L.Q.C. Wishart’s Pine Tree Tar Cordial with the Poison Label!

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L.Q.C. Wishart’s Pine Tree Tar Cordial with the Poison Label!

31 January 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAI like it when an example of a re-purposed bottle shows up at an auction or on ebay. They are fun to look at and add ‘personality’ to a bottle. You will not see too many better examples then this wickedly crude, L.Q.C. Wishart’s Pine Tree Tar Cordial with the poison label on on ebay now. The listing reads as follows:

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Antique L.Q.C. Wishart’s Pine Tree Tar Cordial BOTTLE Phila 1859 Green Medicine

Up for auction this evening is an Estate fresh Antique L.Q.C. Wishart’s Pine Tree Tar Cordial BOTTLE Phila 1859 Green Medicine. Fresh attic find, I have not cleaned it or touched it. Cool paper label that reads, BED BUG POISON H.L. DRAKE PHYSICIAN AND DRUGGIST CAUGHDENOY, NEW YORK, there is a piece of tape on the bottom right of the label. The bottle measures 7.5 inches tall and 2 1/4 inches square on the bottom. No cracks, only a couple of tiny nicks on the top of the rim, cool bottle! Sold as is as you see it, Enlarge the photos and zoom in for a closer look and judge for yourself the condition. Guaranteed 100% old and authentic!!! – c.1901 100% Positive Feedback

Horace Leander Drake was born in New York in 1839 to Orrin G. Drake and Lydia A. Hitchcock. Horace was a physician and druggist who lived and practiced in Caughdenoy, New York (north of Syracuse and southeast of Oswego) as the label says. His brother, Daison Delos Drake, was two years older and was also a physician and druggist in the region.

Horace graduated from the University of Michigan with brother, Daison, as his Preceptor. Horace married Julia Elizabeth Forsyth (b. Vermilion, N.Y.) and resided in Syracuse, New York. They had two children, Horace B. Drake, Jr. and Carrie J. Drake. Drake was a private in Company I., 28th Infantry who enlisted on May 14, 1861 and was discharged on June 3, 1863. Drake re-enlisted from the 28th Infantry into Company I, 15th Cavalry, as a sergeant on October 15, 1863 and was discharged at Louisville, Kentucky on August 9, 1865. Horace Drake, MD died in Caughdenoy, NY in October 1902 at the age of 62 and is buried in Central Square, NY.

Read More: Dr. L.Q.C. Wishart’s Pine Tree Tar Cordials from the Marshall Collection

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Posted in Civil War, Cordial, Druggist & Drugstore, eBay, History, Medicines & Cures, Poison Bottles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Hot on the trail of the elusive O.O.S.B.

This gallery contains 5 photos.

Hot on the trail of the elusive O.O.S.B. 31 January 2014 Yet more information on Our Own Southern Bitters from James Viguerie. As you know, Eric McGuire provided information yesterday on this bitters. Yes, this post is abtly named, “Hot … Continue reading

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A. Slager – Manufacturer of German Vegetable Stomach Bitters

Slager Bitters

A. Slager, Dealer in Queensware and Manufacturer of German Vegetable Stomach Bitters – 1865 Memphis City Directory

A. Slager – Manufacturer of German Vegetable Stomach Bitters

Queensware & Bitters

30 January 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAI was looking around an old 1865 Memphis business directory the other day and found this A. Slager, Dealer in Queensware and Manufacturer of German Vegetable Stomach Bitters listing. How do you like that combination? I could not find a reference in the Ring and Ham Bitters Bottles books. Bill Ham was kind enough to provide the following update and comment that will be in the next Bitters Bottles Supplement.

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G 30 GERMAN VEGETABLE STOMACH BITTERS, A. Slager, No. 149 ½ Popular Street, Memphis

I found that the listing for G 30 was missing from the BITTERS BOTTLES book but in checking FOR BITTERS ONLY, I found a listing for German Vegetable Stomach Bitters that you recently displayed the advertisement for.” – Bill Ham

There is sparse information on this brand and Abraham Slager. This bitters was probably only produced for a year or so. Some of you may wonder why I even spend time on these ghosts. Well, somebody out there usually has more information or better yet, an example to include in the post…..or better yet, an example for my collection. 🙂 Where did this guy come from, where did he go? What a mystery.

1865: A. Slager, china and manufacturers of stomach bitters, 149 1/2 Poplar street, Memphis City Directory

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Abraham Slager, China, Glass & Queensware, 149 1/2 Poplar – 1867 Memphis City Directory

1866-1867: Abraham Slager, china, queensware, glassware, lamps & oils, 149 1/2 Poplar, r same, Memphis City Directory

1867: B. & A. Slager, bill of sale, $250, stock & fixtures, No. 172 Poplar Street – Memphis Daily Appeal (Memphis, Tenn.), February 20, 1867

As this post is sparse with information and imagery, I though you might enjoy these two related photographs from the same time period.

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China Glass & Queensware, Auction & Negro Sales, Whitehall St, Cigar Manufactory, Atlanta, Georgia, 1864

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Hirsch & Slager Cigar store at 9 S. Main St. owned by Sam Hirsch & Harry Slager. — Cotton bale in front with sign, “We bought our bale at ten cents, have you? Hirsch & Slager.” Not sure here of a family relationship.

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Who knows… Maybe Abraham Slager visited the Peobody Hotel, one of my favorites with the duck routine. – 1867 Memphis City Directory

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Dinnerware, History, Lamps, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

More on C.H. Ebbert & Co’s OUR OWN SOUTHERN BITTERS

Ebbert label 1More on C.H. Ebbert & Co’s OUR OWN SOUTHERN BITTERS

30 January 2014

Ferdinand,

I read with great interest your piece on C.H. Ebbert & Co’s OUR OWN SOUTHERN BITTERS. I can totally understand why this bottle would be high on any Southerner’s wish list, but that digging story from thememphisdiggers.com is sort of confusing. Did they actually dig pieces of the bottle or were they just hoping to find an example of this enigmatic bottle? If pieces were found, I would assume that they would have been photographed along with the other items shown in their digging article.

The ‘Memphis Boys’ also note the letters “O.O.S.B.” embossed on one of the panels of at least one of the two known variants of the bottle. Advertisements of the day prove the product existed, and with accounts of how the bottle was embossed, it is remarkable that no one has been forthcoming with photos of, at least, pieces of the bottle. It makes me skeptical that one actually exists.

Shortly after OUR OWN SOUTHERN BITTERS was introduced to the market several newspapers carried articles attempting to discredit Ebbert by alluding that he was actually a “Northerner” who was trying to capitalize on the Southern market. It is well documented that thousands of cases of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters were supplied to the Union troops, and this new “knockoff” was said to be just an imitation targeting Southern sympathizers. Even though he was born in Ohio, and his wife was born in New York, it is doubtful Charles H. Ebbert harbored any resentment toward Southerners, as he did live in Memphis. He likely just saw a market opportunity, not thinking he would be targeted as an outsider. In fact, the Memphis Daily Avalanche of May 25, 1866, notes:

“The agents of Mrs. Jefferson Davis are in the city, and are the guests of the Ebbert House.”

That would be none other than the wife of Jefferson Davis. In 1866, Davis was in rather hot water for acting as president of the Confederate States of America. In fact of Ebbert’s two silent partners, Benjamin F. Folger served in Company A, Tennessee 3rd Infantry Battalion from Memphis. His other partner, John F. Cameron, was his brother-in-law, a well respected citizen of Memphis who entered Confederate service as Captain of the Young Guard from Memphis and was eventually promoted to Lieutenant Colonel. It is not clear whether the defamation of Ebbert’s name contributed to the decline of his wholesale liquor business, but by February of 1868 Ebbert found it necessary to declare bankruptcy. His death soon followed, in 1869 or 1870, for his widow and children were living in Sioux City, Iowa, as noted in the 1870 U.S. Census for that city.

Charles H. Ebbert married Elizabeth “Libbie” H. Cameron in Memphis on 20 March 1866. They had two children, Mae Ebbert, born in Memphis on 7 May 1868 and Katherine Ebbert, born 7 October 1869 in Sioux City, Iowa. Mae eventually married but died a divorced widow as Mae Ebbert Lebaud in Knoxville, Tennessee, on 5 April 1952. Katherine became a music teacher, first in Galveston, Texas, and later moved to Los Angeles, California, where she died on 30 July 1969. She never married.

Elizabeth Ebbert, wife of Charles H. Ebbert, moved back to Memphis in the mid-1870’s where her mother, Isabella Fraser Cameron, and four of her siblings were living. Libbie operated a boarding house for awhile and was last noted in the 1883 directory, but then disappeared from available records.

On 16 May 1866, Ebbert registered the text of the label for his OUR OWN SOUTHERN STOMACH BITTERS with the clerk of the Western District Court of Tennessee. A copy of the label was attached to the registration. The graphics are the same as that used in some of his advertisements, with a central feature being the bust of Andrew ‘Stonewall’ Jackson, resting upon perhaps the most recognizable symbol of the Confederate States, apart from its flag – the Confederate wreath. It is also interesting to note that Ebbert, Folger and Cameron were initially selling a bitters called STONEWALL BITTERS, which is probably the same product but the marketplace became cluttered with similarly named products and it may be that they wanted a cleaner ownership to the name of their bitters.

I am with you, Ferdinand, in challenging the Southern diggers to post pictures of the OOSB embossed bottle.

Eric McGuire

Attachments:

1. A copy of the label for OUR OWN SOUTHERN BITTERS (see below), copyrighted by Charles H. Ebbert in 1866.

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Label for OUR OWN SOUTHERN BITTERS (see below), copyrighted by Charles H. Ebbert in 1866.

2. An advertisement for OUR OWN SOUTHERN BITTERS that appeared in the New Orleans Times, 27 Apr 1866. It contains the letters O. O. S. B., one in each corner of the ad.

New Orleans Times, 27 Apr 1866

An advertisement for OUR OWN SOUTHERN BITTERS that appeared in the New Orleans Times, 27 Apr 1866. It contains the letters O. O. S. B., one in each corner of the ad.

Read More: Hot on the trail of the elusive O.O.S.B. & Our Own Southern Bitters – Memphis

Posted in Advertising, Advice, Article Publications, Bitters, Civil War, History, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

J. M. Laroque’s Liquid Anti Bilious Bitters – Baltimore

J. M. Laroque’s Liquid Anti Bilious Bitters – Baltimore

29 January 2014 (R•092818)

Apple-Touch-IconAJohn M. Laroque, a Frenchmen, was the proprietor of Laroque’s Drug Store at 20 Baltimore Street from 1817 until his death in 1864 making the drug store one of the oldest, if not oldest pharmacies in the city. The store could have been founded by his father, Dr. L. M. Laroque who mysteriously is mentioned in a few places but vanishes from records. J.M. Laroque however, was the proprietor who ran this store for many decades. This is his story.

John Laroque was born on the island of San Domingo in 1788. His father was a wealthy planter at the time of the insurrection of the slaves but in consequence of the Civil War, which raged upon the islands for several years, lost all of his property. Around 1804, he was compelled, with his family, to take refuge in the United States.

The Laroque family (father, mother, two sons and a daughter) selected Baltimore, Maryland as their place of residence and business. John, who was 16 years old at the time, engaged as an assistant in an apothecary store. After his apprenticeship, he commenced business on his own account. His first business name probably was the House of Laroque and Milhau.

Dr. Laroque was a citizen of good standing, was highly esteemed and was a solider in the War of 1812. He fought at the battle of Bladensburg and was enrolled for the defense of Baltimore in 1814, but from the knowledge obtained in his business he was withdrawn from the field and placed in hospital service. John M. Laroque and Laroque’s Pharmacy was an anchor of Baltimore City business for decades producing products such as fresh drugs, chemicals, perfumery, Laroque’s Sarsaparilla, Aspasia Lotion, Laroque’s Rose Dentrifice, Cough Syrup, Elixir of Bark, Florida Water and J.M. Laroque’s Liquid Anti-Bilious Bitters. After Dr. Laroque’s death, the pharmacy business was conducted by his son, Dr. Emile Laroque until his death in 1873.

The decedents of Dr. John M. Laroque (Regis B. and Emile J. Laroque) remained in business and were known as Laroque’s Pharmacy at the northwest corner of Pratt and Chester Streets.

J.M. Laroques Anti Bilious Bitters – Image from Bob Ford

The pharmacy was then purchased by Dr. William E. Thornton whose name occurs on Laroque’s Anti-Bilious Bitters advertisements and trade cards. Thornton obtained Patent #607 for the bitters on March 21, 1876. He was succeeded after 16 years by Dr. John T. Wooters who remained at the drug store for three years and was followed by Dr. Thomas Sudler. Then came the great Baltimore fire in 1904 and the neighborhoods to the south, where most of the pharmacy trade came from, vanished. The market dried up and the pharmacy ceased to exist. We do see that Read’s Drug Store was selling Laroque’s Bitters in 1920 which is interesting.

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J.M. Laroque’s Anti-Bilious Bitters trade cards (see top of post). The cards are marked Russia, England and France – Joe Gourd Collection

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Great Baltimore Fire Aftermath

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John M. Laroque | Baltimore vial bottle – BDBottle – antique-bottles.net.

According to Baltimore bottle authority, Chris Rowell, the Laroque bottles are quite rare as he has only seen two pontiled examples and both were different. One was a large Florida Water (see image below) and the other was a small round vial type bottle (see above). Laroque also produced his anti-bilious bitters which is considered extremely rare with probably less than five known examples. The Florida Water is currently the only known example and is open pontiled. There are probably less than five of the smooth based examples known as well.

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Laroque Florida Water bottle – baltimorebottles.com

“At Laroque’s, corner of Baltimore and Harrison streets, the clerk said that they never sold morphine or opium preparations in usual quantities without a prescription from a physician. He knew of a variety actress who took a half pint per day, and of several women who took several ounces a day.”

From: BALTIMORE OPIUM-EATERS – People Who Drink a Pint of Laudanum a Day Others who Consume a Drachm of Morphinen-Confession of a Female Victim. – Daily Alta California (San Francisco), 16 October 1875

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

L 29  J. M. LAROQUES ANTI-BILIOUS BITTERS
J. M. LAROQUES / motif of stomach including appendix / ANTI-BILIOUS BITTERS // W. E. THORTON / PROPRIETOR // f // BALTIMORE. MD. //
10 x 2 5/8 (6 ½*) 3/8
Square, Amber, LTCR, Applied mouth, 3 sp, Extremely rare
John M. Laroque was a druggist in Baltimore.
Drug Catalogs: 1883 and 1891 Schieffelin
Copyright March, 1876 by William E. Thorton
Trade cards available

*Also, I think that the 6 1/2 inch shoulder hieght is too short on the L 29 listing. The bottle does have a relatively long neck, but I don’t think it is as long as this suggests – Bill Ham

Select Timeline Events:

1788: John M. Laroque born on the island of San Domingo on 3 October 1788.
About 1804: Laroque family, comprised of the father, mother, two sons and a daughter leave San Domingo for the United States. Baltimore was selected as the place of residence and business.
About 1806: John M. Laroque, engaged as an assistant in an apothecary store.
1817: Formation of Laroque’s drug business on Baltimore Street.
1822: Listing: House of Laroque & Milhau, chymists and druggists, 8 Baltimore – C. Keenan’s Baltimore Directory for 1822-23 (see below)

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1833: Listing: Chemists, Druggists and Apothecaries – John M. Laroque, pharmaceutist and chemist, corner of Baltimore and Harrison Streets – A Complete View of Baltimore, 1833
1845: John M. Laroque at his Chemical Pharmacy advertisement (see below) – Baltimore Wholesale Business Directory and Business Circular for the Year 1845

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1849-1860: John M. Laroque, chemist and druggist, 20 Baltimore, Matchett’s Baltimore Directory
1850: Dr. Laroque used as a reference (see below) – The Sun (Baltimore), 9 March 1850

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1864: Death, John M. Laroque, announced in the Baltimore Daily Gazette, March 28, 1864.
DEATH OF AN ESTEEMED CITIZEN
The obituary column this morning announces the death of Dr. John M. Laroque, in the 77th year of his age. The deceased was born in the island of San Domingo on the 3d of October, 1788. His father was a wealthy planter at the time of the insurrection of the slaves, in June, 1793, but in consequence of the civil war, which raged upon the islands for several years, all his property was lost, and about the year 1804 he was compelled, with his family, to take refuge, together with numbers of others, in the United States. The family comprised the father, mother, two sons and a daughter. Upon reaching the United States, Baltimore was selected as the place of residence. John M. Laroque, the subject of this notice, was in his sixteenth year upon arriving here, and shortly after engaged as an assistant in an apothecary store. Several years after he commenced business on his own account at the corner of Baltimore and Harrison streets, which he prosecuted up to within a few months of his death.
Dr. Laroque was highly esteemed by a very large circle of friends. He was a solider in the war of 1812, and fought at the battle of Bladensburg. He was enrolled for the defense of Baltimore in 1814, but from the knowledge obtained in his business he was withdrawn from the field and placed upon hospital service. Yesterday the French Society held a meeting, when the death of Dr. Laroque, who was one of the oldest members, was announced by the President, who spoke in the highest terms of the many virtues of the deceased. The Society resolved to attend the funeral in a body and appointed six of their number to act as pall-bearers upon the occasion. The remains will be deposited in the Cathedral burial ground.
187o: First advertising in Baltimore for Laroque’s Anti-Bilous (sp) Bitters, From the proprietor Emile Laroque (successor to J.M. Laroque) N.E. corner of Baltimore and Harrison Streets – The Baltimore Sun, Monday, March 21, 1870

1871: Advertisement below for Laroque’s Anti-Bilious Bitters at Laroque’s Pharmacy – The Baltimore Sun, Thursday, August 24, 1871

1872: Advertisement below for Laroque’s Anti-Bilious Bitters at Laroque’s Pharmacy – The Baltimore Sun, Friday, April 26, 1872

1874: William E. Thornton takes a position with J. M. Laroque’ s business. Thornton is from Fredricksburg, Maryland. Invested wisely and moved into Baltimore politics.
1874: Advertisement below for J.M. Laroque’s Anti-Bilious Bitters at Laroque’s Pharmacy – The Baltimore Sun, Saturday, August 8, 1874

1875: “At Laroque’s, corner of Baltimore and Harrison streets, the clerk said that they never sold morphine or opium preparations in usual quantities without a prescription from a physician. He knew of a variety actress who took a half pint per day, and of several women who took several ounces a day.” – BALTIMORE OPIUM-EATERS – People Who Drink a Pint of Laudanum a Day Others who Consume a Drachm of Morphinen-Confession of a Female Victim.Daily Alta California (San Francisco), 16 October 1875
1876: Patent #607J.M. Laroque’s Liquid Anti Bilious Bitters, William E. Thornton, Baltimore, Maryland, March 21, 1876 (application filed March 14) – 1877 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Patents
1876: J. M. Laroque’s Original Elixir of Calisaya Bark advertisement (see below) represented by W. E. Thornton, Sole Proprietor, Baltimore, Maryland. – Baltimore Physician and Surgeon

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1878-79: William E. Thornton, Treasurer, Maryland College of Pharmacy, Session 1878-1879 (see below)

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1877: “By the time they had passed the corner of Baltimore and Harrison streets, one man [was] dead with a ball through the breast and three others dangerously wounded, had been carried into Laroque’s drug store at that point. The two companies continued up Baltimore street toward the Camden Station.” – The great railroad strike of 1877 by by  (see below) – Harpers Weekly

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1880: J.M. Laroque’s Anti Bilious Bitters advertisement (below) – Staunton Spectator, 23 March 1880

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1881: J. M. Laroque’s Anti Bilious Bitters advertisement (below) – Der deutsche Correspondent, February 18, 1881

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1881: Newspaper advertisement (below) J.M. Laroque’s Anti Bilious BittersMemphis Daily Appeal, July 22, 1881

1883: Testimonial (below) to William E. Thornton for Laroque’s Anti Bilious Bitters – Raleigh Christian Advocate, Wednesday, November 14, 1883

1884-1885: William E. Thornton, Baltimore City CouncilArchives of Maryland Historical List Baltimore City Council, First Branch Ninth Ward, 1818-1923
1888: William E. Thornton, Baltimore City Council, Second Branch, Ninth & Tenth Wards – 1888 Ripley’s Business Guide
1888: Death, William E. Thornton, 40, druggist, Baltimore City, February 11, 1888 – Maryland Mortalities 1876-1915 from the (Baltimore) Sun Almanac *Dr. Thornton slipped on ice on a stoop and received a concussion of the brain and died.
1893: Listing for Laroque’s Pharmacy (Emile. J. Laroque and Regis B. Laroque) – Polks Baltimore (Maryland) City Business Directory (1893-1894) (see below)

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1920: Laroques Bitters being sold for 31 cents at Read’s Drug Store – The Baltimore Sun, Sunday, June 20, 1920
Posted in Apothecary, Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Medicines & Cures, Revolutionary War, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

To be Remembered – Ed Bartos & Bill Marks

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To be Remembered – Ed Bartos & Bill Marks

28 January 2014

I lost my oldest friend Ed Bartos

by James Bender

Ed Bartos photo_B:WOn January 9, 2014, I lost my oldest friend and the man that started me into the wonderful hobby of old bottles. Edward C. Bartos of Richmondville, New York passed away at a young age of 66. Ed has left behind a wife of 43 years (Terry) and three great children (Denise, Jerimy and Eddy).

One of the biggest questions everyone asks today is how we can get younger people involved in the hobby? With this in mind I will share this story.

I was a 13 year old kid who’s parents had split up and I was being raised by my mom. My father would stop and see me once in a while and our interests were different. He liked hunting and fishing, I was into sports like basketball and track. I had problems in school doing my home work and always just got by. Science was a class I did not like and always had issues passing. Enter Mr. Bartos my 7th grade science teacher.

Back then, the Cobleskill School system would offer what they called 9th period extra courses. They could be about almost anything. Mr. Bartos, the name I called him for almost 10 years, offered collecting old bottles. Now at the time I could have cared less about old bottles but thought to myself it would be a good way to get on Mr. Bartos’s good side, couldn’t hurt right? Well two amazing things happened, first I found it very interesting due to Mr. Bartos’s teaching style and his true love of the hobby. The second thing that happened is that I found a life long friend of almost 44 years. I will never forget the day he gave me a ‘D’ on my homework. He told me I better step it up and work harder if I wanted to go digging. Many times after that he would remind that hard work was the only way to get things done.

For my last 4 years of school, I held an average of over 95 and left school a half year early because I had enough credits. For the first 6 to 8 years of our friendship we spent a lot of time together including summers digging old bottles and going to bottle shows. Mr Bartos paid my way in to the famous Charlie Gardner sale which cost $100 for a ticket. I still have the old photos I took that day. I remember Mr. Bartos telling me don’t touch. I almost listened until I saw an aqua Washington shaped bottle that I just had to hold. Today we know it as a Washington Centennial Bitters. Mr. Bartos bought an Emerald Green Albany Glass Works pint flask that day. I have never seen another to this day. He knew his bottles and would always say,”knowlege is king”. Funny thing, one of my current friends told me the same thing the second time we got together. Ed found one of the first Celery Green Drakes Plantations. Then there was the light Puce Pink soda that was found in a chicken house (still sets on Jim Halls shelf where it has been for 30 years or so). One of my personal favorites is the Amber Quart Sharon Sulphur Water that Dick Watson has in his collection. It is the only one known to this day.

As the years past, Ed and Terry got married and formed a fantastic family. I got in my early twenties and did a lot running around on my own. I would see Ed a name I finally realized I could use at shows and we would get together now and then and go picking. Ed got more and more into antiques in general but still would turn up some very rare bottles. Ed collected many different types of bottles over the years. He built great collections in bitters, sodas and mineral waters. He would build a collection as good as he could and then sell it and start something else.This is something I myself have also done over the years. The last 15 years or so of our friendship was mainly phone calls. I was busy running the Lumber Mill in Cobleskill and Ed had been in a bad car wreck which really effected him. He was always in pain of some kind and his drive was no where near were it was. We bought a small collection about 5 years ago of a bunch of lesser bottles. Ed was so happy that he found it and the day we bought it I knew it was a mistake but I did not care. It was a flash back to the good old days of traveling with Mr Bartos. I took the bottles and Ed took the stoneware to give his son to set around his house. I never did get my money back really but I would jump in the car and do it all again if we could. That day was Mr.Bartos and James on a bottle run. Everyone who knows me today calls me Jim, a name I like much better. Ed made it regular business to call me James, a name I never really liked. It was our own little joke. The last time I called him or he called me I don’t remember he ended the call by saying I’m getting tired Jim. I never really thought much about it until I learned of his death.

So the next time you are wondering how can we get the younger people involved in the hobby my answer is to build a friendship first and the rest will come easy.

I will miss my friend yet I know that part of him lives on in me. I always respected Ed and he always respected me. The old bottles I have sitting on the shelves will always be a reminder of him. Bye Ed!

James Bender
Sprakers, NY

The Life and Times of Bill Marks

by Keith O. Evans

BillMarksBWBill Marks started out serving his country during World War Two with the United States Marine Corp. from 1941 through 1945. Bill saw combat at Gual Canal, Solomon Island, Cape Gloucester and New Britain South Pacific. I thank you Bill for bravely serving the United States during World War Two.

Bill was a Facility Pilot for Eastern Airline in Miami, Florida during the 1940’s. Bill went on to become employed with the Civil Aeronautical Administration, (CAA) in the 1960’s as an Air Traffic Controller. Bill had the opportunity to dig for Bottles in Port Author Texas in the 1950’s finding several embossed Port Author Pharmacy Bottles. Bill also had a change to dig for Bottles at the Savannah GA at an Old Plantation and Olcaluzca, AL during that same decade.

Bill worked with the Federal Aviation Administration in the 1970’s. During that same period of time Bill joined the MT Bottle Club in Deland, FL. Bill meets Bill Draggers an MT Bottle Club member who was employed with the Florida Power Company in Deland, FL. Bill Draggers had arranged for the MT Bottle Club to have their club meetings at Florida Power Company’s Lounge Room starting in 1969 up until the 1970’s. Bill remembers the Contest that the MT Bottle club had in 1969, to name the Club. Each Club member was allowed to place a name into a draw and the name that was pick was “MT” A female Club member won and received a prize a “Vinol” Amber Sprite or Wine bottle, 6.5 inches tall and embossed with a “Pat. Apr 18 1898”. As a lifelong member of the MT Bottle Club Bill Marks has held each and every elected and appointed position that the club has to offer. Bill latest position held with the MT Bottle Club is a Board of Director from 2008 to present. Bill holds one the longest records as the MT Bottle Clubs Editor of the Digger’s Dispatch Club News Letter for 30 years from 1980 to 2009. In 1993 his wife June Marks joins the MT Bottle Club and is a club member to this day. Bill has attended all but one of the MT Bottle Club shows held annually in March, since the club was founded.

Bill also joined the Orlando Bottle Club in the 1970. Bill did not hold any elected position in this club.

Bill has attended many Bottle show throughout the United States since the 1970’s. In Florida Bill has attended the Jacksonville, St. Petersburg, Sarasota and of course the MT Bottle Clubs show in Deland. The out of state Bottle shows that Bill has attended were Savannah, GA, Mobile, AL, Houston, TX, Phoenixes, AZ, and Denver, Colorado. One time in the 1980’s Mark set up and sold at the Columbia, SC bottle show  and sold the local bottles that he had dug in that area.   Mark attended the Columbia, SC Bottle show several times between 1980’s through 2000’s.

In the late 1960’s, Bill obtained permission to dig at the Old City Dump in Valdosta, GA. He recalls digging into the side of a hill. Bill also, obtained permission to dig on the Air Force Base near some homes that dated back to the Civil War. He had to check in and out at the front gate and promise not to smoke while on the Air Force Base. The man that gave him permission to be on the property wanted Quart size Whiskey Jars to put syrup in. This man’s family sold syrup and needed the Quart size whiskey Jars. So, Bill collected as many Quart sizes Whiskey jars as he could find while exploring the Air Force Base and gave them to the man.  Bill used a probe to check the ground for bottles. Bill also, used a metal detector and found barb wire of an old pig pin. In addition to the pig pen find Bill found and dug two out houses that were approximately four feet apart. Bill used metal washer with a yellow cloth attached to mark the locations that his metal detector alarmed for copper. Bill best find at this location was a pint size jar, half full of Indian Head Penny’s near a fence line. Bill enjoyed looking at the History of the Civilian era homes and property that was abandon when the Air Force took over the land. Bill remembers seeing an old horse drawn Plow inside of an old partially falling down shed. While searching for bottle and using his metal detector, Bill saw and killed a Rattle Snake and two Water Moccasins on the Air Force Base, near one of the dilapidated sheds.

In the early 1970’s Bill had an opportunity to dig for bottles in Liberty, PA and found embossed Whiskeys, embossed Hutchinson, and pottery type jugs all from PA. Bill found one and two gallon jugs that had a name etched into their surface. The pottery jugs were so close to the surface of a ditch that Bill used a three prong hoe to dig them out. Bill recommends using a three prong hoe to pick up and search through piles of dirt quickly and without fear of damaging any bottles.

In 1973 Bill dug for bottles in Tampa, FL near were Interstate Four was planned. The houses were being torn down to make way for Interstate Four and that is where Bill was searching for bottles. Bill found many Case Gin Bottles and he regrets not keeping the seals off of the broken Case Gin Bottles. Bill found various embossed, cork top Tampa, FL and Ebro City, FL Pharmacy Bottles. During this same time period, when the Hillsborough River near Tampa, FL, water level was low, Bill would dig on the river banks. Bill found such treasures as the Tampa, FL Brewing CO, Hutchinson bottles, Beer Bottles, Tampa, FL sodas, Tampa, FL embossed, cork top pharmacy bottles and Black Glass bottles that were hand blown in a mold.

In the late 1970’s Bill dug for bottles near the Missippi River in Batonruex, LA. Bill found five St. Louis Swat clear soda bottle. He also use an alumina John’s Boat with no motor to float along the shallow parts of the river, while using a pitch fork to move the boat and probe for bottles in the sandy bottom of the river.

Bill lived in Astor, FL between 1974 and 1980. He would take a boat out onto the St. Johns River near High way 40 and probe the bottom of the shallow area of the river with a pitch fork looking for bottles.  Bill found several Sanford, FL Hutchison bottles. Bill meets one of the hazards of searching for bottles in St. Johns River System in Florida, a water Moccasin which killed.

In the 1970’s Bill and a fellow MT Bottle Club member used a boat with an out board motor out on to Lake Dextor which is part of the St. John’s River System in Florida and maneuvered the boat and out board motor with a shield on it, near and around the pilings of the old docks to remove the sand in an attempt to discover any long lost bottles. With the out board motor and boat a safe distance away Bill would go into the water of Lake Dextor and feel for any dislodged bottles submerged under the water. Bill found Whiskeys and black glass in Lake Dextor. One the better fines in Lake Dextor was several straight side Cokes from Deland and Daytona Florida.

In the 1970’s Bill and Shorty dug at the old city dump in Ocala, FL. They found many embossed cork top Ocala, FL Drug Store bottles. Also, in the 1970’s Bill dug bottles near the Old Plantation Motel. He found several Onion type bottle and sold them all of them to an antique shop for $15 apiece.

In the early 1980’s Bill stayed at his Daughter’s home near Augusta, GA. He dug at an old train station  and found beer bottles, Augusta, GA embossed, cork top pharmacy bottles and Columbia, SC embossed, cork top pharmacy bottles. In the early 1980’s Bill dug up a privy in Savannah, GA and found an Indian Queen bitters bottle.

In the late 1980’s Bill dug for bottles in St. Augustine, FL, but need not have much luck at finding anything. Bill also dug bottles in the late 1980’s in Columbia, SC. He found some miscellaneous smooth side cork top bottles, which he did not keep and some black glass type bottles which he did keep. Bill had to dig down to about 9 to 10 feet level to begin to find the nice bottles. He found embossed cork top Pharmacy Bottles from towns in SC, NC, and GA., just too many different Towns and Cities for Bill to remember. In addition to the Pharmacy bottle Bill found Two Hutchinson bottles from Columbia, SC and many South Carolina Dispensary Bottles and Jugs. In the Late 1980’s Bill searched for bottles in Lake Emporium in Volusia CO FL. Bill used a pitch fork to slide across the bottom of this shallow lake in hopes of finding hidden treasures. Bill found a few cork top inks bottles with his pitch fork.

Bill started his adult life with dedication and honor by serving his country during World War Two and has devoted the rest of his adult life to Bottle collecting. Bill has dedicated over 40 years of service to the MT Bottle Club in Deland, Florida. I solute Bill for his Service and I hope someday to humbly follow in his footsteps.

I am sad to say that Bill Marks passed away on 13th January 2014. Bill was a good Husband, Father and person. The MT Bottle Club of Deland, FL will miss Bill. I am proud to have known Bill Marks.

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USA Hospital Dept Bottles – Theft Report!

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USA Hospital Dept Bottles Theft Report!

27 January 2014

Collectors, PLEASE be on the lookout for these bottles below. They were in a package reportedly stolen from what I now have learned is an unsecured USPS sorting facility. It is likely that the thief will simply break the bottles (hoping for a box full of electronics) but they did have price tags so perhaps they will come to market. Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.

Sent two boxes express – only one made it to the destination. Driver said “saw two boxes when I came in – only one when I was packing the truck.” Never would have considered the theft angle but the postmaster from destination has made it clear this is what he believes has happened. Unclear if other boxes were stolen that day but we were told “we thought this problem (theft) had been resolved.” Frustrating.

Jeff Noordsy

Item9509B

Item9524B

Item9520

Item9512B

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Our Own Southern Bitters – Memphis

OurOwnStomachBittersArt

Our Own Southern Bitters Memphis

26 January 2014 (03 April 2014 Bottle Pictures Added from Russel Poole) (R•092115)

Ebbert1

Filling the hole in, Stumpy, I mean Buddy, finds this stump for filler! We didn’t get as many pictures as we wanted but after going 26 feet in this one, we only found about 12 bottles – about 5 beveled edge snuff, 3 nice Ginger Beers, J.W. Bull’s Cough Syrup, an early Doll Head, and the one that got away was a super rare bitters from Memphis; “Our Own Southern Bitters // C. H. Ebbert & Co”. What a crying shame. The hole didn’t go like we wanted it but maybe we’ll get a great one next week!

TheMemphisDiggers.com

Apple-Touch-IconAWhile tracking down John Parham Dromgoole (English Female Bitters) yesterday, who spent some time in Memphis, I came across this really neat 1867 advertisement for Our Own Southern Bitters (see below) put out by C.H. Ebbert & Co. The Stonewall Jackson art is crisp and strong. I wasn’t familiar with the brand but see that Carlyn Ring and Bill Ham have designated it as O 94.5 in Bitters Bottles and said it was a labeled, square bitters.

The Memphis boys put this as No. 11 on their “Hope to Find List” and said, “A very rare bitters from Memphis. On the panels ‘O O S B’. There were two different molds for this bitters; a paneled and a non-paneled.” I hope one of them reads this and can get me some pictures of this rare bird. This brand wasn’t aground long, probably just in 1866 and 1867.

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Our Own Southern Bitters C. H. Ebbert & Co. advertisement – Debow’s Review: Agricultural, Commercial, Industrial Progress and Resources – J. D. B. DeBow., 1867

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Ebbert CoPartnership Notice – Memphis Daily Appeal, 02 December 1865

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Listing:

The new listing by Bill Ham for the forthcoming Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

O 94.5  S (in circle pattern) / (motif-wreath ) / B (in circle
pattern) // DEPOT / MEMPHIS TENN // f // C. H. EBERT & CO //
L . . . Our Own Southern Bitters
9 3/8 x 2 3Ž4 (7) 1Ž4
Square, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, Extremely rare
Chat_81 OOSB

Eric McGuire example that sold at the 2015 FOHBC Chattanooga National Antique Bottle Show “Rolling Thunder” Auction.

Select Timeline:

1865: A. H. Davis sells his interests to C. H. Ebbert. Ebbert starts a Wholesale Liquor and Rectfying Business with John F. Cameron and Benjmin F. Folger (see notice above).
1865: C. H. Ebert & Co. (spelled incorrectly), wh liquor dealers, 324 second – Memphis City Directory
1866: C. H. Ebbert & Co. (Charles H. Ebbert and Aaron H. Davies), rectifiers, 342 Second, Memphis City Directory
1867-1868: Charles H. Ebbert, (C. H. Ebbert & Co.) r Vance, ne cor Orleans (Charles H. Ebbert, John F. Cameron and Benjmin F. Folger) wholesale liquor dealers and rectifiers, and proprietors “Our own Southern Bitters”, 342 and 344 Second – Halpin City Directory of Memphis, Tenn

Ebbert3

EbbertSaloon1865Memphis

Ebbert Saloon advertisement, Alfred J. Ebbert – 1865 Memphis City Directory Not sure of a relationship but I bet it is there.

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Our Own Southern Bitters advertisementThe Bolivar Bulletin (Tenn), July 21, 1866

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Our Own Stomach Bitters advertisementMemphis Daily Appeal, 15 August 1867

Read More: Hot on the trail of the elusive O.O.S.B.

Read: More on C.H. Ebbert & Co’s OUR OWN SOUTHERN BITTERS

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Civil War, Digging and Finding, History, Liquor Merchant, Spirits, Tonics, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. Dromgoole’s English Female Bitters & Yellow Fever

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Dr. Dromgoole’s English Female Bitters & Yellow Fever

25 January 2014 (R•012415)

“Within the oyster’s shell uncouth, The purest pearl may hide.”

So with the afflictions that lurk among the females of our land. The pale cheek, the palpitating heart, the dull eye, the listless tongue, the aching head, the feeble walk, the lost appetite,
 the gradual emaciation, and the pale,
 sallow cheek, all indicate a serious disease lurking and undermining the constitution. If this be your condition,
sunder the diseased link, unbind the fetters, disband the sickly poisons, and
 disarm the raging storm that threatens
your life – by the use of Dr. Dromgoole’s
 English Female Bitters, that great 
wonder-working female medicine of 
the present day. Chronic cases of ten
 years standing yield to their potent influence. Sold everywhere in large bottles at one dollar.

Apple-Touch-IconAAn incoming Joe Gourd (Chicago) e-mail and three outstanding trade card examples (see below) for Dromgoole’s English Female Bitters is the inspiration for this post.

Ferd,

I think I have the rudiments of a post for you. A recently completed auction on ebay included one of my favorite bitters trade cards. The auction featured a Dr. Dromgooles English Female Bitters bottle (Ring & Ham E 45). The name has always tickled me.

English_Female_Bitters

Anyway, I did a little research of my own on Dr. John Parham Droomgoole. He was a Louisville, Kentucky, physician in the late 1800s. He published a book on the Yellow Fever epidemic of 1878. Read: Dr. Dromgoole’s Yellow Fever Heroes, Honors, and Horrors of 1878.

I think there is probably much more to be uncovered. I’ll leave that to you.

Enjoy……Joe

John Parham Dromgoole

Edward Dromgoole (John’s great grandfather) was an Irish immigrant who settled in Maryland around 1770 and became a Methodist minister, merchant, and planter in Brunswick County, Virginia. His son, Edward, followed the same path.

John Parham Dromgoole was born in 1827 in Brunswick and moved on to graduate from the University of Louisville School of Medicine in 1847. He then moved to Shelbyville, Tennessee where he was a physician and general wholesale dealer in patent and family medicines, soaps and perfumes etc.

Dr. Dromgoole’s next listing is in 1865 where he was a physician at Wilkerson’s Drug Store in Memphis, Tennessee. In subsequent years, he is listed as J. P. Dromgoole & Co. at 120 Beale Street with Daniel Gober and they were listed as physicians and wholesale & retail druggists. The first English Female Bitters advertisement occurs in this period. In 1873, Dromgoole is back in Louisville practicing as a physician and manufacturing his English Female Bitters.

The great Yellow Fever epidemic of 1878 originated in New Orleans in mid-July and the mosquito-bourne, viral disease spread northward to Grenada, Mississippi blanketing the Mississippi Valley with its victims.

Following the 1878 Yellow Fever epidemic, Dr. Dromgoole gathered fever methodology and perspectives from a wide variety of professionals and sufferers and published his landmark, Dr. Dromgoole’s Yellow Fever Heroes, Honors, and Horrors of 1878. A list of over ten thousand victims, martyr death-roll of volunteer physicians, nurses, etc. 

“Perhaps in the history of epidemic nothing more appalling ever occurred among civilized people than the suddenness and fatality with which it appeared in Grenada,” wrote Dr. J. P. Dromgoole, the Louisville physician who went to Memphis’s aid and then turned his attention to Grenada, a city of twenty-five hundred inhabitants.” 

He remained in Louisville until we next see a patent medicine listing for him in Atlanta in 1884 for “B.B.B. Botanic Blood Balm”. Many of you may be familiar with this brand and bottle. In 1890, Asa Candler (yes, that Candler) bought the once venerable Botanic Blood Balm Co. which had been a big seller for its inventor, Dr. J. P. Dromgoole. Candler probably picked it up at a rock-bottom price, after an 1889 landmark Georgia Supreme Court case significantly reduced the value of the company by finding in favor of a plaintiff who sued after taking 3 bottles “as directed” for a rash on his leg, and ended up with “his head, neck and breast . . . covered with red spots and the inside of his mouth and throat filled with sores [and finally] a large part of the hair fell from his head.”

One very interesting character related to a bottle long dormant on my shelves. Every bottle has a story. John Dromgoole died in 1929.

Joe Gourd Advertising Trade Cards – Dr. Dromgoole

These Dr. Dromgoole’s English Female Bitters trade cards from trade card authority, Joe Gourd are rather late and come from the period when John P. Dromgoole was living and working in Louisville, Kentucky. I would date these at 1885 and later.

EFM_1_Front

Dr. Dromogoole’s English Female Bitters trade card front – Joe Gourd Collection

EFM1_Back

Dr. Dromogoole’s English Female Bitters trade card back – Joe Gourd Collection

EFM2_Front

Dr. Dromogoole’s English Female Bitters trade card front – Joe Gourd Collection

EFM2_Back

Dr. Dromogoole’s English Female Bitters trade card back – Joe Gourd Collection

EFM3_Front

Dr. Dromogoole’s English Female Bitters trade card front – Joe Gourd Collection

EFM3_Back

Dr. Dromogoole’s English Female Bitters trade card back – Joe Gourd Collection

English Female Bitters Example

E45_Pair

English Female Bitters – Meyer Collection

E45_FRTD

English Female Bitters – Meyer Collection

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

E 45 English Female Bitters
ENGLISH / FEMALE / BITTERS // LOUISVILLE, KY. // f // DROMGOOLE //
8 1/2 x 3 1/8 x 2 (6 1/8) 3/8
Rectangular, LTC, Applied mouth and Tooled lip, 3 sp, Clear and Aqua – Rare;
Sapphire Blue – Extremely rare
Label: Is recommended in non-surgical cases for those weaknesses and disorders
which have heretofore be known as female complaints. After 40 years this medicine
is considered by us an excellent remedy for female complaints. For maid and matron.
It is especially recommended for young girls just entering womanhood and those at
the turn of life. The public are hereby notified that on and after this date the English
Female Bitters will be put up in cartons, printed in two colors, the old red wrapper
being discarded. This change is being made for three reasons, vis: to prevent counter-
feiting, to prevent breakage, and to furnish more handsome wrapping. May 1, 1880.

A new listing below by Bill Ham for the forthcoming Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

E 46_5_EFB

E 46.5 English Female Bitters – Memphis, Tennessee – American Bottle Auctions

E 46.5  ENGLISH FEMALE BITTERS
E 46.5  ENGLISH / FEMALE / BITTERS // MEMPHIS, TENN. // sp // f // sp  //
9 x 3 1/8 x 2 (6 1/8) 3/8
Rectangular, LTCR, Applied mouth , 3 sp, Very rare

Dr. John Parham Dromgoole | Select Timeline

1770: Edward Dromgoole (John’s great grandfather) was an Irish immigrant who settled in Maryland around 1770 and became a Methodist minister, merchant, and planter in Brunswick County, Virginia. His son, Edward, followed the same path.

1827: Birth, father Edward D. Dromgoole, birth 1792 in Brunswick, Virginia, mother Jeannette C. Bynum, birth 1804 in South Carolina. *His uncle was John Easter Dromgoole.

1847: John P. Dromgoole, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville: Hospital, Medical College of Louisville, 1847

1849: married Mary T. Ashburn (Birth 03 February 1828) in Overton, Tennessee, Death 30 November 1910 in Albion, Boone, Nebraska.

DromgooleShelbyville1851

Testimonial for Dr. C. Williams by John P. Dromgoole, Druggist, Shelbyville, Tennessee, July 14, 1851Nashville Union, February 14, 1853

1851: Testimonial (see above) for Dr. C. Williams by John P. Dromgoole, Druggist, Shelbyville, Tennessee, July 14, 1851.

DromgooleCollegeStreet

John P. Dromgoole practicing on College Street in Shelbyville, Tennessee in this 1854 advertisement. Patent and Family Medicines, Perfumes, Soaps etc. – antiquemedicines.com

186o: John P. Dromgoole, physcian, Shelbyville, Bedford, Tennessee – 1860 Federal Census

The other girl, Mary T. Asburn, married John P.  Dromgoole, prominent Shelbyville Doctor.

1860: J. P. Dromgoole, billiard saloon, southeast Public Square – Tennessee State Gazetteer and Business Directory for 1860-61 *strange listing

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Dr. J. P. Dromgoole – 1865 Memphis City Directory

1865: J. P. Dromgoole, physician, Wilkerson’s Drug Store, Memphis City Directory

DromgooleAd1865Memphis

J. P. Dromgoole & Co. advertisement noting “English Female Bitters” – 1865 Memphis City Directory

1866-1867: John Parham Dromgoole (J. P. Dromgoole & Co.), 120 Beale –  (J. P. Dromgoole and Daniel Gober), physicians, wholesale and retail druggists, 423 Main – Memphis Tennessee City Directory

DromgooleHalfPage1866Memphis

J. P. Dromgoole & Co. advertisement noting “Female Bitters” – 1866 Memphis City Directory

1867: Dromgoole’s & Co’s English Female Bitters advertisement – The Bolivar (Texas) Bulletin, September 28, 1867

1868-1872John P. Dromgoole & Co. (J. P. Dromgoole and Daniel Gober), manufacturer English Female Bitters, 389 Main – Memphis Tennessee City Directory

1873: J. P. Dromgoole, physician, 207 Market, nr 6th, Louisville City Directory

1875-1876: J. P. Dromgoole, Bitters Manufacturer, 85 5th, nr Marker, Louisville City Directory

1877: J. P. Dromgoole, mnfr bitters, 104 Main st., nr Floyd, Louisville City Directory

FemaleBeauty1873Dromgoole

“Female Beauty” Dromgoole’s English Female Bitters advertisement – Buffalo Reflex (Buffalo, Mo.), May 16, 1873

1878: John P. Dromgoole, physician (also Edward D., chemist and Thomas A. Dromgoole, 673 3d av. nr Ormsby ave, Louisville City Directory

DromgoolesYFArt

Cover and title page, Dr. Dromgoole’s Yellow Fever Heroes, Honors, and Horrors of 1878. A list of over ten thousand victims, martyr death-roll of volunteer physicians, nurses, etc.1878 (Louisville, Kentucky)

1878: Dromgoole’s Yellow Fever Manifesto (see above) is published – Dr. Dromgoole’s Yellow Fever Heroes, Honors, and Horrors of 1878. A list of over ten thousand victims, martyr death-roll of volunteer physicians, nurses, etc. (1879)

Following the 1878 epidemic, a Kentucky physician by the name of J. P. Dromgoole gathered fever methodology and perspectives from a wide variety of professionals and sufferers. The publication, titled Heroes, Honors, and Horrors, remains a legacy to the memory of the epidemic and the pain it caused. Further, it serves as a unique and illustrative source for understanding the fever epidemics from the perspective of the caregiver while simultaneously providing insight into the patient experience. In an article, “Yellow Fever ― Medical Mockeries,” an anonymous survivor of Memphis recounted his experience with the illness and his evaluation of medicine’s role in his recovery and, more broadly, future prevention. Midway through his commentary about fever as neither infectious nor contagious, he ranted, “Has medical science since the history of epidemics ever stayed a plague?” In the context of regional medical expertise toward tropical maladies, his stance matches the futility expressed by caregivers in the South in response to their inability to slow or treat yellow fever. Further, as Dromgoole’s text aimed to publicize the successes (heroes) and failures (horrors) of the 1878 epidemic in order to learn from them, the Memphis survivor picked a high profile medium in which to offer such a scathing remark.

1879 – 1880: J. P. Dromgoole & Co., (J. P. Dromgoole and J. B. Wilder), patent medicines, 215 Main, nr 6th, Louisvilly City Directory

1883: J. P. Dromgoole & Co., 605, W. Main, Louisville City Directory  *also listed as agent in Atlanta City Directory

1884: John P. Dromgoole, patent medicinesCity of Atlanta Directory. Dromgoole patents B.B.B. Botanic Blood Balm

1885: Dr. John P. Dromgoole (Blood Balm Co.) – 1885 City of Atlanta Directory

1889: J. P. Dromgoole & Co. (T. A. Courtenay), patent medicines, 222 6th, Louisville City Directory

BBBAtlanta_Meyer

B B B Botanic Blood Balm – Meyer Collection

1890: Asa Candler (yes, that Candler) bought the once venerable Botanic Blood Balm Co. (B.B.B.), which had been a big seller for its inventor, Dr. J. P. Dromgoole. (Candler probably picked it up at a rock-bottom price, after an 1889 landmark Georgia Supreme Court case significantly reduced the value of the company by finding in favor of a plaintiff who sued after taking 3 bottles “as directed” for a rash on his leg, and ended up with “his head, neck and breast . . . covered with red spots and the inside of his mouth and throat filled with sores [and finally] a large part of the hair fell from his head.”

1899: J. P. Dromgoole Medicine Co., Patent Medicines, 1113 Hancock, Louisville City Directory

1929: death, 31 December 1929

Droomgoole targeting the Women’s Market

Dr. Dromgoole advertised his English Female Bitters from 1867 to 1890 in Texas (Austin, Bolivar, Brenham and San Marcos which is not far from Houston) and Kentucky. Why south Texas? Many of the newspaper pages (same page), share and advertise for both English Female Bitters and Botanic Blood Balm.

Even as late as 1908, Meyer Brothers was advertising English Female Bitters.

Dromgoole1867Bolivar

Dromgoole’s & Co’s English Female Bitters advertisement – The Bolivar (Texas) Bulletin, September 28, 1867

PositiveWomenBitters

“A Positive Woman” – Dr. Drumgoole’s (spelled incorrectly) English Female Bitters notice – The Breckenridge News (Cloverport, Kentucky), July 09, 1879

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“Heaven’ First Law” – Dr. Dromgoole’s English Female Bitters notice – The Hartford Herald, October 01, 1879

EFB_Demure

“Demure Coquetry” – English Female Bitters notice – The Hartford Herald (Hartford, Ky.), October 22, 1879

ADistressedWoman

“A Distreesed Woman” – English Female Bitters notice – The Hartford Herald (Hartford, Ky.), December 17, 1879

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“She Can’t Blush” – English Female Bitters notice – The Hartford Herald (Hartford, Ky.), January 28, 1880

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Dr. Dromgoole’s English Female Bitters notice – Brenham (Texas) Weekly Banner, April 03, 1890

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Dr. Dromgoole’s English Female Bitters notice – Meyer Brothers Druggist, 1908

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Druggist & Drugstore, eBay, History, Medicines & Cures, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Having Fun With “Off the Wall” Bottles

stairway display

Having Fun With “Off the Wall” Bottles

25 January 2014

Showing off bottles in creative fashion provides much enjoyment and is a way to get as much pleasure as possible out of the glass that you own. Sometimes good presentation is everything and can make even ordinary bottles look great! An example of this is shown here in this picture above of some local bottles displayed in backlit niches which were cut out of what used to be a big blank wall in the stairway of our house.

Different colored demijohns placed together (see below) and backlit is another good example of rather ordinary bottles being made to look extraordinary. (you knew I was going to get to demijohns eventually, didn’t you?)

A local advanced flask collector has referred to demijohns as an “off the wall category” but does admit that my demis are “presented well.” Hey, don’t be a bottle snob!

My wife says I have been given the gift of bottle displaying.

Gene A. (Ainsworth)

fifteen inch demijohns

More: On the Origin of Demijohns

Posted in Advice, Collectors & Collections, Color Runs, Demijohns, Display, Photography | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment