Bottles Stories in a Wine Cellar

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Bottles Stories in a Wine Cellar

06 April 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAA week ago Saturday night, Pam and Randy Selenak, Jerry Forbes and myself were invited to a cozy wine tasting in Webb Tartaglia’s wine cellar with his pretty lady friend, Jane. Web is pictured at the top of this post with a black cat that appeared even though the cellar door was closed. Hmmmmm.

This was after the wonderful Morro Bay Bottle Show put on by the San Luis Obispo Bottle Society. Webb is an extraordinary man and this was one evening that I will never forget. Very spiritual and fun. Kind of like telling stories around a camp fire. Historically, each guest over time, hammers a quarter in to an overhead cellar beam. I guess to ward off black cat spells. The wine bottle pictured further below was signed by Willie Nelson.

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Posted in Bottle Shows, Wine & Champagne | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

2014 Morro Bay Bottle Show

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2014 Morro Bay Bottle Show

San Luis Obispo Bottle Society

05 April 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAI have always heard that the Morro Bay, California bottle show, put on by the San Luis Obispo Bottle Society, was an experience. This quaint show, in the shadow of Morro Rock is orchestrated by Webb Tartaglia, who has forty years of show experience as show chairman. Unfortunately, Morro Bay is a little out of the way for me in Houston, so I kind of set it aside and just wished I could go each year. Well I was finally able to go, though Elizabeth had to stay back and hold down the fort.

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Recently, the club found the original San Luis Obispo Bottle Society sign that was used on a Morro Bay parade float that featured an old outhouse.

I flew in to LAX last Thursaday, a week ago, from Houston and connected on a puddle jumper to San Luis Obispo where my bottle friend Jerry Forbes (Big Sur coast) picked me up. As the weather was simply perfect, we headed up the coast to Monterey where we had lunch at this killer place called Sandbar & Grill which was embedded in the side of the pier and in the heart of all the docked sailboats. Both of us having an open-face, Dungeness crab, shrimp and avocado sandwich with killer bloodies kept our spirits high and our anticipation steady.

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Sandbar & Grill in Monterey Bay where we had our crab sandwich lunch.

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Looking at the docked sailboats from Sandbar & Grill.

Next we walked to the Fisherman Wharf piers, near Cannery Row and were entertained by the California sea lions. We could have spent a couple of hours here.

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Sunning and entertaining California Sea Lions on a platform in Monterey Bay by Fisherman’s Wharf.

Time was tight, so we passed on the famous Monterey Aquarium and opted to head for our quaint little hotel in Morro Bay overlooking the famous Morro Rock which is pictured at the top of the post. Some reference it as the ‘Gibraltar’ of the Pacific.

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A few nice examples that Steve Mello set out for our viewing pleasure. Many of these bottles were found by digging or diving.

Next, on Thursday evening, Jerry and I headed up to Steve Mello’s house in Paso Robles for bottle viewing, a steak cook-out and local wine tasting with bottle friends accumulating for the two-day show that starts on Friday afternoon. Not a bad way to enjoy our first evening. Steve has beautiful bottles, many he has found by diving. I even picked up a killer, labeled Bissell’s Tonic Bitters that I was able to photograph as the sun set, I-phone in one hand, wine glass in the other.

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Fully labeled, Bissell’s Tonic Bitters from Peoria, Illinois.

On Friday morning, after a nice early morning jog along the bay, Jerry Forbes, Steve Bird (Los Alamitos) and myself had an early breakfast and headed over to the Morro Bay Veterans Hall where the show is held each year. We wanted to get there early to check out the action. My first photograph were these killer bottles from Pam and Randy Selenak (Orange) that I sat in a window to catch the later afternoon light.

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Left, flanking cranberry puce, Physiological Hair bottle and right, cobalt blue Hair Color Restorer with an amber Old Bourbon Castle Whiskey flask in the middle.

One on my highlights of the show was meeting with Dave Kyle (Thousand Oaks) who had specifically brought two boxes of his favorite figural bitters to the show. We had been communicating for months via e-mail and boy was I anticipating this presentation. We looked at ten or so bottles Friday afternoon and the second box on Saturday. Setting up on an old, weathered picnic table within the show allowed us the perfect setting. Everybody was drooling. Read More: Dave Kyle and his Figural Bitters.

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A grouping of just a few of Dave Kyle’s figural bitters.

Four displays at the show caught my attention, the first being colorful hair bottles from the Selenak collection. Many of the bottles represented Mrs. Susan A. Allen and Allen Hair bottles. The second was Back Bar bottles and antique spigot handles displayed on a barrel by club chairman, Webb Tartaglia. The next display was labeled medicines by Brett Weathersbee (Atascadero). The super bottles were all set within a small glass cabinet. A real feast for the eyes. Lastly, I was able to review and photograph Food Product Jars from 1850 to 1900 by Chef Johnny Pol. Rather nice displays for a small show. All are pictured below.

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Display information graphics in front of the Selenak hair bottle display.

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Just a fantastic grouping of hair bottles from the Selenak collection.

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Back Bar bottles and antique spigot handles displayed on a barrel by club chairman, Webb Tartaglia

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Small western labeled medicines by Brett Weathersbee

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Food Product Jars from 1850 to 1900 by Chef Johnny Pol.

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Webb Tartaglia and his Back Bar bottles

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Brett Weathersbee and his labeled medicines.

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Chef Johnny Pol and his Food Product Jars from 1850 to 1900.

OK, by this time, on late Thursday afternoon, we were all getting hungry and eager for the planned dealer cook-out and wine tasting hosted and orchestrated by club chairman, Webb Tartaglia. Home made sausage, 2″ thick monster steaks, veggie side dishes and dessert rounded out an incredible first afternoon for the show.

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Monster steaks cooked at the show. Sausage came first.

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Webb’s home made sausage.

Saturday is the day for the public to attend the show. I spent most of the day looking at bottles, picking up a few bitters like my aqua Paradise Bitters (Read: Paradise Bitters from Fresno, California) from Lou Lambert and very whittled, pale yellow, Old Sachem Bitters and Wigwam Tonic from Ken Edward (Sutter Creek). This was a Mike Henness bottle at one time. I also picked up a killer Pipafax from Doug Hansen (Palo Cedro) and a heavily whittled, Webb’s Improved Stomach Bitters from Jackson, Michigan (Read: Webb’s Improved Stomach Bitters – Jackson, Michigan). Not a bad haul for a small show. I also had a good meeting with Bill Ham to discuss the process and schedule for the planned Bitters Bottles Supplement 2.

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Aqua, Paradise Bitters from Fresno, California

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Pale yellow, Old Sachem Bitters and Wigwam Tonic.

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Detail of pale yellow, Old Sachem Bitters and Wigwam Tonic.

I was able to walk the small room and adjoining outdoor table area and take a few pictures. Here is a gallery of some colorful folks that make up the show. My apologies for forgetting some of the names. Please help me if you can so I can update the captions.

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Charlie Holt from Herald, California

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Chuck Gildea from Laguna Hills

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Dave Maryo from Los Angeles

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Cindy selling Donuts and coffee for dealers (Last name needed)

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Doug Hansen (Palo Cedro) and Glenn Piati (Morro Bay)

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Tom Spellman (Upland) and Dwayne Anthony (Highland)

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George Mross (Minden, Nevada)

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Jerry Forbes from Carmel

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John Ronald from Petaluma

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Ken Edward from Sutter Creek

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Lou Lambert from Graton

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Tania Mitchell from Grover Beach, California

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(Identification Needed)

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Jackie Lindgren (Martinez) and Leisa Huntsman Lambert (Graton)

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Scott Yeargain and John Swearingen (Thousand Oaks)

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Dave Kyle (Thousand Oaks)

After the show on Saturday, four of us headed up to Webb Tartaglia’s ranch and had a very spiritual wine tasting in Webb’s small cozy wine cellar. Read: Bottles Stories in a Wine Cellar.

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Webb Tartaglia’s wine cellar.

What a fantastic show. I saved the BEST for last as I was finally going to go deep in the mountains between Carmel and Big Sur and visit my dear friends Jerry and Helen Forbes at their ‘tree house’. Here again, this was so special, I will dedicate a separate post. My hat is off to the San Luis Obispo Bottle Society and Webb Tartaglia. I will be returning, with Elizabeth.

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Jerry and Helen Forbes and of course Cutter the Min Pin

Posted in Bitters, Bottle Shows, Club News, Collectors & Collections, Figural Bottles, Hair Tonics, Medicines & Cures, News, Utility Bottles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Dave Kyle and his Figural Bitters

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Dave Kyle and his Figural Bitters

03 April 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAOften, when I travel to bottle shows around the country, I am afforded the luxury of visiting some fantastic collections and meeting with some great people in their homes. In some cases, I am also able to see examples from private collections that are presented to me at a secluded area at a regional bottle show due to being unable to adjust my travel schedule to see a collection. In this case, I could not get to Thousand Oaks, California to see some of the great figural bottles from the Dave Kyle collection. These bottles came to me in two boxes and I was able to review, discuss and photograph at the two day Morro Bay Bottle Show this past weekend. I hope you will be as impressed as I am with Dave and his passion for figural bitters. It looks like I need to put Thousand Oaks on my radar.

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I will not be captioning each picture as many bitters collectors will recognize the classic iconic bottles. For those of you that need a little help, you will see a trio of National Bitters (ear of corn figural), Cannon’s Dyspeptic Bitters, a killer green Palmer’s Tonic Bitters semi-cabin, Brown’s Celebrated Indian Herb Bitters (indian queen figural), Capital Bitters, Old Homestead Wild Cherry Bitters, Best Bitters in America, Professor Byrne Universal Compound Stomach Bitters, Wheeler’s Berlin Bitters, Smith’s Druid Bitters, National Tonic Bitters, Harvey’s Prairie Bitters, Dr. Wonser’s Indian Root Bitters, Drake’s Plantation BittersFish Bitters and the only known labeled London Medicated Health Restorer (ex: Ferdinand Meyer IV, my father).

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Dave Kyle

First of all, a little background about myself. I was born in Los Angeles on July 6, 1930 and attended Fairfax and Menlo Park high schools. Two years of college at Menlo Park and Santa Monica City College included football and track and field. Next, I was in the Unites States Army from 1952-1954 during the Korean War. Upon discharge, I worked at Safeway Stores and then it was 28 years with the Burbank Fire Department. I retired in 1985.

Actually, as old as I am, I should have started my collecting as Dick Watson did in the 1950s. The first bottle I bought was a ‘Warner Kidney and Liver Cure’ in July 1992. My son Scott and I traveled up to Carson City, Nevada to visit a bottle-digging friend of my son, John Shuler. While with John, he showed me a ‘National Bitters Ear-of-Corn’ figural and a ‘Brown’s Indian Queen Bitters’ which I fell in love with, thus a love affair with not only Warner’s Cures but also figural bitters. I have to mention the name Jack Stecher at the start of my quest for Warner’s. As well as being a great friend, Jack is a tremendous help with his knowledge and collection of many labeled Warner’s. I have been his house guest on many occasions and have traveled to many eastern shows with Jack and got to meet the likes of Don Keating, Ted Krist, Dick Bowman, Burt Spiller, Bob Sheffield and Cliff Moore. Great people with great bottles in their collections.

