASometimes you just have to throw something at the wall and see if it sticks. I picked up the extremely rare Burkhart’s Homestead Bitters back in June on eBay. Both pictures are from the seller. The bottle is from Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. Just today I opened the box to look at the bottle. I am not kidding, I am so backed up with work, travel and Federation business, that I have not opened or inspected some incoming bottles. I feel a bit foolish but it is what it is.

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

B 269  BURKHART’S HOMESTEAD BITTERS
BURKHART’S / HOMESTEAD BITTERS // f // FOND DU LAC. WIS. // f //
9 1/8 x 2 5/8 (6 5/8)
Square, Amber, LTC, Tooled lip, Extremely rare
Newspaper advertisement

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The only medicine-related Burkhart that I could find in that period, within the region, was a Dr. William Sherman (W. S.) Burkhart. He was born in 1864 and was in the patent medicine business in Cincinnati, Ohio. Burkhart claimed that he had discovered the greatest blood purifier ever. Six months treatment with one of his vegetable compounds cost one dollar. I find no record of Burkhart in Fond du Lac but he did advertise in their local Commonwealth Reporter newspaper. He would have had to put out the bitters in his late teens or very early twenties though.

Here is where is gets interesting as Congress, during our time period, was offering 160 acres of free land as an incentive to settle in Florida. As a result homesteaders were flocking to the south Dade area for free land, however Congress remained steadfast that the thirty-six square mile prime land tract given to the Perrine heirs was the Perrine Grant and could not to be homesteaded. By 1886, many families had taken over parts of the grant and built farms. They formed what was known as a “Squatter’s Union” in order to protect their rights, hiring a Dr. Cutler as their representative.

This Dr. W. S. Burkhart from Cincinnati, took advantage of this deal and actually owned hundreds of acres of land in the Southern portion of Homestead, Florida. He later, in 1930, was listed as a real estate salesman. The agriculturally rich area of Homestead was an important component of Miami-Dade County, so were the small communities located between Miami and Homestead. Communities named Cutler, Kendall, Perrine, Peters, and Princeton. F. S. Morse described Dr. W. S. Burkhart as “a very enthusiastic and apparently well-to-do patent medicine man, who has bought considerable property in this county and whose disposition is in the way of growing vegetables and fruits.”

Well that is all I have. A man named Burkhart who put out Burkhart’s Homestead Bitters in Fond du Lac and a patent medicine doctor named W. S. Burkhart who bought land in Homestead, Florida. Kind of a stretch. Do you all know anything? Maybe bitters collector Jeff Burkhardt from Wisconsin knows something?

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Dr. Burkhart’s Vegetable Compound advertisement – Omaha Daily Bee, January 1902

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Dr. Burkhart is Famous advertisement – Fond du Lac (Wisconsin) Commonwealth Reporter, March 1913

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Another red herring. Drs. Burkhart & Burkhart from Rock Island, Illinois

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, eBay, History, Medicines & Cures, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

My “Fall” grouping of 1/2 pint Union Clasped Hands

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My “Fall” grouping of 1/2 pint Union Clasped Hands

26 September 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAAs I returned to Houston yesterday, I noticed the temperature was a good 15 degrees cooler than when I left earlier in the week. Here at Peach Ridge there are even some early leaves on the ground from our Pecan trees. Yes Autumn is finally here, my favorite time of the year. What a nice way to usher it in with some spectacular Union Clasped Hands historical flasks from Troy Scafuro.

Hi Ferdinand,

I wanted to send along some pictures of my “Fall” grouping of 1/2 pint Union Clasped Hands. I’ve been very blessed in knowing some great people in the field of antique and historical glass. I started collecting along time ago when my cousin, Matt Lacy got me into the hobby. I’ve learned a great deal from Matt over the years, and am proud to say that I have a good foundation of knowledge in just the little area in which I collect, which is the Union Clasped Hands. As of recent, I had the pleasure of of gaining some fine examples through Mark and Andrew Vuono, as well as Jim Bender. These people have graciously extended their knowledge and help to me in bettering my collection, and for them, I am thankful. It’s nice knowing that no matter you are in your collecting, there are always people willing to help you. Whether that be in knowledge or acquisition.

Below is a few of what I feel are considered “Fall” worthy examples of coloring. Sadly one of the gems that you’ll see in the pics is an amber cannon with a shoulder crack. This is a beautiful example filled with tons of bubbles, but sadly it is damaged. But I am proud that I have an intact example.

Throughout the years of collecting, I was glad to see that a simple aqua union (which was my first flask) could lead to such a beautiful little color run. I hope this small collection helps to inspire starting collectors out there. Some of the most beautiful pieces in my opinion don’t always have to cost thousands of dollars. As they say, beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and these little guys are quite fun and beautiful to collect.

My small collection will be setup at the Richfield, Ohio show this weekend. It will have more examples than just the “Fall” ones that you see here. For those that would like to see, feel free to stop by.

Cheers,
Troy Scafuro

PS: Also, I would like to thank Matt’s wife, Elizabeth for the lovely pictures that she took! She has quite the eye for photographing antique glass!

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Read More: I took a few photos this morning of my Union Clasping Hands flasks

Posted in Bottle Shows, Club News, Collectors & Collections, Color Runs, Flasks, Historical Flasks, Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. Swayne’s Bitter Catholicon – A Very Valuable Bitters

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Dr. Swayne’s Bitter Catholicon – A Very Valuable Bitters

26 September 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAJeff Noordsy, up in Cornwall, Vermont, posted three pictures of an early, pontiled, aqua bitters saying “Yup, it’s cracked but how many of you have seen a “Swayne’s – Valuable Bitters – Bitter, / Catholicon – Philada”? Not me I say. How cool. By the way, this brand is not to be confused with Swain’s Bourbon Bitters.

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“Swayne’s – Valuable Bitters – Bitter, / Catholicon – Philada” – Jeff Noordsy

Carlyn Ring and W. C. Ham list in Bitters Bottles Supplement:

S 230  SWAYNE’S // VALUABLE BITTERS // BITTER / CATHOLICON // PHILADA
6?x 2 ½? X 1 ¼?
Rectangular, Aqua, DC, Applied mouth, Rough pontil mark, Extremely rare
Dr. Swayne & Son, Philadelphia, Norristown Directory (Pennsylvania), 1860-61

Dr. Huson Swayne

Huson Swayne was born in Chester, Pennsylvania on 07 December 1793. He would marry Susanna Phillips on 16 April 1818 in Hockessin, Chester, Pennsylvania and have three children, one being William P. Swayne (1825-1906) who would later work with his father.

Dr. Swayne started is business around 1838. Listings in the mid to late 1840s show a Dr. Swayne’s Family Medicines on the northwest corner of Eighth and Race streets in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Over the years they represented and sold many patent medicines including their best seller, Dr. Swayne’s Compound Syrup of Wild Cherry (see below), London Hair Color Restorer, Dr. Swayne’s Ointment, Dr. Swayne’s Panacea, Dr. Swayne’s Celebrated Vermifuge, Dr. Swains Pills, Swayne’s Bowel Cordial and The Dr. Swayne’s Bitter Catholicon.

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By 1861, the business was being listed as Dr. H. Swayne & Son (Huson & William P. Swayne) at 8 North 7th street. They continued in business together until around 1863, when Huson died. William P. Swayne then started to list himself as a “Physician” in 1867 and kept the name Swayne & Son. This made for a smooth transition around 1887, when he brought his own son, William A. Swayne into the business. They continued together for a few years, then, sometime around 1904, the business was taken over by Walter Micram and Howard Sowden. It is not known whether they bought it out, or just started managing it. William P. Huson would die in 1906.

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Dr. Swayne’s Pills – American Museum of American History

The earliest advertisement I could find was from a Reading, Pennsylvania, German newspaper below from 1847.

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Very early Dr. Swayne’s advertisement in German – Der Liberale Beobachter und Berks, Montgomery und Schuylkill Caunties allgemeine Anzeiger. (Reading, Pa.), August 10, 1847

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Marketing graphics for Dr. Swayne’s Celebrated Family Medicines and Dr. Swayne’s Compound of Syrup of Wild Cherry – The Columbia Democrat, March 31, 1849

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Dr. Swayne’s Celebrated Family Medicines advertisement – The Star of the North (Bloomsburg, PA), October 7, 1850

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Swayne’s Vereinigter Staaten Kalender, 1857 für Stadt und Land, und zum Gebrauch für alle Familien Published 1856 by Herausgegeben von Dr. H. Swayne & Son in Philadelphia – Written in German

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Early advertisement for Dr. Swayne’s Bitter Catholicon – Reading Times, 15 April 1859

Select Timeline:

1793: Birth, Huson Swayne, December 7, 1793 in Chester, Pennsylvania. Father was Caleb Swayne (1749-1825) and Mary B. Wood (1753-1825)

1818: Marriage to Susanna Phillips on 16 April 1818 in Hockessin, Chester, Pennsylvania. Children Philena P., Albanus Rest and William P. Swayne (1825-1906).

1838: Marriage to Sarah Ann Tryon in Philidelphia on 11 October 1838. Children George, Franklin  and Dorothy C. Swayne

1850: Dr. Swayne’s Family Medicines, Dr. Swayne, N.W. Corner Eighth & Race streets, Philadelphia – Pennsylvania State Business Directory 1850-51

1861: Dr. H. Swayne & Son (Huson Swayne & William P. Swayne), family medicines, 8N 7th – Philadelphia City Directory

1863: Death, Dr. Huson Swayne, April 18, 1863 in Pennsylvania

1890: Swayne, William A. (Dr. Swayne & Son), h 330 N 6th – Philidelphia City Directory

1904: Dr. Swayne & Son – Philidelphia City Directory

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, History, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. Gerrish and his Brazilian Concentrated Stomach Bitter(s)

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Dr. Gerrish and his Brazilian Concentrated Stomach Bitter(s)

and Lancaster Tonic Bitters

23 September 2014 (R•092514)

Apple-Touch-IconAWell, it looks like we can finally put to bed where the unlisted Lancaster Tonic Bitters was made (Read: Unlisted Lancaster Tonic Bitters Found). I have what might be the only known example that I picked up years ago from Greg Bair. Ruling out Lancaster, Pennsylvania, I leaned to New York. I was wrong, This bitters is from Boston, Massachusetts. The clue came in the following e-mail:

Hi Ferdinand…First of all…I love your site…a wealth of information that I refer to frequently. I recently picked up a Brazilian Stomach Bitters bottle (see above) with label and base embossed “THOS G. GERRISH rooster TRADEMARK. The label is not in great shape but does say Brazilian Concentrated Stomach Bitters. While researching, I found an early advertisement (see below) that connected Thomas Gerrish, of Lowell, Mass. with Lancaster Tonic Bitters and Brazilian Stomach Bitter. I was at the bottle show in Mass yesterday and spoke to Greg Bair…he had not acquired any further info on the Lancaster bottle that he sold to you some time ago. I saw your inquiry so just passing this info along…regards – Wendy Kelly

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Dr. Gerrish’s Standards Bitters, Lancaster Tonic Bitters and Brazilian Concentrated Stomach Bitter advertisement – The 1883 Somerville City Directory. Advertisement also occurs in many 1882 locations.

So there we go. I couple quick searches reveals the following 1875 advertisement below for Lancaster Tonic Bitters. Pay special attention to the enlarged Capital “L” of Lancaster and “S” of Bitters. You will also see the same exaggerated typographic treatment on the actual bottle which is also pictured below. Not conclusive, but pretty darn close.

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Lancaster Tonic Bitters advertisement on a cover of the 1875-76 Lowell, Massachusetts City Directory. Note the Thomas G. Gerrish name and address.

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Unlisted Lancaster Tonic Bitters – Meyer Collection

Here are a few more pictures of the Brazilian Concentrated Stomach Bitter which is also unlisted. Yes, there is no “s” in Bitter. Odd. Look at that cool rooster embossed on the bottom of the bottle. Doesn’t get much better than that. The roosters also on the label.

Bill Ham has provided the following number which will be included in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

B 207.5 L . . . Brazilian (picture of rooster) Trade Mark Concentrated Stomach Bitter
// b // THOS G. GERRISH (motif of rooster) TRADE MARK
11 ½
Round-lady’s leg, Amber,
See G 37, L 11.5

See more: Fighting Cocks and Roosters on Bottles

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Label detail Brazilian Bitters lady’s leg figural bottle – Wendy Kelly

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Base detail of Brazilian Bitters lady’s leg figural bottle – Wendy Kelly. Look at that embossed rooster.

So who is Dr. Gerrish? Seems like he might be a flashy guy. Looks like he had the bitters and tonic market cornered in Lowell with Dr. Gerrish’s Standard Bitters, Lancaster Tonic Bitters, Brazilian Concentrated Stomach Bitter, Dr. Gerrish’s Tonic Tonic Bitters and Dr. Gerrish’s Life Cordial. Flashy.

Stay tuned for additions to this post. I am away from my Ring & Ham books as I am in a small dark restaurant in Paducah. Time to find my hotel.

Merrimack corp., Gerrish Thomas G. architect (Boston), house Pawtucket,

1865: The city-clerk during all the years of the war was John H. McAlvin. The city-treasurer in 1861, 1862, 1863, and 1864, was George W. Bedlow;1 in 1865, Thomas G. Gerrish. – William Schouler, A history of Massachusetts in the Civil War: Volume 2

1875: Gerrish, Thomas, proprietor, Lancaster Tonic Bitters, 69 Haverhill – 1875 Boston City Directory

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Cordial, History, Tonics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Woodgate & Company – Club House Gin

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Woodgate & Company – Club House Gin

18 September 2014

NO PLEASURE CAN EXCEED THE SMOKING OF THE WEED

Apple-Touch-IconAKen Edward had this cool Woodgate & Co., Club House Gin bottle at the Downieville Bottle Show this past weekend. Ken let me photograph it (see above) while I said I would try to track down some information. Apparently some shards and a few complete examples have been found on the west coast while another example, and maybe more, were found in the New York area.

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1860 Woodgate & Co., New York City, token front – Heritage Auctions

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1860 Woodgate & Co., New York City, token reverse – Heritage Auctions

If we look at New York City from around 1857 – 1860 or so, we find a Woodgate & Company on 83 Water Street who were importers of brandies, wines, and gins. They were obviously in to tobacco too judging from the puffing gentleman. An advertising token supports this information (see above). Previously, in 1852, there was a Woodgate & Roome who were wholesale wine and liquor dealers, and importers located at 46 Vesey according to a New York City Directory. So we can lean towards New York City as the primary source of this bottle. This looks like we are talking about John H. Woodgate who was born about 1802 in England and was listed as a grocer as early as 1835 in New York City.

I am really wondering if this is the same Woodgate as Woodgate’s Plantation Bitters?Read: The Mystery surrounding the Woodgate’s Plantation Bitters

There is also another similar Western gin embossed Woodgate & Co. Clubhouse Gin. I dug one with a few friends about 3 or 4 years ago in the bay area, and know of two other diggers that dug about 6 broken and damaged examples, 1 mint. I can only account for two mint examples, and 3 intact examples…2 of those have big lip chips and the other a blown out hole in the corner. I will try to post a picture of the example I have later in the week…. – J.F. Cutter Extra (Western Bitters News)

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We dug this last week and are trying to put an approximate value on it for the split. I am guessing it is from NY – Antique-Bottles.net

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Digging and Finding, Ephemera, Gin, History, Liquor Merchant, Tobacco, Wine & Champagne | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Great Comet of 1811 & Comet Wine

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The Great Comet of 1811 & Comet Wine

17 September 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAKen Edward pulled me aside at the Downieville Bottle Show this past weekend and showed me what he called a “Halley’s Comet bottle” with an embossed comet seal and the date 1811 on a portion of the label. Ken was close but this is not Halley’s comet but rather the “Great Comet of 1811”.

“the year 1811 turned out to be particularly fine for wine production, and merchants marketed ‘Comet Wine’ at high prices for many years afterwards”

The comet of 1811 was thought to be responsible for the long, hot summer and dry autumn and the following abundant harvest that year. As it turned out, the year 1811 turned out to be particularly fine for wine production, and merchants marketed ‘Comet Wine’ at high prices for many years afterwards.

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[Wikipedia] The Great Comet of 1811 was a comet that was visible to the naked eye for around 260 days, a record it held until the appearance of Comet Hale–Bopp in 1997. The comet was discovered March 25, 1811 by Honoré Flaugergues at 2.7 AU from the sun in the now-defunct constellation of Argo Navis. After being obscured for several days by moonlight, it was also found by Jean-Louis Pons on April 11, while Franz Xaver, Baron Von Zach was able to confirm Flaugergues’ discovery the same night.

The first provisional orbit was computed in June by Johann Karl Burckhardt. Based on these calculations, Heinrich Wilhelm Matthäus Olbers made a prediction that the comet would go on to become extremely bright later that year.

From May to August, the comet’s position made it difficult to spot because of its low altitude and the evening twilight. Both Flaugergues and Olbers were able to recover it in Leo Minor during August, Olbers noting a small but distinct tail, consisting of two rays forming a parabola, when viewing through a comet seeker. By September, in Ursa Major, it was becoming a conspicuous object in the evening sky as it approached perihelion: William Herschel noted that a tail 25° long had developed by October 6.

By January 1812, the comet’s brightness had faded. Several astronomers continued to obtain telescopic observations for some months, the last being Vincent Wisniewski at Novocherkassk, who noted it as barely reaching an apparent magnitude of 11 by August 12.

The Great Comet of 1811 was thought to have had an exceptionally large coma, perhaps reaching over 1 million miles across – fifty percent larger than the Sun. The comet’s nucleus was later estimated at 30-40 km in diameter and the orbital period was calculated at 3,757 years (later adjusted to 3,065 years). In many ways the comet was quite similar to Comet Hale–Bopp: it became spectacular without passing particularly close to either the Earth or the Sun, but had an extremely large and active nucleus.

Astronomers also found the comet a memorable sight. William Henry Smyth, comparing his recollections of the Great Comet of 1811 to the spectacular Donati’s Comet, stated that “as a mere sight-object, the branched tail was of greater interest, the nucleus with its ‘head-veil’ was more distinct, and its circumpolarity was a fortunate incident for gazers”.

The comet was apparently visible during the New Madrid earthquakes in December, 1811. A report on the first steamship to descend the Ohio River as it approached the confluence with the Mississippi River states, “December 18, 1811. – The anniversary of this day the people of Cairo and its vicinity should never forget. It was the coming of the first steamboat to where Cairo now is – the New Orleans, Capt. Roosevelt, Commanding. It was the severest day of the great throes of the New Madrid earthquake; at the same time, a fiery comet was rushing athwart the horizon.

The Great Comet of 1811 seems to have had a particular impact on non-astronomers. The artists John Linnell and William Blake both witnessed it, the former producing several sketches and the latter possibly incorporating it in his famous panel The Ghost of a Flea.

The English travel writer, novelist, and political economist Harriet Martineau (1802–1876) makes an odd reference to not seeing the comet in her Autobiography: “When the great comet of 1811 was attracting all eyes…[n]ight after night, the whole family of us went up to the long windows at the top of my father’s warehouse; and the exclamations on all hands about the comet perfectly exasperated me,–because I could not see it!… Such is the fact; and philosophers may make of it what they may,–remembering that I was then nine years old, and with remarkably good eyes.”

At the midpoint of War and Peace, Tolstoy describes the character of Pierre observing this “enormous and brilliant comet […] which was said to portend all kinds of woes and the end of the world”. The comet was popularly thought to have portended Napoleon’s invasion of Russia (even being referred to as “Napoleon’s Comet”) and the War of 1812, among other events. In 2012 the Off-Broadway musical Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812 by Dave Malloy opened to wide acclaim; the musical chronicles the romantic plot of Natasha, Anatole and Andrei, culminating in Pierre’s witnessing of the comet.

The year 1811 turned out to be particularly fine for wine production, and merchants marketed ‘Comet Wine’ at high prices for many years afterwards. The film Year of the Comet, a 1992 romantic comedy adventure film, is based on this premise and tells the story of the pursuit of a contemporarily discovered bottle of wine from the year of the Great Comet bottled for Napoleon. The film stars Penelope Ann Miller, Tim Daly and French film legend Louis Jourdan (his last film before retiring to the south of France, which is known for its wine making).

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Comet of 1811 Bottle – Ken Edward

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Comet of 1811 Bottle – Ken Edward

 Read More: Dr. C. V. Schmidt’s Asteroid Tonic Bitters – 1848

Posted in History, Wine & Champagne | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

California Wine Bitters – From the vineyard of Kohler & Frohling

CWBLabelCalifornia Wine Bitters – From the vineyard of Kohler & Frohling

16 September 2014 (R•030615)

Apple-Touch-IconAHere, everything is not as it should be. The first example of the California Wine Bitters lady’s leg pictured below was spotted on a table at the Downieville Bottle Show and was recognized as a potential label applied to a bottle, meaning not an original application. The label was just too fresh and clean. The dealer noted this. The bottle stayed on the table though I was intrigued by the graphics.

The listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

C 25.5  California Wine Bitters
From the vineyard of Kohler & Frohling, 626 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, California
Rennert, Prosch & Co, 26 & 28 Vesey Street, New York
Known from a trade card.

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Kohler&FrohlingTM

Kohler & Frohling (Charles Kohler and John Frohling) was established in 1854 with the partners playing key roles in the development of the Southern California wine industry. They were the founders of Anaheim which was born in 1857, when 50 German-American families from the San Francisco area paid $750 each to invest in the Los Angeles Vineyard Society. Kohler and Frohling hired George Hansen, Los Angeles County’s assistant surveyor, to purchase and lay out the new wine-making colony. Kohler was also a member of the Los Angeles, California, Common Council, the governing body of that city. Kohler and Frohling planted 3,000 vines of wine grapes in the Los Angeles area. The firm of Frohling and Kohler was so successful that they began looking for a steady sources of grapes for their wine making.

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Labeled California Wine Bitters – North American Glass

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Label Only, ‘California / Wine Bitters / From the Vineyard of / Kohler & Frohling / Rennert, Prosch & Co. / 26 & 28 Vesey St. New York / 626 Montgomery St. San Francisco’, (Ring/Ham, C-25.5), American, ca. 1865 – 1875, yellowish olive green ladies leg, 11 5/8”h, smooth base, applied ring mouth, 98% original label. – Glass Works Auctions

CALIFORNIA WINES

IT IS A PRACTICE AMONGST certain Dealers to announce to the public that they do not sell any other than the pure article and for that reason ask for or claim the patronage of purchasers, while the Wines which they offer for sale are frequently PRICKED and SOUR, and detrimental to health, by occasioning, to a great degree, acidity of the stomach; an indication of their inferiority is to be noticed, in general, by their RILY appearance.

The undersigned, who had the honor of introducing California Wines, in 1854, the FIRST, and therefore the PIONEERS in the business, having sustained their reputation for the supply of a GENUINE ARTICLE, so that connoisseurs of Wines admit that KOHLER & FROHLING have the BEST stock of NATIVE WINES in the market, all of which have been PROPERLY ATTENDED TO and MATURED BY AGE. As they are sold at the same prices at which the Inferior descriptions are offered, it will be the fault of Dealers and Consumers should they not call for

KOHLER A FROHLING’S WINES,

Which are PERFECTLY PURE, CLEAR and SOUND, WILL ALWAYS KEEP and GIVE SATISFACTION TO EVERYBODY.

We OFFER FOR SALE :

SUPERIOR PORT WINE, For Medicinal purposes;

ANGELICA AND WHITE WINES, Vintage of 1857 and 1858;

WINE BITTERS, The best Appetizer in the State;

With a variety of other articles.

KOHLER & FROHLING, 626 Montgomery street, Montgomery Block,

San Francisco.

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California Wines advertisement by Kohler & Frohling – Sacramento Daily Union, 7 July 1862

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Kohler & Frohling California Wines & Brandies letterhead, San Francisco 1894 – eBay

Read about another California Wine Bitters: El Aliso, Jean Louis and Pierre Sainsevain and their California Wine Bitters

Read about another California Wine Bitters: M. Keller Label over at Western Bitters News

Posted in Bitters, Figural Bottles, History, Liquor Merchant, Wine & Champagne | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

An unlisted Dr. Abbott’s Bitters by C. A. Richards

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An unlisted Dr. Abbott’s Bitters by C. A. Richards

15 September 2014 (R072719)

Apple-Touch-IconAHere is another labeled bitters that was presented to me by Jerry Forbes at the Downieville Bottle Show. With a label in rather poor shape, it is still exciting none-the-less because we have an unlisted Dr. Abbott’s Bitters. The bottle was found in Sacramento in an attic in 1999, off of J Street, by a contractor who sold the bottle to Jerry.

The label reads “Dr. Abbott’s Bitters” with a picture I presume of Dr. Abbott. Also on the label, “For the Cure of Indigestion”, “C. A. Richards, Sole Proprietor” and “80 State Street, Boston”. The label is also signed by C. A. Richards. Advertising for this brand seems to be from 1849 to 1860. There are plenty of advertisements showing cases of Abbott’s Bitters for sale in places such as Vermont, Richmond and even Honolulu, Hawaii.

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C. A. Richard’s famous Abbott’s Bitters! advertisement – Vermont Phœnix (Brattleboro, Vt.), September 06, 1856

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2 cases Dr Abbott’s Bitters – The Daily Dispatch. (Richmond, Va) December 25, 1852

I immediately liked this bitters because of the Dr. Abbott name and the C. A. Richards link. We certainly know this name. Read: Two examples of a C.A. Richards 99 Washington St. Boston.

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C. A. Richard’s famous Abbott’s Bitters advertisement – The Middlebury Register. (Middlebury, Vt.), December 17, 1856

Carlyn Ring and W. C. Ham do have a related listing in Bitters Bottles:

A 3.5…DR. ABBOTT’S BITTERS
I.D. Richardson & Son, Agents, 34 Elm Street, Boston
Newspaper Advertisement: Salem, Mass. Nov 1, 1849
The subscriber having relinquished the manufacture and sale of the above Bitters entirely to his agents I. D. Richardson & Co., No. 24 Elm Street, Boston, on account of ill health, would inform his friends, and the public that any of his medicine purchased of them, can be depended upon as genuine. All orders and communication must be addressed to the above firm.

The information above probably means that C. A. Richards took over the brand around 1850 or so from I. D. Richardson & Co.

Here is a new listing that will be used in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

A 3.4 L … Dr. Abbott’s Bitters, (Portrait Dr. Abbott in oval), For the Cure of Indigestion, C. A. Richards, Sole Proprietor, 89 State Street, Boston, signature C. A. Richards
11 ½ x 3
Round, Black green, DC, Applied mouth
Bottle found in Sacramento, California

Read Daily Dose, Saturday, 27 July 2019

Read about another Abbott’s Bitters: Abbott’s Aromatic Bitters – A Later Bitters with Class

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A labeled Dr. Abbott’s Bitters – ex Forbes Collection

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A labeled Dr. Abbott’s Bitters. Here you see the C.A. Richards signature – ex Forbes Collection

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