Hufeland Swiss Stomach Bitters

Hufeland1

Hufeland Swiss Stomach Bitters

14 September 2014 (R•091814)

Apple-Touch-IconAJerry Forbes brought a labeled Hufeland Swiss Stomach Bitters from the Downieville Bottle Show back to our cabin last night. I think he purchased it for $25. This joins some other exciting bitters that were picked up and spotted at the show yesterday.

HufelandTall

The primary label reads “Hufeland Swiss Stomach Bitters“, N. Van Bergen & Co., Sole Manufacturers, San Francisco“. The secondary, oval label reads, “First Premium Awarded by the Mechanics Institute, San Francisco, 1860“. So the brand has been around for some time as this is an 1890s or so bottle. There is no embossing. The graphics are really neat showing three men, one presumably a doctor.

Hufeland2

N. Vergen & Company, as you can see from the listing below, is Nicholas Van Bergen, John W. Van Bergen and Fritz Habenicht. Nicholas was also associated with Kohler & Van Bergen.

VanBergen1889SFListing

Crocker-Langley San Francisco directory for the year 1899

[from Eric McGuire] Regarding Jerry’s very nice labeled example of the Hufeland’s Bitters bottle, as you noted, it all began with J. G. Frisch, the earliest proprietor. I have attached a copy of the label (see below) which was deposited with the Secretery of State of California as Trade Mark No. 40, in 1864.

HufelandLabelEric

Frisch was an important figure in the early liquor industry of California but is not well known, as he died fairly early in the history of the West. Johann Gottfried Frisch died in San Francisco on December 26, 1865. That Thomas Taylor, the well known San Francisco and Virginia City liquor dealer would succeed in Frisch’s business was natural since Taylor was running the business anyway in Frisch’s later years, and most importantly, Taylor was his son-in-law. He had married J. G. and Dorotea Frisch’s daughter, Bertha. To make things even more interesting, the Frisch’s had another daughter, Wilhelmine. She married Amandus Fenkhausen, who was also a successful San Francisco liquor dealer.

HufelandsAd

Dr. Hufeland Swiss Stomach Bitters advertisement – Mariposa Gazette, 24 April 1868

HufelandsTaylorAd

Dr. Hufeland Swiss Stomach Bitters advertisement – The Virginia and Truckee Railroad Directory, 1873-74

Christoph Wilhelm Friedrich Hufeland (12 August 1762, Langensalza – 25 August 1836, Berlin) was a German physician. He is famous as the most eminent practical physician of his time in Germany and as the author of numerous works displaying extensive reading and a cultivated critical faculty. Hufeland was born at Langensalza, Saxony (now Thuringia) and educated at Weimar, where his father held the office of court physician to the grand duchess. In 1780 he entered the University of Jena, and in the following year went on to Göttingen, where in 1783 he graduated in medicine.

Christoph_Wilhelm_Hufeland

After assisting his father for some years at Weimar, he was called in 1793 to the chair of medicine at Jena, receiving at the same time the positions of court physician and professor of Pathology at Weimar. In 1798 Frederick William III of Prussia granted him the position director of the medical college and generally of state medical affairs at the Charité, in Berlin. He filled the chair of pathology and therapeutics in the University of Berlin, founded in 1809, and in 1810 became councillor of state. In 1823, he was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.

In time he became as famous as Goethe, Herder, Schiller, and Wieland in his homeland.

Hufeland was the inventor of the term macrobiotic, was Physician Royal to the King of Prussia, as well as giving medical attention to the following illustrious patients: “Johann Wolfgang Goethe (1749-1832), Johann Gottfried von Herder (1744-1803), Schiller (1739-1805), and Christoph Martin Wieland (1732-1813).” He was also a close friend of Samuel Hahnemann and published many of his original writings in his Journal. He also “joined the Illuminati order at this time, having been introduced to freemasonry in Göttingen in 1783.” He also seems to have professed an interest in Chinese Alchemy and methods of extending longevity.

The most widely known of his many writings is the treatise entitled Makrobiotik oder Die Kunst, das menschliche Leben zu verlängern (1796), which was translated into many languages, including in Serbian by Dr. Jovan Stejić in Vienna in 1828. Of his practical works, the System of Practical Medicine (System der praktischen Heilkunde, 1818-1828) is the most elaborate. From 1795 to 1835 he published a Journal der praktischen Arznei und Wundarzneikunde. His autobiography was published in 1863. [Wikipedia]

We have written about Bergen before. Read: Old Dr. C. W. Hufeland’s German Bitters – For Dyspepsia

This appears to be unlisted variant of the Dr. Hufeland’s Swiss Stomach Bitters. The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles for a very similar labeled example reads:

H 206 L … Dr. Hufeland’s Celebrated Swiss Stomach Bitters
J. G. Frisch, Sole manufacturer and proprietor, San Francisco, California
11 3/4 x 3 1/4 (6 1/2)
Round, amber, LTCR

Notice that J. G. Frisch is the sole manufacturer and proprietor. Frisch is rather well-known to Western bitters collectors as he put out the California Bitters.

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

H 207.3 L … Hufeland Swiss Stomach Bitters, Van Bergen & Co., Sole Manufacturers, San Francisco
12 ¼ x 3 1/2
Round, Dark green, ARM, Applied mouth
Van Bergen & Co was Sole Agent for Barkhouse Bros. & Co Gold Dust Bourbon in business from 1871 till the 1890s.
J.G. Frisch trademarked the Hufeland Swiss Stomach Bitters brand, No. 40 in the State of California in 1864.
Thomas Taylor & Co., Sole Agents for Dr. Hufland’s Swiss Stomach Bitters, No. 72 South C Street, Virginia, Nevada, The Virginia and Truckee Railroad Directory, 1873-4

Read: California Bitters / Manufactured only by / J. G. Frisch San Francisco

Kegs of lard, 25-pound shipments of dry mustard, barrels of tar and even a new safe were among the items recorded in invoice logs being shipped to the largely uninhabited frontier. The records are all written in immaculate cursive handwriting, showing products delivered by companies such as Taylor & Bender Wholesale Grocers, “sole agents for Dr. Hufeland’s celebrated Swiss stomach bitters.”