Along with my searching and buying Warner’s, I was also, when I could afford it, buying more bitters. There are so many people that I met during my travels and search for the Warner’s and bitter’s, I don’t have the room to list them all. These being collectors, dealers, auctioneers, and good people that have passed on. I thank them all!! I went on to acquire 150 Warner’s, some being one-of-a-kind. I also started getting more involved with the bitters. Eventually, I sold off all of my collection to the “Warner Hard Hitters”. I went to many shows and was involved with most of the major auction houses plus e-Bay and private sales. I do have some medicines but no more Warner bottles, just some advertising signs plus some poisons, my favorites being the trio of ‘skull poisons’, small, medium, and large thanks to Mike George and Greg Bair.

I kept my quest going for more bitters during the 1990s and 2000s. In 2007, I took out a reverse mortgage on my house here in Thousand Oaks, California and used some of the funds to acquire the ever rarer bitters bottles that of course, command higher prices. I now have a total of 150 bottles, mostly bitters, but some medicines, poisons, and six beautiful ‘Flaccus Jars’. I also enjoy woodworking, which came in handy for constructing my seven back-lighted bottle cabinets.

I really don’t drive much anymore due to Glaucoma and way too much traffic! A good friend, fruit jar Globe collector, John Swearingen and I, have traveled to quite a few shows together and will be flying to Lexington, Kentucky the first of August for the much anticipated FOHBC National Antique Bottle Show. The bottle ride so far for me has been fantastic with meeting so many great people. I would also like to mention and thank my ‘Warner World’ mentors such as Jack Stecher, Andy Lange of Plymouth, Massachusetts, along with Steve Jackson, Bob Sheffield, Mike Seeliger, John Wolf, Ed Ojea, Terry McMurray, and Mike and Kathy Craig. I apologize if I’ve left anyone out, there have been so many!

I’ll close for now with a big thanks to Ferd Meyer for asking me to do this write-up for Peachridge Glass. I also thank him for his input and help to me personally. I think we all admire his contributions, energy, knowledge, and leadership to our great hobby. Someday, if I get to the Houston area, I’ll take him up on his offer to see his great collection!! Thanks to all and the good Lord willing and if the creeks don’t rise, I’ll see ya in Lexington!!

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Posted in Bitters, Bottle Shows, Collectors & Collections, Color Runs, Figural Bottles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

March 2014 – Antique Bottle & Glass Photo Gallery

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Having fun in the bottle room and wanted to show off my two newest demijohns. We can call this the big, the small, and the ugly! Doing stuff like this is what my friend Brian calls “crapping around with bottles.” – Gene Ainsworth

Apple-Touch-IconAHere we go with the March 2014 group of pictures culled from a few of the web and Facebook sites that we all like. It looks like snow backgrounds are dominating the group of pictures this month which makes sense. What a great way to show off bottle colors! Truly some spectacular pictures. My favorite is the top picture Gene Ainsworth and some of his demijohns. Make sure you enlarge the picture and look at the small demijohn.

March 2014 – Antique Bottle & Glass 

P H O T O    G A L L E R Y

01 April 2014

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Good morning. I opened up the front drapes when we got up to get our dose of color and this is what we saw. Doesn’t get much better than this. – Pam Selenak


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Some Dr. T’s for Mr. C. – Woody Douglas


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Three 12 panel Harrisons. Gallon, 11 1/2″. 7″ cornflower blue. 4 7/8″ on the right. – Charles Aprill


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And last but not least (if I don’t get these on now, I won’t have the time later). My flask finds. I’ve been searching for quite awhile for a quart Louisville Glass Works embossed scroll. The few I’ve encountered over the years always had lip damage or extra roughness that I didn’t like. Not only does this have the best lip I’ve seen, it is decidedly a hue of green….not dark, but not aquamarine either. McKearin GIX-6 mold w/red iron pontil (forgot a picture of that). Next was this awesome GXIII-53 Resurgam pint in sort of a smoky clear but a slight hint of greenish w/striations all thru the base & lower half. Ex Paul Richards w/applied top. Picked it up & would not put it down (with someone right at my shoulder waiting for me to do exactly that). Last scroll is for comparison only had that in the window here, ice blue to show against the greenish hues… – Mike Stephano


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Finally after about 5 weeks I got my bottle from Hecklers Auctions – Gary Venturini


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Sorting more of my fancy clear liqueurs today. Want to get up a nice display. Have about 75 of them all dating 1860-1900. Many are open pontilled. Some have been in boxes for years – Marlena VanHelsing


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The flask I came to the show hoping to find, a Charles Wharton Chestnut Grove pocket flask in a brilliant blue. I had been wanting one to go with my Wharton’s Philadelphia whiskey collection. These four were all blown at Whitney Glass Works in Glassboro, New Jersey circa 1860. The real kicker here is that this example comes from the renowned Bryan Grapentine Collection. It’s always great to find the best example possible with provenance from a famous collection. – Eric Richter


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That is my morning wake up call (see top sunrise). This is my afternoon visual. – Pam Selenak


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The unusual Mede’s Mexican Fluid – Norman Heckler


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Baltimore Antique Bottle Show goodies. Photographed near Carmel, California – Jerry Forbes


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Hairs – Charles Flint


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Some rare shipping crates Ryan McMurray


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Here are a few funky nuts… good early ones in unusual colors! – Michael George


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My morning vista, them squares are getting a hold – Matthew Tigue Levanti


VickiePond

I have been collecting bottles and glass since I was given my first “poison” bottle aged 5, most have been presents or ones I’ve bought here in England, but a few have been dug up on my Dads property in France. I’m sending you some pictures as your website looks brilliant and thought it might be nice for you to see some things from this side of the pond! – Vickie Sutton


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Here’s what I`ve done with some of the nicer pieces I’ve dug over the years. Put them in a couple clear jars and let the sun shine through. If only they could have been whole…. – Bill Steele


TableGlass_NoordsyReally digging this photo – Jeff Noordsy


WhereIsSpring_MarshallWhere’s Spring? – Tom Marshall


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Last one this evening some of my early Medicines in a group picture. 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, Lees 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


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New England variety – Tom Marshall


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More Wolfe’s! I just love these, got a little snow in the high country today – Mathew Tigue Levanti


DocsDigsDocs Digs – Larry Doc Schultz


See: August 2013 – Antique Bottle & Glass Photo Gallery

See: September 2013 – Antique Bottle & Glass Photo Gallery

See: October 2013 – Antique Bottle & Glass Photo Gallery

See: November 2013 – Antique Bottle & Glass Photo Gallery

See: December 2013 – Antique Bottle & Glass Photo Gallery

See: January 2014 – Antique Bottle & Glass Photo Gallery

See: February 2014 – Antique Bottle & Glass Photo Gallery

Posted in News, Photography | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Daily Dose | April 2014

April   2 0 1 4

Tuesday, 29 April 2014

BootsSnake

My new boots that I will be wearing to bottle shows and FOHBC board meetings. Wadda’ y’all think?

Monday, 28 April 2014

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Off to Augusta and Atlanta here shortly. You should be getting the May | June Bottles and Extras this week if you haven’t received yet. Just starting work on the July | August issue. Will have a great article titled, The West Point Class of 1846 McClellan Bottle” by Eric Richter. This pic might make the cover. Eric adds, McClellan and Lincoln on the cover, then here’s the best shot. March into Lexington with a historical issue. B&E logo in blue and gray. Plenty of space for titles etc. What a cocky little bastard McClellan was!”

Sunday, 27 April 2014

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Added this nice trade card from the Gourd collection to the existing Cocamoke Bitters post.

Saturday, 26 April 2014

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Good morning. Look at these rather nice pictures of a freshly dug Sarracenia Life Bitters sent in by Richard Kramerich. Read more about Triskelions and the Tucker bottle: Sarracenia Life Bitters and the Triskelions.

Friday, 25 April 2014

Denver collector coming in later today. Don’t want to make too much of a Fuss about it but need to shine and polish some bottles… so working at Peach Ridge today.

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Thanks to Marianne Dow for this image of A.F. Perry’s Apothecary (Perry’s Anti Bilious Bitters) in Manchester, New Hampshire.

Wednesday, 23 April 2014

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Hump day for me. Straddling two worlds here at the studio. Working on a cast iron (I think) bottle post. Stay tuned. Look for a Alfred French Perry bitters post.

Tuesday, 22 April 2014

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Sorry, been super busy. Things kind of quiet in the bottle world. Working on a series of New Hampshire bitters posts which are indicated on the home page. Still have a labeled Dr. Stephen Jewett’s Tonic Bitters, labeled Burnham’s Vegetable Strengthening Jaundice Bitters and labeled Perry’s Anti-Bilious Bitters to process and post.

Sandor Fuss will be at Peachridge on Friday. This is his fourth or fifth trip. Looking forward to bottle talk and dinner. Always fun.

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Been focusing on art and a post for the the Lexington Seminars. Hard to pick!

Did you get the latest FOHBC Newsletter that was sent out this AM? See Newsletter

Friday, 18 April 2014

Samuel Toothaker

I don’t know, you tell me… it seems like this guy would have been a dentist instead of a doctor. Would have made advertising a lot easier. From an 1845 Nashua, NH City Directory.

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I have to admit, I got a real good chuckle from this. Danny Cathreno sent in the above picture of a flask that was won on ebay and shipped by seller to Danny. Good luck getting the peanuts out! Maybe better to say the flask contained milk and keep them in.

Thursday, 17 April 2014

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Sorry about the site being down. Kind of frustrating on my end. Ambition: I like this notice I found in The Rutland Herald (Vermont) in 1836. Maybe I should of had a gill of yeast with my gin bitters and Rice Krispies this morning!

Monday, 14 April 2014

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Steve Jackson update over at Warner’s Safe Cure: “No City” Safe Cure – Part 2

Sunday, 13 April 2014

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See Holloway’s Bitters post update with Mark Yate’s Holloway’s Celebrated Stomach Bitters example.

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See Pipifax Post Update.

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Completed a post for Holloway’s Bitters.

Updated Pipifax post. Marianne Dow has led us to the poem, The Devil’s Bout by Jean Wright (below). Marianne adds, “Pipifax was a drunken devil, one of 500,000 that Satan imprisoned in corked bottles, and when corks pop, they say, ”the devil’s out”.

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Thursday, 10 April 2014

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I really like the storefront graphics. Overwhelming but effective. I think they sell Patterson’s Pills? They are also Birth Control Specialists.

Wednesday, 09 April 2014

AmericanLifeOmahaRecently showing up. American Life Bitters, Omaha variant.

Monday, 07 April 2014

I hope you are all watching the ‘Sheik’ moving in to bitters. Dale, looks like your green Hostetter’s went to NY or Qatar. Also the Suffolk pig.

Sunday, 06 April 2014

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Cover art featuring PART 2 of Stephen Hubbell’s and Eric McGuire’s epic Dr. Henley Royal Palm Gin story. Subscribe and Become a Member

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Look for my post on our spiritual visit with master Webb Tartaglia.

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Check out Bruce Silva’s Western Whiskeyana list. I like ‘Whiskeyana’. Some of those western guys have probably thought about naming their daughter with that one.

Thursday, 03 April 2014

BlakesEbayRazorApril showers bring May flowers. Lots of rain here in Louisville today. Really getting backed up on posts. I do want to say that a nice Dr. G. C. Blake’s Anti-Dyspeptic Bitters from Buffalo in on sale over at ebay. Found in Canada I believe. The seller is Ken Warren who sent me the above pic. Nice bottle.

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Will be posting some of Dave Kyle’s figural bitters bottles later today I hope.

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Updated the Our Own Southern Bitters – Memphis post with pics from Russel Poole.

Tuesday, 01 April 2014

WhitlockRigSandor

Leaving Monterey, Ca. in an hour or so. Connect at LAX for Houston. Been at Jerry Forbes in mountains between Big Sur and Carmel. Jerry reminded me of this terrific bottle that exchanged hands a few years back in Baltimore. Looking at a Whitlock & Co. from New York. Look at that corner treatment. Bottle now resides in a Rocky Mountain collection. Read More: Constitution Bitters – The oldest Figural Bitters? and Barrel Series – B.M. & E.A. Whitlock & Co. – New York

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Paradise Bitters – Fresno, California

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Paradise Bitters – Fresno, California

31 March 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAI picked up a pretty rare Paradise Bitters at the Morro Bay bottle show this past weekend when I was walking out the doors nearing the end of the two-day show. Lou Lambert had it and said the bottle was from Fresno and dug in Fresno. Possibly only three or so known examples, he added. There was no embossing except “Paradise Bitters” twice, on the side panels.

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A quick search using “Paradise Bitters” and “Fresno” revealed the advertisement below that said Dr. John L. Kellett’s Paradise Oil was the “The Greatest Discovery on Earth”. Later in the advertisement, he implores you to use “Paradise Bitters” for a variety of other ailments. Priced $1 dollar a bottle, it was manufactured by Kellett & Brown in Fresno, California. All druggists can obtain the same by applying to F. W. Braun & Company in Los Angeles, California.

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Paradise Bitters manufactured by Kellett & Brown, Fresno, California –  Los Angeles Herald, 3 August 1891

From various bits of information, I can piece together that Dr. John Kellett was born about 1805 in Ireland and once in the states, settled in Utica, New York. He came west and settled in Hornitos, Mariposa County, California as a farmer. Hornitos soon became one of the most important points in the route of travel between Stockton and Los Angeles and is northwest of Fresno. Hornitos means “little ovens” in Spanish. About a mile from town, Dr. John Kellet, in 1851, operated a quartz mill, by water-power, with a wheel forty-five feet in diameter.

He married Minerva Evilyn Lewis in 1855, who in her teens, she, with her father, sister, brother and stepmother, left Alabama for Richmond, Virginia, from there they went to Little Rock, Arkansas; from there they emigrated to California in 1852, crossing the plains in a wagon train. The had a number of children, the first being John Lewis Kellett in 1862. I believe this son put out the Paradise Bitters.

The following “incident with a runaway horse” in 1873, talks about young John. “John L. Kellett, a lad of 15 years of age, son of Dr. John Kellett, who resides near Hornitos, met with a very severe accident a few days ago, which came near proving fatal. He was in the act of unhitching a horse which was fastened with a chain halter, when the animal gave a sudden start and ran – the chain becoming entangled and forming a noose around the boy’s wrist. The boy fell and was dragged at full speed for about 400 yards, receiving some very serious and painful bruises, including 5 severe cuts on the head. When picked up nearly every stitch of clothing was torn from his body and he was insensible. His escape from death seems almost a miracle. At last accounts he was recovering with a prospect of sustaining no permanent injury from his wounds.”

In 1882, John C. Kellett was advertising Liniments and in 1891, John L. Kellett was advertising the Paradise Bitters and Paradise Oil. Did they work together? Did they compete? In 1902, The California C0-operative Medical Company was organized in Eureka, California and was formed by John L. Kellett. One share entitled the owner to “free medical service and treatment for themselves and little ones”. At this time Kellett was operating out of Oakland.

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

P 19.5  PARADISE BITTERS

// PARADISE BITTERS // sp // PARADISE BITTERS //
7 5/8 x 2 1/2  x 1 3/8 (5 1/2)
Rectangular, Aqua, NSC, Tooled lip, Extremely rare
Paradise Medicine Company of California
One dug in Virginia City, Nevada

Select Timeline Events

1851: Hornitos soon became one of the most important points in the route of travel between Stockton and Los Angeles. About a mile from town, Dr. John Kellett, in 1851, operated a quartz mill, by water-power, with a wheel forty-five feet in diameter.

1855: Marriage, Minerva Evilyn Lewis to Dr. John Kellett

1862: Saturday, 20 Dec 1862, Birth at Hornitos, Dec. 23, to the wife of John Kellett a son.

1873: John Kellett – AN INCIDENT WITH A RUNAWAY HORSE,  HORNITOS, 1873-Wednesday, 15 Jan 1873, Stockton Daily Independent

1882: Dr. John Kellett’s Liniments advertisement (see below) – The Fresno Republican – 24 June 1882

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Dr. John C. Kellett’s Liniments advertisement – The Fresno Republican – 24 June 1882

1887: KELLET Death – At Hornitos, January 5th, 1887, Minerva Evilyn KELLETT, a native of Alabama, aged 47 years.

The deceased was the beloved wife of Dr. John KELLETT, of Hornitos. She was born in Mobile, Alabama, on Oct. 12th, 1839, and was the youngest child of David L. LEWIS, by his wife Susanna LEGARE, daughter of Hugh LEGARE, of North Carolina, whom he married at Georgia in 1829. While the subject of this sketch was yet early in her teens, she, with her father, sister, brother and stepmother, left Alabama for Richmond, Va., from there they went to Little Rock, Arkansas; from thence they emigrated to California in 1852, crossing the plains in the same train, with R. H. WARD, of Merced, STONER and family at Stockton. The LEWIS family met John KELLETT of Hornitos, then of Utica, New York, who the deceased married in 1855 since which time she has devoted her life to the cares of her family and the careful rearing of her children, who are now left to mourn the loss of a faithful devoted wife, a patient and gentle mother.

1887: January 22, 1887 Mariposa Gazette, KELLETT- HALLIHAN marriage January 12, 1889 Mariposa Gazette from Coulterville Correspondence, Miss Lizzie HALLIHAN, one of our fair young Coulterville girls, and John KELLETT, of Hornitos, were united in the holy bonds of matrimony by Father RAGO, at the residence of the bride’s father, on Sunday, December 30th. The happy couple departed for their home near Hornitos on Monday.

1897: John L. Kellett, patent medicines, 1309 Broadway – Oakland City Directory

1902: The California Co-operative Medical Company organized in Eureka, California was formed by John L. Kellett.

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Wonderful Success notice, 1992

1904: John L. Kellett, president, The California Co-operative Medical Company, 906 Broadway – Oakland City Directory

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

Webb’s Improved Stomach Bitters – Jackson, Michigan

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Webb’s Improved Stomach Bitters Jackson, Michigan

29 March 2014 (R•033014) (R•053015)

Apple-Touch-IconAIt is not often that I purchase a bottle for my collection when I already have an example, unless of course it is a different color or mold variation. In this case, yesterday afternoon, at the opening of the San Luis Obispo Bottle Society’s, Morro Bay Bottle Show, I purchased a Webb’s Improved Stomach Bitters from Jackson, Michigan from Lou Lambert. Lou knew an antique dealer who sold him the bottle, which is quite extraordinary.

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My existing orange amber bottle is pictured above while at the top of this post you will see my new example which was photographed today at the show. Below is an illustration of their drug store in Jackson, Michigan.

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Illustration of Webb’s Drug Store, Webb’s Family Medicines.

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

W 60 WEBB’S IMPROVED STOMACH BITTERS
WEBB’S IMPROVED / STOMACH BITTERS. // f // C. E. WEBB & BRO. / JACKSON, MICH. // f //
L…Webb’s Improved Stomach Bitters, (picture of a three-story building) C. E.
Webb & Bro., Jackson, Mich.
9 x 2 3/4 (6 1/4) 3/8
Square, Amber, LTC, Tooled lip and Applied mouth, Rare
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Existing Orange Amber Webb’s Improved Stomach Bitters – Meyer Collection

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“WEBB’S IMPROVED / STOMACH BITTERS. – C.E. WEBB & BRO. / JACKSON. MICH_” (with original labels), America, 1870 – 1880. Bright, light golden honey with plenty of yellowish tones in natural daylight, square with beveled corners, applied sloping collar – smooth base, ht. 9′, near mint; (a hard to see, ¼” iridescent bruise on top edge of lip, otherwise sparkling mint!) R/H #W60. A very scarce bitters, extremely rare with labels, and in a lighter color than normally encountered. Wonderful, original graphic label shows the “WEBB’S FAMILY MEDICINES” building which was located at 201 Main Street, in downtown Jackson, Mich. The rear label is approximately 60% complete and states that it is “The Best Medicinal Bitters in Use.” – American Glass Gallery – Auction 14

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“WEBB’S IMPROVED / STOMACH BITTERS. – C.E. WEBB & BRO. / JACKSON. MICH_” (with original labels), America, 1870 – 1880. Bright, light golden honey with plenty of yellowish tones in natural daylight, square with beveled corners, applied sloping collar – smooth base, ht. 9′, near mint; (a hard to see, ¼” iridescent bruise on top edge of lip, otherwise sparkling mint!) R/H #W60. A very scarce bitters, extremely rare with labels, and in a lighter color than normally encountered. Wonderful, original graphic label shows the “WEBB’S FAMILY MEDICINES” building which was located at 201 Main Street, in downtown Jackson, Mich. The rear label is approximately 60% complete and states that it is “The Best Medicinal Bitters in Use.” – American Glass Gallery – Auction 14

C. E. Webb & Brother

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Webb’s Drug Store, Jackson, Michigan

Charles E. Webb 

Charles E. Webb was a druggist and manufacturing chemist who prepared a line of extracts and compounds for his medical remedies, which gained great popularity and were sold to retailers in several States. He was born in Jefferson county, New York in 1835 and was the third of eight sons from George and Julia Webb, nee Brown, of New York. Charles spent the first 14 years of his life working on a farm. He then went to Watertown, New York to learn the drug business, remaining there until 1857. Webb then went to Iowa, and for six years was the proprietor of a drug store in DeWitt. He eventually sold out and came to Jackson, Michigan in 1863, and formed C. E. Webb & Brother, with his brother Walter at 201 Main Street in Jackson, Michigan. They had one of the largest and finest drug stores in central Michigan. Below is an advertisement that the brothers placed in the 1867 – 1868 Jackson City Directory.

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C. E. Webb & Brother advertisement – 1867 & 1868 Jackson City Directory (Jackson, Michigan)

Webb married Elizabeth Clark, of Watertown, New York, by whom he had 4 children, 3 daughters and 1 son. He was a member of the City School Board, and he and his family belonged to the First Baptist Church. Webb’s mother was a niece of General Jacob Brown, who settled in Pennsylvania before William Penn’s time; and moved to northern New York when the country was a wilderness. For six months they saw the face of no white person but their own family, the Indians being their only neighbors.

Walter B. Webb

Walter B. Webb was an  insurance, loan and real-estate agent. He was born in Watertown, New York in 1843 and enjoyed the advantages of common school until 15 years of age. Webb then came west and engaged in the drug business with his brother Charles in DeWitt, Iowa. He remained until 1863 and then came to Jackson, continued in the same business, and three years later became a partner. In January 1875, Webb retired his interest from the concern, save that in manufacture of patent medicines, which he retained. He then engaged in insurance, representing some 18 fire companies, among which were a number of the leading companies of Europe, his business being equaled in volume by few agents in Michigan. You can see his business occupying the same building at 201 Main Street in Jackson, Michigan. Walter married Emma L. Backus, of Jackson, in 1866, who died two years after; and in the fall of 1871 he married Julia A. Mann, of Calhoun county, Michigan. They had 1 daughter, Mettie. He and his wife were members of the Episcopal Church.

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Later Walter B. Webb Insurance advertisement (over Webb’s Drug Store) – Jackson County, Michigan, rural directory (1918)

Reference: The History of Jackson County, Michigan, 1881, and other resources.

Select Listings

1867 & 1868: C E Webb & Brother (Charles E and Walter B), druggists, dealer in drugs and medicines, 224 Main, Jackson City Directory (Jackson, Michigan)

1871: C E Webb & Brother (Charles E and Walter B), druggists, dealer in drugs and medicines, 201 Main, Jackson City Directory (Jackson, Michigan)

1891: On October 15, 1891, Mr. Ryerson married Julia E. Webb, daughter of the late Charles E. Webb, of Jackson. They have one son: Creighter Webb Ryerson.

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I also have an example of the extremely rare, Webb’s Old Rye Bitters. The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

W 61  WEBBS OLD RYE BITTERS
WEBBS / OLD RYE BITTERS // f // JACKSON, MICH. // f //
9 x 2 5/8 (6 1/4) 3/8
Rectangular, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, Extremely rare
Embossing on wider sides.

W61WebbsOldRye_Meyer

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Bottle Shows, Collectors & Collections, Digging and Finding, Druggist & Drugstore, History | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

John Thomson and his “Thomsonian System of Practice”

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John Thomson and his “Thomsonian System of Practice”

27 March 2014 (R•28 March 2014)

Apple-Touch-IconAJust a short post tonight, it has gotten longer thanks to Mark Yates and his leads, about John Thomson who was a Botanic Physician located at No. 67 Beaver-street in Albany, New York. The illustration above is Albany in 1854.

Early Medical Warfare

thomson1835John and his brother Cyrus, marketed their father Samuel’s, “Thomsonian System of Practice” and sold, using testimonials, the Vegetable Anti-Dyspeptic Wine Bitters. Later in Syracuse, Cyrus operated the city’s first Infirmary Center of Early Medical Warfare.

Read More: Samuel Thomson and the Poetry of Botanic Medicine, 1810-1860, Chapter 1, The American Hippocrates

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City’s First Infirmary Center of Early Medical Warfare – The Post Standard, 15 August 1948 – Syracuse, New York

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The Botanic Infirmary circa 1890s – Early Landmarks of Syracuse

This is an early bitters, with no bottles recorded in collections. One advertisement I found said, “40th Barrel of Vegetable Anti-Dyspeptic, manufactured this day, since 2d March, 1831.”

Carlyn Ring and W. C. Ham note the following in Bitters Bottles:

A 73  ANTI-DYSPEPTIC VEGETABLE BITTERS
Newspaper advertisement 1834: Its good effects are beyond description, cures consumption, destroys pernicious thirst in summer and expels paroxysms in winter. For any disease of the head, stomach or bowels.

Mark Yates  (Cazenovia, New York) adds that there was a Cyrus Thomson in Syracuse (Geddes), New York and that he has a labeled, unembossed open pontiled medicine (he will forward a picture). He led me to the 1894 book, Early Landmarks of Syracuse and some information within that indicates that Cyrus’ father, Samuel, was the founder of the Thomsonian System of Medicine. A couple of important excerpts:

Dr. Cyrus Thomson is remembered as a very eccentric man, rough and uneducated, though possessing considerable natural ability, shrewd, a close observer, and fond of telling amusing anecdotes. He was the son of Samuel Thomson, the founder of the Thomsonian system of medicine, and was born January 20, 1797, in Alstead, New Hampshire, where his father was born.

A letter from his distinguished though eccentric father, dated Madison county, New York, July 26, 1823, says that Samuel Thomson of Boston, Mass., authorized Cyrus Thomson to act as an agent in selling his medicines and to become a member of the Friendly Medical ‘Botannack’ society; the agreement lasting two years.

This botanic treatment, called the Thomsonian system, was founded by Samuel Thomson, who claimed to have “discovered the fatal error of Allopathy – the doctrine that irritation, fever and inflammation are diseases.” Samuel wrote in his book published in 1825; “Our life depends on heat; food is the fuel that kindles and continues that heat; heat I found was life, and cold was death, and that all constitutions are alike,” meaning in regard to their anatomy and physiology, their powers and their wants. Read More

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Verse describing the principles of the Thomsonian System – Early Landmarks of Syracuse

A few advertisements I found are represented below, one dating the specific bitters brand to 1828.

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John Thomson Botanic Physician advertisement – Albany Evening Journal, 1831

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John Thomson Botanic Physician advertisement – Albany Evening Journal, 1832

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“40th Barrel of Vegetable Anti-Dyspeptic” advertisement – Albany Evening Journal, May 17, 1833

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Dr. G. C. Blake’s Anti-Dyspeptic Bitters from Buffalo

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Dr. G. C. Blake’s Anti Dyspeptic Bitters from Buffalo

26 March 2014

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Apple-Touch-IconAWith the completion of the Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters post from New York City, it seems logical that we might now want to look at the Dr. G. C. Blake’s Anti-Dyspeptic Bitters from Buffalo, New York. Cory Stock also suggested this in a follow-up e-mail.

This bottle is quite difficult to find and I am pleased to possess a nice example in my collection that is featured in this post. The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

B 119  BLAKES ANTI DESPEPTIC BITTERS
G. C. BLAKES / ANTI. DESPEPTIC ( au ) / BITTERS // c //
58 Lloyd Street Buffalo, New York
7 1/4 x 3 1/8 x 1 7/8 (4 1/2)
Oval, Aqua, STC, Applied mouth, Metallic pontil mark, Very rare

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Buffalo Harbor in the 1850s

George C. Blake was listed as the proprietor of Blake’s Anti-Dyspeptic Bitters in 1855 and 1856 in Buffalo, New York Directories. His address was 53 Lloyd Street at the corner of Commercial and Water Streets. In 1857 he is listed, but the bitters relationship is not. In 1858 he is listed as a druggist at 2 Thompson block, Prime. In 1859 he has a saloon in Buffalo. Before 1855 and after 1859 he is a mystery. One has to wonder if he was related to Thomas Blake and the Blake’s Aromatic Bitters in New York City.

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Dr. G. C. Blake’s Anti Dyspeptic Bitters advertisement – The Commercial Advertiser Directory for the City of Buffalo, 1855

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Dr. G. C. Blake’s Anti Dyspeptic Bitters advertisement – 1855 Buffalo Business Directory

George C. Blake

1855 – 1856: George C. Blake, proprietor, anti-dyspeptic bitters (see above), 53 Lloyd Street at the corner of Commercial and Water Streets – Buffalo City Directory

1857: George C. Blake – Buffalo City Directory

1858: George C. Blake, druggist, 2 Thompson block, Prime – Buffalo City Directory

1859: George C. Blake, saloon, 4 commercial, h same, Distillers, Cordials, 2 Prime, Buffalo – New York City Directory

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, History, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Stock up with Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters

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Stock up with Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters

25 March 2014 (R•030617)

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Apple-Touch-IconAI have to tell you, I really like my aqua bitters bottles. I keep many of the smaller examples in one room and they shine and dance without the color that you see in other rooms. I pulled a Blake’s bottle off the shelf today because I found a neat 1852 advertisement for a Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters from New York that prompted this post. Carlyn Ring and Bill Ham have catalogued this bottle in Bitters Bottles Supplement as follows:

B 120  BLAKES AROMATIC BITTERS
f // DR. BLAKES // AROMATIC BITTERS // NEW YORK //
L…Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters, Depot, 118 Division Street and 68 South St., corner of Pine St.
7 x 2 7/8 x 1 3/4 (5) 3/4
Rectangular, Aqua, STC, Applied mouth, Rough pontil mark, Scarce

Dr. Thomas Blake’s claim to fame was his Aromatic Bitters that he marketed heavily and sold between 1847 and 1856 in New York City and across the country by using principal druggists in each city. He first started in 1842, according to one advertisement (see below) that says “For five years Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters and Tonic Invigorator, has been effecting cures among his friends, acquaintances, and neighbors”.

His primary offices were at 118 Division Street and 68 South Street from 1850 – 1855. He relied heavily on testimonials within his advertising and claimed his bitters would cure dyspepsia, disease of the liver, fever, ague, piles, scrofula, bilious complaints, ship fever, Asiatic cholera and general debility, among many other things. Examples of his bitters bottles have been found in the Canal Zone and many examples were dug in the west according to Ring & Ham.

Dr. Blake had it all figured out and recommended that an adult take a large tablespoonful of Blake’s Aromatic Bitters three times a day. If a person should be very bilious, a wineglassful before going to bed; and for a child, a teaspoonful twice a day. He was proud and signed his name on every wrapper and had his name prominently embossed on each bottle. With these small bottles, and those doses, the mothers must have been stocking up with crates of the concoction. I bet Dr. Blake was very successful.

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Hey Ferdinand. I’m digging in New Orleans and hitting open pontil bottles today. Here’s some pics. – Michael Burkett

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Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters advertisement – New York Tribune, August 1847 *Note that he says “For five years Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters and Tonic Invigorator, have been effecting cures among his friends, acquaintances, and neighbors” in the first sentence.

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Dr. Thomas Blakes Aromatic Bitters and Tonic Invigorator advertisement – Tremayne’s Table of Post-offices in the United States, 1850

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Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters advertisement – Saturday, December 28, 1850, Irish American Weekly (New York, NY)

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Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters advertisement – United States Commercial Register, 1851

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Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters advertisement – 1852 New York City Directory

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Blake’s Aromatic Bitters advertisement – The Republic, 1852

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Dr. Blake’s Aromatic Bitters advertisement – Boston City Directory, 1853

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Blake’s Aromatic Bitters still being sold, though at a discount – New York Tribune, Thursday, May 22, 1856

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