An invoice ledger from the late 1890s recently donated by the Alaska Commercial Co., that includes order forms and invoices. The first known shipment of Pilot Bread to Alaska is listed among the items.
Posted in Advertising, Bitters, History, Liquor Merchant, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Cool Embossings 3

TrioEmbossedPart3

Cool Embossings 3

09 September 2014

Apple-Touch-IconALions, Bears and Bulls oh my. This is the third post in the series titled “Cool Embossings”. See Cool Bottle Embossings and Cool Bottle Embossings 2. I carry these images around in my digital purse, and periodically want to post. Please send me any pictures you have of cool embossings.


CrouchingLionEmboss

Crouching Lion In Shield) Sealed Onion Wine Bottle, England, 1690-1710. Flattened bulbous form with embossed seal at mid body, medium olive green, sheared mouth with applied string rim – pontil scar, ht. 6 1/4 inches, greatest dia. 5 3/4 inches; (3/4 inch chip from applied seal, numerous chips from applied string rim and sheared mouth). Similar in form and construction to RD plate 10 Early and rare. – Heckler Premier Auction 115

WashingtonSpringWaterBustWash

“WASHINGTON SPRING CO / (bust of Washington) / BALLSTON SPA / N.Y. – C”, (S-61), American, ca. 1865 – 1875, deep emerald green pint, smooth base, applied sloping double collar mouth – Glass Works Auction 98

SloopStarDetail

SLOOP – STAR, (GX-8), Bridgeton Glass Works, Bridgeton, New Jersey, ca. 1825 – 1840, deep sapphire blue half-pint, tubular open pontil, sheared and tooled lip. – Glass Works Auction 98

TravelesCompanionStarEmboss

“TRAVELER’S” / STAR / “COMPANION – RAVENNA” / STAR / “GLASS CO.”, (GXIV-3), Ravenna Glass Works, Ravenna, Ohio, ca. 1855 – 1865, tobacco amber pint, reddish iron pontil – Glass Works Auction 98

Walking lion on a Cold Lion Iron Tonic

IndianMedicalSpringWaterEmbossing

“INDIAN MEDICAL SPRING WATER CO. / (motif of an Indians head) / “MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.”, Minnesota, ca. 1895 – 1910, cobalt blue half-gallon. – Glass Works Auction 98

ManitouBittersEmboss

“MANITOU” (motif on an Indians head) / “BITTERS”, (M-28.3), American, ca. 1880 – 1890, amber, 7 7/8”h, smooth base, tooled ringed lip. – Glass Works Auction 98

GirlOnBikeEmbossing

Girl on a Bicycle from a GXIII-3 historical flask pint.

DuramWhiskeyBull

Duram Whiskey Bull

RattleSnakeOil

Rattle Snake Oil – Embossed Snake – eBay

ShilohBottlingWorksIndian

Embossed Indian Head on Shiloh Bottling Works, Providence, R.I.

HutchBradSeigler

Man pouring beer hutch – Brad Seigler

Embossed Bear Seal

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The extremely rare Maynard’s Star Bitters from Pittsburgh

MaynardsTrio_Meyer

The Extremely Rare Maynard’s Star Bitters from Pittsburgh

07 September 2014 (R•102916)

Apple-Touch-IconAI haven’t thought about my Maynard’s Star Bitters (my example is pictured at the top of this post) until I saw another example in the upcoming Heckler Premier Auction 115. Their example is pictured below. I was able to pick up my example at the live auction at the FOHBC York National Antique Bottle Expo in 2008.

MaynrdsStarHeckler

Lot: 3 “Maynard’s / Star Bitters” Bottle, America, 1860-1880. Square with beveled corners, medium yellowish amber in shoulders shading to reddish amber in base with puce overtones, applied sloping collared mouth – smooth base, ht. 8 7/8 inches; (3/8 inch by 1/4 inch open bubble on label panel, 1/16 inch flake from interior mouth edge, professionally cleaned with remaining stain on base). Unlisted Great whittled appearance. – Heckler Premier Auction 115

maynards_gwa_113

“MAYNARD’S – STAR BITTERS”, (unlisted), American, ca. 1870 – 1880, reddish amber, 9”h, smooth base, applied tapered collar mouth. A shallow open bubble is on a label panel, lightly cleaned. Good glass whittle and probably unique! – Glass Works Auctions – Auction #113

What is exciting is that five of these bottles were found in a dig in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. At that time, the bottle was a new find and unlisted. Two were broken and two had some damage. Four were in amber. My example came out in great condition and in unique coloration with olive amber tones. You can read about the dig and discovery in the July/August 2008 issue of the FOHBC Bottles and Extras.

Read: Bitter January Digs by Jeff Mihalik

The Carlyn Ring and Bill Ham listing in the upcoming Bitters Bottles Supplement 2 will be:

M 51.4  MAYNARD // STAR // BITTERS // f //
8 7/8 x 2 3/4
Square, Amber and Olive-yellow, 3 sp, LTC, Applied mouth, Very rare
A olive amber (revise) example, and three undamaged amber examples were dug in Beaver Falls, PA., two more amber examples, one with a potstone with tails and a cracked example were also dug.

E. Frank Maynard was a druggist and a manufacturer of patent medicines between 1869 and 1873 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It is most likely that he put out a limited run of Maynard’s Star Bitters in 1870 and 1871. Later Maynard was a liquor broker at various locations in Pittsburgh. There is very little information other than he was born in Ohio in 1845. His parents were from Vermont. His wife was Rosanna Maynard and children were May, Nellie, Florence and Asa Maynard.

MaynardsStarBittersAd

Maynard’s Star Bitters advertisement – The Cairo (Cairo, Illinois) Bulletin, 29 August 1871

Select Timeline

1845: Born November 1845, E. F. Maynard, Ohio

1867: E. F. Maynard, clerk, 40 Wylie – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1868: E. Frank Maynard, druggist,  3 Monongahela House – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1869: E. F. Maynard, Patent Medicines, 3 Monongahela House – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1871: E. F. Maynarddruggist, 3 Smithfield, h Bidwell n Ohio av, A – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory | Maynard’s Star Bitters advertisement (see above) – The Cairo (Cairo, Illinois) Bulletin, 29 August 1871

1873: E. F. Maynard, druggist, Pasture Lane, Mt W – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1875: E. F. Maynard, clerk, 2131 Sarah, s s – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1877: bookkeeper, 2111 Sarah, s s – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1878: E. F. Maynard, clerk, 148 Third Ave – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1879: E. F. Maynard, manager, Hiland Ave, 19th wd – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1881E. F. Maynard, clerk, Hiland Ave, e e  – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1882: E. F. Maynard, Grain Broker, 59 Fourth Av  – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1887-88: E. F. Maynard, bookkeeper, 19 Fourth – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1890: E. F. Maynard, 116 Smithfield – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania City Directory

1900: E. F. Maynard, Liquor Broker, Allegheny Ward 5 – United States Federal Census

Posted in Auction News, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Liquor Merchant, Tonics | Leave a comment

Two California collections at Holabird’s Western Americana Collections

HolabirdsLogo

Two California collections at Holabird’s Western Americana Collections

07 September 2014

My name is Joe Elcano and I work with Fred Holabird. He has asked me to contact you to see if you could help us. Our September and December auctions have materials that your membership may be interested in it.

In September, we have paper label bottles and California whiskey and brewery paper and envelopes from the Ken Prag Collection. There is quite a variety of other bottle related materials. All together there are 132 lots. I have attached a couple of photographs and the descriptions of those lots are at the bottom of this e-mail.

In December we have a world-class California Brewery Collection from Tom Burt including glassware, signs, back bar, only known Buffalo Brew cooler.

You can see the entire catalog online at Holabird’s Western Americana Collections or let me know and I will send you a catalog(s).

If I can be of any further service, please contact me,

Joe Elcano
joe@fhwac.com
3555 Airway Drive
Suite #308
Reno, Nevada 89511
775.851.1859

See Saloon Lots

Fred was very excited to hear from you. He says ‘hi.’ I attached a list of items for sale in the major wine, whiskey, and brewery related ephemera, paper label bottles, California wine menus, etc in the next e-mail. I have also included a couple of photographs that might be useful. The descriptions for those photographs are below.

Please let me know if I can do anything else to make this easier for you! Joe

2442

Lot 1465 Fabulous full face Old Phoenix whiskey bottle, c1890 PHOENIX / OLD / picture of eagle / BOURBON / NABER, ALFS, & BRUNE / S.F. / SOLE AGENTS. 11 3/4″, amber, cylinder fifth, glop top, 1880-1895. Barnett #578. tine 1/4 – 1/2″ split inside back. As is!

11146

Lot 1480 Jessie Moore Sour Mash Whiskey Under government supervision at distillery #150 in the 5th district. Label has one hole and some tears on left. One rip on right.

11183

Lot 1484 Original 1890 Liquor License for the Mitchler Saloon in Murphys Signed by Mitchler, auditor A. L. Wyllie, tax collector A. F. Jordan and deputy W. D. Riley. $16.00 ($51/3 per month) for the last quarter of the year. Some spotting, but an incredibly historic piece.

2899

Lot 1550 Senator Leland Stanford’s Vina Distillery Leland Stanford acquired some land in Tehama County and he built it into the Great Vina Ranch. In 1955 it came into the hands of Trappist Monks. Very nice broadside of the Stanford Winery in Vina, California. Advertising ‘Pure Grape Brandy.’ Stanford was U. S. Senator from 1885-1893. He was also the Governor of California, one of the founders of the transcontinental railroad, and founder of Stanford University. There are some small issues for this 125 year old piece: please see photograph.

199

Lot 1577 Brighton Beach Wine List and Menu Group c1870-1880 This is a really fun lot from the resort town of Brighton Beach. This lot has 5 various wine lists and menus from the various establishments during the 1870s-1880s. Just some of the wines featured in the menus are; champagnes, Rhine, burgundy and Moselle. 1) West Brighton Beach Hotel bill of fare and wine list for June 15, 1882. 2) Another item from the West Brighton Beach Hotel, only this was for the 1879 Arion Sea-side Summer-Night’s Festival. 3) Small wine list from an unknown location. It features a short list of champagnes, claret, white and Rhine wines, burgundy, sherry and liqueurs. 4) Hotel Brighton dinner and wine list from August 23, 1882. 5) Another item from the West Brighton Beach Hotel’s 1879 Arion Sea-side Summer-Night’s Festival. This is just a small wine list from the hotel.

11323

Lot 1578 William S. Turner Distilling Company hand bill and price list Includes Crown Rock & Rye and Wild Cherry Bitters. Hole in middle of paper.

Posted in Advertising, Advice, Auction News, Breweriana, Collectors & Collections, Ephemera, News, Spirits, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Daily Dose | September 2014

SEPTEMBER  |  2 0 1 4

Monday, 29 September 2014

Kind of fun with all these extremely rare, listed and listed bitters that are surfacing. It is a great time to be a bitters collector. Hearing of an extremely rare Dr. Whitney’s Bitters from Olean, New York this morning. The neat thing is, at least for me, is just learning and recording these bitters. Of course if I can add it to my collection, that is nice to Ke-mo sah-bee.

Saturday, 27 September 2014

IrobBittersPrescription

I like this excerpt from an early Iron Bitters newspaper advertisement. From Dr. Cure. Read: Baltimore’s Iron Bitters – Brown Chemical Company

Friday, 26 September 2014

SwaynesSidePontil

Working on a post for an early, extremely rare and pontiled, “Swayne’s – Valuable Bitters – Bitter, / Catholicon – Philada” bottle that I purchased last night from a Vermont dealer and collector.

Thursday, 25 September 2014

LoveridgeJug

Picked up the Loveridge’s Wahoo Bitters Jug the other night from the Glass Works auction. If you remember, I saw this same jug at the Lexington National. Read: Loveridge’s Wahoo Bitters Jug – Buffalo N.Y.

Tuesday, 23 September 2014

SnakeofCorruption

Sorry just so busy. In Kentucky again today on business. Was watching the Glass Works Auction last night. Of particular interest was the “Snake of Corruption” historical flask. Wow-o-Wow. I understand one exists in screaming yellow.

SnakeOfCorruptionGWA

150. AMERICAN EAGLE – EAGLE WITH SERPENT IN BEAK, (GII-9), Pittsburgh District, ca. 1835 – 1840 clear glass pint, pontil scarred base, sheared and tooled lip.
Pristine perfect and with an exceptional impression, one of the best! This very rare flask was rated as number 29 in McKearin’s, American Glass ‘top 40’ historical flasks. Referred to as the ‘ 6f9 Snake of Corruption’ it has always been believed to have been made for either William Henry Harrison Presidential campaign of 1836, when he lost to Martin Van Buren, or 1840 when he defeated Van Buren trying for his second term. In our opinion this is the finest example of this historically important flask that we have seen!

Thursday, 18 September 2014

GoldVials

Just getting back from Downieville and Sacramento last night. A quickly paced and fun week for sure. A group of bears visited us each night. That added some suspense. Especially since one got into the local pizza parlor. Jerry Forbes and I tried our luck panning for gold on Tuesday. Thought I would share some pictures.

JerryPanFull

GoldPan

[from Eric McGuire] Regarding Jerry’s very nice labeled example of the Hufeland’s Celebrated Swiss Stomach Bitters bottle, as you noted, it all began with J. G. Frisch, the earliest proprietor. I have attached a copy of the label (see below) which was deposited with the Secretary of State of California as Trade Mark No. 40, in 1864.

HufelandLabelEric

Frisch was an important figure in the early liquor industry of California but is not well-known, as he died fairly early in the history of the West. Johann Gottfried Frisch died in San Francisco on December 26, 1865. That Thomas Taylor, the well-known San Francisco and Virginia City liquor dealer would succeed in Frisch’s business was natural since Taylor was running the business anyway in Frisch’s later years, and most importantly, Taylor was his son-in-law. He had married J. G. and Dorotea Frisch’s daughter, Bertha. To make things even more interesting, the Frisch’s had another daughter, Wilhelmine. She married Amandus Fenkhausen, who was also a successful San Francisco liquor dealer.

Monday, 15 September 2014

DVBear

[from last Friday] CoCo and I took our run in the mountains and saw a big BEAR this early morning in Downieville as we prepare for the big party tonight at Rick Simi’s. It was only later when the sun came up, and I had my glasses on, that I saw that mean bear again. At least that is what I told Elizabeth. Yipes Strips. [Update] Not kidding. Bear broke into Downieville pizza joint last night and razed it. Bottle Show just started. Not good if bear gets into show.

Thursday, 11 September 2014

Remember 9/11 my friends. Flight to Sacramento here shortly. Dropped CoCo off at PetSafe. Lunch with Jeff Wichmann, and meeting some folks at the FOHBC 2016 Convention and Hotel facility. Then off to Downieville to meet Jerry Forbes and Cutter, his MinPin.

BrokenLithia

In from Jim Bender… Hi Ferd, I have to tell you in all the years of collecting I have never had this happen. I received my copy of Bottles and Extras the other day and saw where the base had popped off a bottle. I thought boy he must have had a big temperature change or something. Well guess what happened to me last night? I go to our local flea market early Sunday mornings whenever I can to see if there is anything. I normally hope to find something I can sell and at least cover gas. I picked up this Sunset Spring Water bottle. It had been in a barn or something so I put it in our big sink in the laundry room to soak. I left it in there almost a week and decided to finish wash it. Looked good and I sprayed Windex inside as I do most of the time after cleaning a bottle. Carried it out to the sink in the kitchen and put in it the dish strainer. Walked away 15 feet and heard a pop. Looked back and the base had popped off. I have never had this happen before. Please don’t run any articles about necks falling off.  Jim Bender

Tuesday, 09 September 2014

2LabeledZingaris

Two outstanding examples of a labeled Zingari Bitters lady’s leg in the upcoming Heckler Premier Auction 115. Heckler had one a year ago or so. Suspect someone found a case and is letting a few go at a time.

Read: Lady’s Leg Series – Zingari Bitters

Sunday, 07 September 2014

WoodbridgeHeadacheHecker

Wow-o-wow. Norman Heckler has a Dr. F. Woodbridge Headache Bitters in his upcoming Premier Auction 115. This is a KILLER square!!!

Read: A ‘Fancy’ Bitters Square for Headaches

Saturday, 06 September 2014

SuffolkHadleyLiking this Suffolk Pig at the new Glass Work Auctions Catalog Auction #104. Ex. Dr. Burton Spiller Collection, Paul Hadley Collection.

Read: Figural Pig Series | Suffolk Bitters

Read: 1970’s Suffolk Pig reproductions, but way cool…

Thursday, 04 September 2014

Been in Louisville with client since Tuesday. Finally getting used to losing Monday to a holiday, which was nice but it threw off my weekday internal clock. Off to Miami tonight for business then back to Houston. Sacramento trip next week for American Bottle Auctions, Jeff Wichmann meeting and 2015 Sacramento Convention meeting later in day. Then off to Downieville for show. Can’t wait. CoCo coming too!

OhioLogoThe Ohio Bottle Club announced their new web site yesterday.

I just thought you all would like to see the color news article the Daytona Beach News Journal Newspaper wrote up about our Bottle Club and about our upcoming 45th Annual Bottle & Insulator Show and Sale coming next year on March 20 & 21, 2015. I just wish she would of used the photo of me holding the Wine Bottle (Demijohn/French BonBonne) in the upright position. I was just trying to show folks what a rare Emerald Green Alsace BonBone Looks like with the light shining through it. This is the only small emerald green one I have ever seen in looking for them for 20+ years. Happy Bottle Collecting and Enjoy!!! Dwight (Pettit) Read Article

Monday, 01 September 2014

RichardsGoldenWhiskeyLabeled

Nice labeled C.A. Richards Golden Sheaf Whiskey on ebay. Read More: Two examples of a C.A. Richards 99 Washington St. Boston

WrightDugNicMeyer

Hi Ferdinand, this is Nic Meyer from Bay City, Michigan. I dug this up today and thought you might be interested in see it. Came out of a pit 6 ft by 6 ft and 5 ft deep. It was full of stuff from the 1860s to 1880 including a nice IRA Paines cobalt target ball, also broken of course. I have almost the whole Wright bottle, it’s in three pieces and unfortunately about 2/3 of the top is missing. I sifted for hours but no luck. I was just wondering if this is as rare as the amber ones and if I could find someone interested in this one. Thanks. Nic Meyer

Read: R. & G. A. Wright – Great Gun Cologne

Read: “R & G. A. Wright / Philada” Miniature Figural Bottle

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

Was there really a Dr. Robertson?

Advertisement: Dr. Robertson’s Medicines preparedly T.W., Dyott – Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette, Friday, February 16, 1810

Was there really a Dr. Robertson? 

30 August 2014 (R•100318)
StephenGroup

Dr Robertson’s Family Medicine / Prepared only by T.W. Dyott 1809-1815, a T.W. Dyott small vial, 1810 to 1825, Daffys True Elixir, Lee’s Prepared by Noah Ridgley Baltimore, Liquid Opadeldoc, Robert Turlington Balsam Of Life 1754 to 1780, Robert Turlington Balsam Of Life 1790 to 1810, True Cephalick Snuff 1810 to 1830, Dalbys Carminative 1820 to 1830 and Macassar Oil London 1815 to 1830. – Stephen Atkinson Collection

Read: Check these T. W. Dyott bottles out!

Read: Dyottville Glass

Apple-Touch-IconAI received an original newsprint copy from Carl T. Hotkowski of the Connecticut Mirror (Hartford) from Monday, June 26, 1820. Within that newspaper were a few advertisements for bitters including the Cooley’s Anti Dispeptic Bitters and the Dr. Robertson’s Patent Stomachic Bitters. Carl certainly knows how to get my attention.

DrRobertsonsBittersJuly1820CT

Dr. Robertson’s Patent Stomachic Bitters advertisement – Connecticut Mirror (Hartford), Monday, June 26, 1820

DrRobetsons2July1820CT

T. W. Dyott, M.D. grand-son of the late celebrated Dr. Robertson, of EdinburghConnecticut Mirror (Hartford), Monday, June 26, 1820

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

R 78  ROBERTSON’S STOMACHIC BITTERS Prepared and sold by T.W. Dyott, M.D., Philadelphia Dr. T.W. Dyott Drug Catalog 1820 Newspaper Advertisement 1824, also mentions Robertson’s Nervous Cordial, Robertson’s Stomachic Elixir of Health. Western Courier (Elliotsville, New York) November 29, 1826 New York Statesman October 9, 1829
R 79  DR ROBERTSON’S STOMACH WINE BITTERS Advertised from 1809-1820. Possibly predecessor to the preceding.
Robertsons1810

T. W. Dyott, M.D. grand-son of the late celebrated Dr. Robertson, of Edinburgh – The Times (Charleston), Tuesday Evening, October 30, 1810

Advertisement: T.W. Dyott’s – image from Don Lindgren, Rabelais Books Inc., Biddeford, Maine

What is interesting is that T.W. Dyott used to proclaim that he was the grandson of the late and celebrated Dr. Robertson, of Edinburgh, Scotland. This could be a reference to William Robertson as he was certainly well known and celebrated. Did he make medicines though? Dyott also said he was a doctor. I have had trouble making these connections in the past but not today as I visit a reference from The Toadstool Millionaires: A Social History of Patent Medicines in America before Federal Regulation, Chapter 3: Vials and Vermifuges, James Harvey Young, PhD. Specifically the passage, “Most of these creations bore the name of a Dr. Robertson. This worthy, Dyott asserted in his advertising, was his own grandfather, a distinguished physician in Edinburgh. The enterprising editor of a Philadelphia medical journal, looking into the matter, discovered that there had been no noted Dr. Robertson in Edinburgh for nearly two centuries. This intelligence did not disturb Dyott in the least.” This same information is echoed in “The first century of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, 1821-1921”. Maybe Dyott was related, or maybe he just used the name and embellished his relationship. It wouldn’t be the first time and certainly not the last time that we will see this type of marketing.

RobertsonsStephen

Two and a half very rare medicine bottles. Two bottles embossed Dr Robertsons Family Medicine Prepared Only By T W Dyott and a Lee’s Valuable Family Medicine Prepared by Noah Ridgley – Stephen Atkinson Collection

Chapter 3: Vials and Vermifuges

Dr. Thomas Dyott

[a selection from The Toadstool Millionaires] A man named Dyott surpassed all his rivals during the first generation and became the king of nostrum makers in the American republic.

At the start Dyott relied heavily on a compound for the cure of “a certain disease,” but soon he was producing a long line of remedies similar to those of Richard and Michael Lee. Most of these creations bore the name of a Dr. Robertson. This worthy, Dyott asserted in his advertising, was his own grandfather, a distinguished physician in Edinburgh. The enterprising editor of a Philadelphia medical journal, looking into the matter, discovered that there had been no noted Dr. Robertson in Edinburgh for nearly two centuries. This intelligence did not disturb Dyott in the least. He went on vending Robertson’s Infallible Worm Destroying Lozenges and the other priceless preparations devised by his honored progenitor, and he made bold to claim a more lofty dignity himself, assuming the title of Doctor of Medicine and fabricating a tale of long experience as a physician in London, the West Indies, and Philadelphia.

Business boomed. Dr. Dyott’s advertisements were displayed prominently in daily papers, of the Eastern cities and occupied columns of space in the rural weeklies of the hinterland. Better to service his far-flung market, Dyott established agencies in New York, Cincinnati, New Orleans, and other cities. His advertisements featured drawings of large Conestoga wagons being loaded from his capacious warehouses with nostrums for the South and West. Besides his own brands, Dyott distributed the old English patent medicines, and the pills and potions of his rivals, among them the bilious pills of Samuel H. P. Lee.

As Thomas Dyott, early in his career, had expanded from blacking to nostrums, so later he enlarged his enterprises again and again. Living in the day of a barter economy, the shrewd merchandiser accepted produce for patent medicines. Soon he was dealing in such things as tobacco and turpentine, peach brandy and rum, candles and castor oil. The scope of his nostrum sales required thousands of bottles, an article he had first required while vending blacking, so Dyott acquired, first, an interest in a glass works, and then full ownership of a large factory on the Delaware River near Philadelphia. Dyott not only undercut the prices of imported British glassware, but soon was turning out the best grade of bottle glass in America. One product of his factory, preserved in the Smithsonian Institution, was a double portrait flask, honoring those two distinguished adopted sons of Philadelphia, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Dyott [10]. By the 1830’s Dyott was living extravagantly on a princely income of $25,000 a year. His personal estate was said to be worth $250,000. He dressed oddly and drove about in style, with four horses attached to his elegant English coach and several outriders in attendance. A man with such expansive vision who had achieved so much was perhaps bound to fancy himself a humanitarian. A pioneer at price-cutting, Dyott had offered to sell his remedies to the “laboring poor at one-half the usual price.” For his own laborers he sought to turn his factory into a sort of model community. Whatever the proportion of alcohol in his remedies, the nostrum king permitted no spirituous liquors in Dyottsville. He made this clear in a high-toned pamphlet composed by his own hand and garnished with classical quotations. Nor was his establishment to be disgraced by swearing, fighting, or gambling. Infractions brought deductions from pay. The former druggist’s apprentice decreed that his own hundred apprentices, who lived on the grounds, be taught reading, writing, arithmetic, and singing. They must also bathe and go to Sunday School. They worked a ten-hour day.

 

Posted in Advertising, Article Publications, Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Druggist & Drugstore, Early American Glass, Glass Companies & Works, History, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Amazing 8-Sided Utility Bottle…Is It Baltimore?

8sidedmedCrop

Amazing 8-Sided Bottle…Is It Baltimore?

29 August 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAAs part of the “Dale Mlasko and great bottles found at the bottom of a San Francisco Hole Week” we now show you this amazing utility or ink bottle that Dale found in the San Francisco gold rush collection that he is going through, box by box. Read: The E. Julin – ABO football sized torpedo Read: Bertinguiot… French or American Inks?

“Hi Ferdinand, Here is an amazing eight sided medicine (ink?) found in an early 1960s dig in San Francisco. While it has no embossing, it is crude with a tubular pontil and trails of black slag throughout. The whittle effect is amazing. It is 6 1/2″ tall. I have been told that it may be Baltimore blown? Any thoughts? Thanks, Dale Mlasko”

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8-sided utility bottle pontil – Dale Mlasko

I was curious why one would say Baltimore on this bottle. I mean I know it may have been a much earlier predecessor to other multi-sided bottles out of Baltimore like the Wheeler’s Berlin Bitters, Walters & Company, London Medicated Health Restorer and the ten-sided Greensfelder & Laupheimer. Buy why Baltimore? Some felt so sure of this when this bottle was posted on the PRG Facebook page. The comment I was most looking for came in from noted Baltimore bottle authority Chris Rowell.

“I would not jump right to Baltimore with these. I have seen pictures of a few of them. And they all seem to be exactly the same color. Sort of a yellow amber. Almost all “amber” Baltimore blown bottles from the 1840s have peach, topaz, or puce tones to the glass. True yellow amber would be a scarce color for Baltimore glass of that era. I would agree with calling them Mid Atlantic. But I can’t rule out a New Jersey or Philadelphia area glass house yet with these.” – Chris Rowell

Noted New England collector Michael George added the following with a picture (below):

“I have one that has the same CRAZY whittle, in a beautiful orange amber color! Really cool utility bottles!” – Michael George

Utilities_George

Three Utility Bottles (subject bottle in center position) – Michael George

Another interesting follow-up comment from Dale Mlasko:

“What is scary is that the color, texture and pontil look eerily like Baker & Cutting. I know of 5 of these all dug in early pits in San Francisco.” – Dale Mlasko

Some multi-sided Baltimore bottles

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London Medicated Health Restorer in that ‘funky’ Baltimore glass color – Chris Rowell

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Six-sided Walters & Co – Baltimore bottle – Meyer Collection

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Six-sided Walters & Co – Baltimore base image

W 083 (Wheelers Berlin)

Six-sided Wheeler’s Berlin Bitters – Baltimore in yellow olive – Meyer Collection

W 082_5 (Wheelers Berlin)

Six-sided Wheeler’s Berlin Bitters – Baltimore in aqua – Meyer Collection

Greensfelder

Ten sided Greensfelder & Laupheimer Druggists Baltimore, Md – Meyer Collection

Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Color, Digging and Finding, Early American Glass, History, Inks, Utility Bottles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Lash’s Gentleman in a Hat

LashBitters

The Lash’s Gentleman in a Hat

28 August 2014 | Mystery Solved 082814 14:55

Apple-Touch-IconAHere is an interesting e-mail I received yesterday about Lash’s Bitters. This seems like a question for bitters trade card authority Joe Gourd. Is there a gentleman in a hat?

Read: Lash’s Bitters | San Francisco – Chicago – New York

Read: Lash’s Bitters – PART TWO | History

Read: Lash’s Bitters | PART THREE – Humorous and Clever Advertising

Read: Lash’s Pineapple-Ade Delicious & Refreshing

LashsBittersFront&Back

Hi Ferdinand,

First off, great write-up on the Lash Bitters Company. I am wondering if you might be able to help me and a few friends out with a project we are working on. Back in 1909-1911, the American Lithographic Company (ALC) printed a massive series of baseball cards for the American Tobacco Company (ATC). This set was widely circulated as a promotional giveaway with one/two cards inserted in 18 different ATC brands. The set is known as the T206 White Border series and is still today widely collected, in fact the most expensive card in the world (T206 Honus Wagner) is from this set.

LashsBaseballFronts

Why am I interested in the Lash Bitters? A collector found 12 of these T206 cards that appeared to be from an original test sheet used at the ALC factory. The cards are all hand cut and are missing a few layers of ink and oddly have several unfinished Lash Bitter’s post card fronts and backs printed on them. We are thinking this unfinished T206 sheet was used to test the printing of the Lash Bitters post cards. So far we have found the back Lash image used and one of the front but there appears to be a second front printed on the backs of the T206 cards.

Below are scans of the cards found, the front/back Lash Bitters ad and the mysterious missing front. I realize it is a long shot but have you seen anything from Lash that has a gentleman in a hat as shown and a large red “LASH BITTERS” logo?

Cheers, Chris

LashesMisprintCards LashSheet

Mystery Solved

Ferd, We’re talking Baseball, Mom and Apple Pie! I recognize the mystery image. It is another version of the post card used in your post. It too is entitled “Waiting for a live one”. Lash's-Man in a Hat

Lash's Casey at the Bat Front

Since we are on the subject of baseball and Lash’s, here’s another Lash’s advertising item. It is a booklet illustrating the well known poem “Casey at the Bat” (see below). Also, I have a number of trade cards with baseball as their theme, Your writer probably has seen them too. Mystery solved……..Joe

Lash's Casey at the Bat Back Cover

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Ephemera, History, Mailbox Letters, Questions, Tobacco, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Bertinguiot… French or American Inks?

BertinguoutInkDalecrop

Bertinguiot… French or American Inks?

27 August 2014 (R•082814)

Apple-Touch-IconAMust be Dale Mlasko week (visit Oregon Trail Antique Bottles & Glass). Keep getting these drop-dead, stunning pictures of bottles that were dug in San Francisco. Earlier this week it was the E. Julin – ABO football sized torpedo and last night, a killer, 8-sided medicine. Stay tuned on that one. Today it is a gorgeous Bertinguiot ink (see top of post and below pontiled base) in a purple puce coloration. The embossing could imprint wet concrete and be read it is so crisp. Dale’s e-mail:

Hi Ferdinand, I recently came across this light purple puce Bertinguout ink. It has an open pontil and was dug in San Francisco in the 1960s. I have seen these in many shades of olive and green and one in cobalt blue. Never in this color. I believe these were originally thought to be French in origin but now I believe they are known to be American? I would appreciate knowing if this color variant is unique or if there are more out there. Regards Dale

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Bertinguiot ink pontil (see top of post) – Dale Mlasko

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Bnd Maurin, Successor of Bertinguiot – Manufacture of inks and sealing wax – Invoice dated 1837

French or American Ink? or both?

What I find interesting here is an obvious French ink that is showing up in the continental United States. These are probably late 1830s and early 1840s pieces though some pieces may be from the 1850s and 1860s. One advertisement from Washington DC in 1836, says “Bertinguiot French Inks, red and black”, for sale (see below). There is some thought as them being blown in the northeast United States, some say Coventry glass works, though the purple puce coloration is not representative of this area at that time. This is a tough name to research. We could be talking about Frenchman, Jean Baptiste Bertinguiot (married Jeanne Claude Masson 1822). One clip says the AM in front of Bertinguiot is Adrien Maurin, the well known French ink merchant. Maurin was the successor of Bertinguiot (see billhead below). Another name in the mix is Perine Guyot. His French inks were being sold in New Orleans in 1858. I know, this is all pretty inky so far. I need to find out if all pieces or just some have the “AM'” embossed in front of “BERTINGUIOT”. Also, who was representing the brand in United States?

BertinguiotFrenchInkAdWasghingtonDCJune6_The Globe1836

Bertinguiot’s French Ink, red and black for sale – The Globe, Washington, June 6, 1836

WillyWallach

Ink maker Adrien Mauren (AM), established 1790 – The Publishers Weekly, 1874

A couple of quotes to ponder:

“I have always believed them to be a product of Coventry, Connecticut but could be wrong. Just looking at them they are screaming New England. I’ve dug an intact example and several broken ones here in Ohio so at very least they were sold in the States. I would think they were marketed by a U.S. company if they are showing up this far inland at that time.” – AppliedLips (antique-bottles.net)

BertinguiotJeffnHolly

BERTINGUIOT ink, bright olive amber, cylindrical, pontil scar, 2 1/8″H x 2 7/16″D, sheared and fire polished mouth, mint. Probably blown at a New England Glass Works, 1820-1840, scarce. Though there are those who would argue that this ink is French, it is the opinion of many (including myself) that the piece was blown in America for the French Canadian market. – Jeff & Holly Noordsy

“I also believe this to be a CT inkwell. Examples exist with a paper labels that indicate a CT town… Columbia I believe. Also… the glass, pontil, form, and sheared top are all characteristics of early Coventry production.” – Michael George (antique-bottles.net)

2binks

I have owned a yellow olive one before and did some research. Many sources on the net and maybe a bottle book or two called it a US ink. There were a couple sources I found that did say French but they were outnumbered and I believe incorrect. I was thinking they were a southern ink company, (Louisiana comes to mind) and bought their bottles from the north.  I might be way off but thought I would share my foggy recollections. – Coboltmoon (antique-bottles.net)

I’ve seen these in this color which is certainly rare but what’s even more rare is the strike on that thing as most are weak. – Lou Lambert (Antique Bottles – Facebook)

There has been multiples of these inks that were recovered in New Orleans. With the heavy French and Creole population there, they were definitely marketed to the local population. They are an obvious Northeast glass product from a French ink manufacturer for distribution here. I don’t think that they wanted a crate full of glass inks rattling around on a boat ride across the Atlantic Ocean. – Brandon Smith

BertinguiotBlueClip

Embossed AM BERTINGUIOT with a pontil mark. The AM is Adrien Maurin (la marquee Adrien Maurin). Ancient Manufacture PERINE GUYOT. Produced in France in 1860. From an outstanding private collection – 1001inkbottlers.com

BertinguiotOliveGreey_EdGray

Bertinguiot ink in olive yellow, open pontil – GreatAntiqueBottles.com

BertinguiotInkwellPastor

Bertinguiot ink in a very dark color – John Pastor

BertinguiotBrandon

Here is my example of this ink that does not say AM before Bertinguiot. The ink was dug in New Orleans just outside the French quarter. There has been multiples of these inks that were recovered in New Orleans. With the heavy French and Creole population there, they were definitely marketed to the local population. They are an obvious Northeast glass product from a French ink manufacturer for distribution here. I don’t think that they wanted a crate full of glass inks rattling around on a boat ride across the Atlantic Ocean. – Brandon Smith

Posted in Digging and Finding, History, Inks, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Catawba Bitters labeled lady’s leg from New Haven

CBLLLabel3

Catawba Bitters labeled lady’s leg from New Haven

26 August 2014

Apple-Touch-IconADavid Jackson (Read: David Jackson and his Applied Seal Bottles) posted these three pretty nice pictures of a Catawba Bitters green lady’s leg figural bottle with a label from Merrick & Moore Wholesale Druggists at 192 State Street, New Haven Connecticut. Not familiar with this one.

What is interesting here is that noted bottle authority, Dr. Richard Cannon once said in an article called SACHEM AND SHOSHONEES regarding  Old Sachems Bitters and Wigwam Tonic, “Apparently George Hunnewell was not the same person as John L. or Joseph W. Hunnewell of Boston who began to put out Hunnewell’s Tolu Anodyne and Universal Cough Remedy in the 1840s. We know that William Goodrich was the proprietor and was located at 145 Water Street. Old Sachem Bitters & Wigwam Tonic was advertised in April, 1859. I do not know how early the product appeared, but probably earlier that 1859. Merrick and Moore Company was in control of the brand when they appeared in the New Haven, Conn. City Directories from 1864-1867. Mr. Merrick resided in several of the local hotels during this period.”

I can not substantiate this connection and find it a bit odd. My research does find a Merrick & Moore (William Merrick & Lucius C. Moore), wholesale druggists and patent medicines, at 192 State in the 1866-1867 Benham’s New Haven Directory and Annual Advertiser. These two guys grew up in New Haven, and were obviously acquaintances as they “clerked” at a number of places until they joined up in late 1850s and 1860s. Their company is only listed for two years. No mention of the Old Sachems.

Anyway, an unlisted bottle that now will have a listing by Bill Ham in the Ring and Ham Bitters Bottles Supplement 2 book.

M 73.7  L . . . Merrick & Moore Catawba Bitters,Wholesale Druggists, 192 State Street, New Haven Conn.
12
Round-lady’s leg, Green, LTCR, Applied mouth
Benham’s New Haven Directory and Annual Advertiser, 1866-1867

Read: The old but sexy, Brown & Drake Catawba Bitters lady’s leg

Read: XR Bottle Find in St. Louis – Catawba Bitters

Read: Catawba Wine Bitters on eBay

CatawbaBittersLL_1

Catawba Bitters lady’s leg bottle, New Haven, Connecticut – David Jackson

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Catawba Bitters lady’s leg bottle, New Haven, Connecticut – David Jackson

Select Timeline:

1831: William Merrick born about 1831 in North Branford, New Haven, Connecticut. Parents: Elizur Merrick (1803-1848) and (Lorinda Chidsey) 1805-1873.
1849: William Merrick marries Adeline Rebecca Brockett on 24 October 1849.
1850: William and Adeline Merrick, age 19, farmer and wife – United States Federal Census
1855-60: Lucius C. Moore, clerk, 54 State and 28 State – New Haven City Directory
1860: William Merrick, age 29, peddler – United States Federal Census
1861-63: Lucius C. Moore, clerk, 149 State (see below) – New Haven City Directory
1863: William Merrick, 149 state – New Haven City Directory
1866-67: Merrick & Moore (William Merrick & Lucius C. Moore), wholesale druggists and patent medicines, &c., 192 State – Benham’s New Haven Directory and Annual Advertiser
1868: Lucius C. Moore, druggist, 139 Main Street – New Haven City Directory
1870: William Merrick, Liquor Dealer living in Brooklyn Ward 10, Kings, New York, wife: Adeline Rebecca Brockett born 6 May 1831 in North Haven, Connecticut, Children: Elizur W. Merrick, B: 1851, Frank M. Merrick B: 1854, William A Merrick B: 1857, Jonathan R. Merrick B: 1858 and Lewis Merrick B: 1864 United States Federal Census
1874: William Merrick died on 30 June 1874 in North Branford, New Haven, Connecticut.
Posted in Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, Figural Bottles, History, Liquor Merchant | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment