December 2013 – Antique Bottle & Glass Photo Gallery

HairBottles_Selenak“Just wanted to send a couple of pictures that Scott took of our hair bottles in our new display cabinet. When the sun comes up in the morning, the colors just light up the living room… “ – Pam Selenak

Apple-Touch-IconAHe we go with the December 2013 group of pictures culled from a few of the Facebook sites. It looks like the color green is really dominating the collection this month which makes sense. Truly some spectacular pictures.

December 2013 – Antique Bottle & Glass 

P H O T O    G A L L E R Y

31 December 2013

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


GreenPitkinAction_George

Here’s a little green Pitkin action – Michael George


GreenTeepeeChrisGreen, open pontiled, teepee, from the same mold as the Harvey sodas from Rhode Island. I got the bottle from a fellow digger. As far as I can tell it is probably unique in this color. – Chris Raezer


Scrolls&InsulatorsJust wanted to share my new scroll flask and a color run of my pint scrolls. I was just able to add the one on the far left in the citron color. After many months, my friend finally decided to let it go and I was able to acquire it! The color is remarkable and bright, just outstanding. – Cody Zeleny


PitkinInkMarshallMore Pitkin Stuff – Tom Marshall


SandwichGlassColors_George

Is there a glass factory that offer a wider range of color diversity than the Boston & Sandwich factories? – Michael George


3Wisharts_EricGot our first snow today. I love the ‘Tanker’ LQC Wishart’s full trees against snow. All 3 from the same mold, (3 identical blank side rivets) Union Glass Works, Philadelphia, 1859-1869. My birthplace sentimental trio. – Eric Richter


snowstorm-demijohns_Gene_10Snowstorm demijohns! – Gene Ainsworth


NYStateofMind_Ciralli

Cool pic in a NY state of mind…Heimstreet, Halsey’s and a pair of Dr T’s… Rick Ciralli


GroupingOfGreens_MoffittGrouping of some greens – Jerry Moffitt


LaurelsMiss_LittleMy Laurel’s (Mississippi) – Jeramy Little


RopedCorners_Wicker

Just sharing some roped corner bottles. Frank Wicker


MineralWatersFlintMineral Waters – Charles Flint


3Pitkins_ZarroThese Pitkins are different – see the wild swirling on the flask on the left, the formed lip on the right, and the tiny size and coloration in the middle. – Dana Charlton-Zarro


HappyHolidays_KamHappy Holidays!!! – Dave Kam


Untitled_TomasJust posting some Corning gems we all would want in our Christmas 2014 stockings. – Noel Tomas


SunBurst_BrauserMerry Christmas to all the Antique Bottle Collectors, and a great New Year ahead! – Mike Brauser


Greenies_CampigliaMore greenies….. – James Campiglia


Chestnuts_NoordsyThree yellow chestnuts, sitting in a tree…. – Jeff Noordsy


SugarBowls_George

I don’t know how many times I have heard, “if I could just turn back time and buy more in the 70s and 80s! Now everything is 10 times the price”. While many bottles have increased 5, 10 or 20 times the prices in the past few decades… there are still some INCREDIBLE deals to be had. I recently purchased this blown three mold sugar bowl (on the left). It is a group 18 pattern with matching lid, ex. Elsholz piece, for LESS MONEY than it sold for in 1986… yes, 27 years ago!! I am extremely happy to add it to my collection. Blown Three Mold is early, beautiful, and can often be very rare. There can’t be more than 10 perfect BTM covered sugar bowls out there! If you have ever been intrigued by this collecting category… there is no better time to jump in! – Michael George


AprillEaglesG II 118 pint & G II 109 half pint – Charles Aprill


WarnerSafes_AaronJust a few shots of the collection of mainly Warner’s Safe – Aaron Hanshew


SmallInks_MarshallUntitled Inks – Tom Marshall


Posted in Collectors & Collections, Display, Photography | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

History of Kantorowicz Family and their Factory

HartwigK1Black

History of Kantorowicz Family and their Factory

30 December 2013 (R•010614) (R•012714-labeled sample size)

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Apple-Touch-IconAAs you may know, I started a series a few days ago on the white milk glass, case gin bitters bottles from primarily Germany and Poland. I rarely see collections of these bottles but when I do, I am really blown away and impressed with the variety and depth of the brand. In the past few years I have had the good fortune of seeing and writing about the Feldmann collection in New York (read article in the November December 2012 issue in Bottles and Extras), the Wicker collection in Indiana and the Katzen collection in Maryland. I even have a few bottles myself.

Today I wanted to focus on the ‘granddaddy’ of all milk glass names, that being Hartwig Kantorowicz from Poznan, Poland. Searching online, I came across the History of Kantorowicz family and their factory by Stanisław Nawrocki. This is it folks, a wonderful overview of an important name in bitters bottle collecting. I have taken the liberty to add representative imagery where appropriate.

SellingHartwig

History of Kantorowicz Family and their Factory

by Stanisław Nawrocki

From the Chronicle of the City of Poznan No. 4 / 1996

HartwigFactory

The Kantorowicz Family is very popular in Poznan, especially among the older generation. Kantorowicz’s had in fact a factory (pictured above) producing great liqueurs, spirits and fruit juices, famous in Poland and in Europe and also very well known in the world. They are not known for their scientific activities, or because of the fact that one of the family members was the world-renowned medievalist. In the nineteenth and early twentieth century in Poznan lived few hundreds of Kantorowicz families, all of Jewish origin. According to the register of residents, there were about 55 families, but besides that, there were about 40 single-parent families (eg, widows with children) and single persons with this name. Prussian officials, who made a record of the city population, did not comply with the rules, leaving some important sections undone, especially regarding the parents. This causes major difficulties when trying to link families in clans.

Difficulties also occurred while reconstructing the family roots of the medievalist Ernst Hartwig Kantorowicz. Since we could not determine all of his ancestors, it has been assumed that the protoplast of this particular Kantorowicz family was Hartwig Kantorowicz, who lived from 1806-1871 and in 1823 founded a spirits and liqueurs factory in Poznan. It is not known whether he was born in Poznan, as some Kantorowicz’s came here during that period from other cities. His father is not known. He could be one of the eight Jewish (as Kantorowicz families were of Jewish decent) inhabitants of Poznan, mentioned in the early nineteenth century records. In 1810 and until 1832 their name was recorded in the lists as “Kantrowicz.”

Despite his young age, Hartwig Kantorowicz, thanks to his business activities, received on 8 September 1834 the privilege of naturalization under the provisions for the Jews, issued on 1 June 1833 by the Chief President H. Flottwell. Naturalized Jews had complete freedom to organize their lives, they could make public commitments, sign contracts, express their will and issue the invoices using the German language. The condition was the adoption of a specific surname and the fact of living in Wielkopolska from 1815.
This means that the naturalized Jews got under the influence of German culture, while some of them have taken liberal views. Such views, unlike Orthodox Jews, were represented by the family of Hartwig. It should be noted that on 31 January 1850, the Jews of Wielkopolska were legally equated with compatriots living in other provinces of the Prussian state.

Another strengthening of Hartwig Kantorowicz position as a citizen was the award of municipal law given to him, after taking the prescribed oath, by the Magistrate of the city of Poznan on 1 April 1845,. During this period the company founded by him was already in full blossom.

Hartwig Kantorowicz married Zofia (Sophia) Asch. The date of marriage is not known because no records of the Jewish population registration in Poznan survived. The population records from the second half of the nineteenth century show that Sophia Asch was born in 1815 in Swarzedz, a city known then of drapery, and since the late nineteenth century of the carpentry. Since 1816, her family lived in Poznan at Wroniecka str. No 6. This address is important, because in the last forty years of the nineteenth century there was a Kantorowicz Company. Sophia and Hartwig had 13 children, i.e., one daughter and 12 sons, of whom only seven survived. Sources do not allow the determination of all birth dates and names, with the exception of four brothers. The oldest of them is Max, born March 9, 1843, died April 6, 1904. On the death of his father (Hartwig), Max managed the company together with his two brothers. He married Rosalind Pauly, who was born in Poznan, on January 22, 1854. They had four children, of whom the eldest was Franz Hartwig, born on December 20, 1872 – he received a Doctorate in law, he studied Science and Philosophy at the state Universities in Lausanne, Munich, Berlin and Göttingen. Eliza was the second child, born on May 2, 1875, who in 1893 married Dr. Louis Milch – a Doctor of Chemistry from Poznan. Gertrude was the third child, born on October 9, 1876, she had Ph.D. in Philosophy and was the author of books about art. She studied in the years 1898-1903 in Berlin, Munich and Zurich Art History, Archeology and Philosophy. The last child was Siegfried Otto Hartwig, born on November 1, 1877, he died in the seventh year of life (1884).

Another known son of Hartwig was Edmund, who was born on July 14, 1846, and died September 11, 1904. He was a Merchant by profession, and after the death of his father together with his two brothers (Maks and Joseph) managed the Company. He did not have a family and died childless.

The third son of Hartwig was Joseph, born on December 14, 1848, in Poznan, died on 8 February 1919, by profession a Merchant, Manager of the Company together with his brothers: Maks and Edmund. He most probably had an apprenticeship in Germany, because in May 1873, he came to Poznan from Offenbach, a city near Frankfurt am Main. His wife was Clara Hepner, born July 5, 1862, in Jaraczewo near Poznan. On 9 December 1920, she moved to Berlin. During World War II in 1942 when trying to cross the border with Switzerland, she was arrested and placed in a concentration camp in Teresin (Czech Republic), where she died in 1943 or 1944.

Joseph and Clara Kantorowicz had four children: two sons and two daughters. The oldest child was Otto Hartwig, born on September 2, 1884, but died in the second year of life (1886). Sophia (known as “Sosza”) was the second child, born January 22, 1887. She studied in Heidelberg. Sophia married a Professor of Economics: Arthur Saltz (1881-1963) and emigrated to the USA, where she died Aug. 15, 1969, in the Worthington (Ohio). The third child was Margaret (Margaretha), born on July 14, 1888. In 1911 she married a Medical Doctor, Ophthalmologist: Ernst Lichtenstein in Schöneberg near Berlin. She died there about 1937. Finally, the fourth child was Medievalist Ernst Hartwig.

Ernst Hartwig was born on May 3, 1895. In the years 1904-1911 he attended the German Augusta Victoria Gymnasium in the humanistic class. He obtained the High School Diploma on 4 May 1913, which showed that he was a mediocre student, without a promise to become the eminent, world renown Historian. Following his father’s advice, he began to prepare for the occupation of a Merchant and continued his schooling at the unknown company in Hamburg. In the directory of Poznań residents it was reported that he left the city on 15 January 1912 for Berlin. However, the outbreak of the First World War found him back in Hamburg. He returned to Poznan, because it was noted in the residency card that on 2 August 1914, he went into the army. It was known from other sources that he volunteered. He fought on the Western Front at Verdun, thereafter he worked in Turkey on the construction of Baghdad railway. After the war, he was against the Wielkopolska insurgents (to defend the family and its material existence), and in the spring of 1919, against the Spartacists in Berlin and against the Communist Republic of Councils in Munich. Several times he was wounded in combat and received high military honors. He was officially checked in Poznan again on 18 December 1918, at their parents’ address: Mickiewicza 30 (then Hohenzollernstrasse). He eventually left Poznan secretly, without official check-out, on 8 September 1919. Those official records show that he was in Berlin and Munich in the spring of 1919, also without official check-out. This fact ends the relationship of Ernst Hartwig Kantorowicz with Poznan, although in the late thirties, he was twice in Poland, and can not be ruled out that he was also in Poznan.

The fourth known son of Hartwig Kantorowicz (the founder of the company) was Hermann, born October 25, 1851. He was a trade clerk. In March 1878 he went to Berlin, he returned to Poznan in 1883, but in February 1891, he moved to America. His further history is unknown.

The fate of the daughter of Hartwig Kantorowicz, as well as of the rest of his descendants is not known.

Some information about members of other families bearing the same name should also be given. First of all it should be mentioned that Kantorowicz name appeared in Poznan already at the turn of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, as noted in the obituary of the city councilor Adolf Kantorowicz after his death in 1906. In 1777, at Wroniecka str. there was a tenement house owned by Rafal Kantorowicz.

In the first half of the nineteenth century Kantorowicz families living in Poznan, there were several, mainly engaged in trade, so they were traders or trading clerks. Some of them were also – as Hartwig Kantorowicz – distillers, they also dealt with the catering In the second half of the nineteenth century the successive generation was also interested in other professions.

Some were the owners of factories: in 1884, Benno Kantorowicz had the fabric and underwear factory. Ismar Kantorowicz ran a lithographic and official print enterprise, Leon Kantorowicz had an yeast factory, and Samuel junior Kantorowicz kept a chocolate and confectionery factory.

Among Kantorowicz’s were also medical doctors. Walter Kantorowicz, born October 12, 1879, or Kantorowicz Emil, born on September 17, 1867, who studied in Berlin, Kiel and Leipzig, and in Poznan, he worked in a Military Hospital. The most famous was Dr. Louis Kantorowicz, born on August 7, 1869, from 1895 until his death in 1932 he practiced in Poznan. His two sons went to Berlin in 1920 and 1922, and his wife Regina in 1932, after the death of her husband. Kurt David Kantorowicz, born on March 14, 1885, was a Pharmacist, and Bruno Kantorowicz, born on December 31, 1885, a Dentist. Eugene Kantorowicz born on May 5, 1877 was an Engineer, and Robert Kantorowicz, born on December 3, 1853, was a Watchmaker. Kantorowicz Neumann, born in 1800, was the Bookseller, Gustav Kantorowicz, born July 11, 1869 was a Musician. Lucy (Lucie) Kantorowicz, born on June 12, 1893, was a Stenographer.

Several representatives of Kantorowicz’s were Administrative Officials. So Marianna Kantorowicz, born June 12, 1891, was Head of (Biirovorsteher) – a closer unknown Office. Kantorowicz Leibusch Louis, born March 14, 1840, in Szamotuły, was a Private Secretary (Privatsekretair) and the Chancellery Advisor (Kanzleirat). Kantorowicz Louis, born on June 6, 1862, was an Office Assistant and later a Folk Lawyer (Volksanwalt). Harry Kantorowicz, born March 22 1856 was an Accountant, Behrendt Kantorowicz, born June 13, 1861, was the Attorney. Joanna Kantorowicz, Born 23 April 1891 , was the Accountant. Fritz Kantorowicz, born on November 19, 1885, was a Court Volunteer and Berthold Kantorowicz, born on November 14, 1857, was a Building Contractor.

In the second half of the nineteenth and early twentieth century four Kantorowicz’s participated in the work of municipal authorities in Poznan. The first was a Merchant Wilhelm Kantorowicz (1850-1894), a Town Councilor in the years 1873-1881. He resigned from this function, and moved to Berlin, where he died. In turn, the Merchant Adolf Kantorowicz (1836-1906) – in the years 1881-1891 was a member of the City Council and in the years 1891-1906 a Board Member of the Civic Centre. He was also a member of the Provincial Council as well as a member of the Provincial Department and a member of the Chamber of Commerce. He was also the Treasurer of the Children Hospital in Inowrocław. He received two high state awards: Order of the Red Eagle and the Order of the Crown. Another Board Member of the city Civic Centre was a Factory Manager Nazary Kantorowicz, born in 1844. He moved out in May 1920 to Berlin, his further history is not known. He held his municipal service in the years 1899-1909, he resigned from the function. At his departure he gave 500 marks to fund the social welfare. Finally, before the First World War, already mentioned, Dr. Franz Kantorowicz was a Member of City Council.

It should also be noted that in the German biographies – next to Ernest – there is another Kantorowicz, namely Herrmann, son of William, born on November 18, 1877, Lawyer and Publicist, a Professor from 1913 in Freiburg, from 1929 in Kiel, from 1933 in the U.S. and since 1934 in London. He died in Cambridge on February 12, 1940. Richard was also a cousin Ernest (1867-1918), originally was named Jakub (James), who adopted Catholicism. He was a Medical Doctor, in the years 1897-1902 he led a scientific expedition to the sources of the Nile, and in 1907-1909 he was a secret Adviser of the Imperial Resident in Ruanda, then belonging to Germany. He changed his name to Kandt.

Majority of Kantorowicz’s from Poznan emigrated to Germany in the late nineteenth century and before the First World War. The whole families left Poznan moving first of all to Berlin, where they found a better life conditions. Besides, they fell more connected with the German culture. Several people emigrated to other cities in Germany, for example, to Breslau, Hamburg and Dresden. Another group moved to Pomerania. Some individuals went to the United States, Brazil, Belgium and Switzerland.

Another wave of emigration occurred after the First World War, during the years 1919-1922, when the Wielkopolska found herself in the reborn Polish state. 47 people named Kantorowicz then went from Poznan to Germany. Of these, 32 people went to Berlin, five to Wroclaw, five to Sopot (Free City of Gdańsk), one person to Dresden, one to Hamburg and one to Zgorzelec, two people to Konigsberg.

After this exile, only a few people with this name lived in Poznan. It was a well-known Medical Doctor Ludwik (Louis) Kantorowicz with his wife (the two sons in 1920 and 1922 went to Berlin); Distiller Ludwik (Louis) Kantorowicz with his wife and three children (one daughter in 1921, moved to Gniewkowo, and son William (in 1928 went to Brazil), Anthony Kantorowicz – a Worker and two widows: Berta and Michalina. Louis (the Doctor) died in 1932 and his wife soon left for Berlin, Distiller Louis died in 1926, and his wife with two children also moved to Berlin in 1930. In Poznan remained only Anthony and the widow Berta Kantorowicz (the wife of Merchant Magnus Kantorowicz, who died in 1915). In 1930 a Traveling Salesman: Raphael Icek Kantorowicz, his wife Esther and two sons, moved to Poznan from Warsaw, but after a few months, the family moved to Bydgoszcz. Currently (1995) three women named Kantorowicz still live in Poznan.

After about 230 years of Kantorowicz’s presence in Poznan their activity came to an end in our City, they disappeared from it’s landscape. They played a significant role in the history of the City, especially in business: as manufacturers, craftsmen, and especially merchants. Their activity in the field of culture, as well as on the board of the Civic Centre of Poznan also deserves an attention.

The company founded in 1823 by Hartwig Kantorowicz, the owner was 17 years old, was located at the Old Market No 10. The company then had 32 competitors in the same industry. One of them bore the same name (Isaac Kantorowicz, at Old Market No 77). There was also a third distiller at the Old Market No 81.

A close competitor was Samuel Prochowiak at Dominikanska Str. No 374, the owner of the company existing since 1816.

Kantorowicz Enterprise prospered well, so that in 1844 he moved to Wroniecka str. No 6, where he acquired the 50-year-old house. Next year the two-storey, fully equipped distillery was built in the yard of the property, including the large copper distillation apparatus for 800 Tallars. In 1871 a new house and a new distillery was built and further two buildings in 1882. In the mid-nineteenth century, Hartwig Kantorowicz was one of the two entrepreneurs in Poznan with the largest assets, estimated at 70-80 thousand. Tal., while others only turned the capital resources in the range of 5 to 20 thousand Tal. Hartwig personally watched that a proper manufacturing process was implemented at the distillery and personally took care of his Company.

Poznan_Kantorowicz_Stone

A comprehensive description of the Company was published in the press in 1895. It was stated there that even before the death of Hartwig Kantorowicz in 1871 the enterprise was managed and successfully developed by three of his sons Max, Edmund and Joseph. The inscription above the entrance to the company stated: “All single-handed” (Alles durch eigene Kraft). The company’s products included a varied assortment. Pure alcohol was poured up to four distillation appliances (with a capacity of 1710, 600, 150 and 25 liters), driven by steam. There, the spirit was mixed with the appropriate spices. In a separate laboratory a special process was implemented to protect various 22 liquors produced by the plant: among others Coca-Bitter, exported to Southeast Asia, or Podbipienta, successful not only among Polish consumers. On the green color liquor bottle there was a label with the figure of Polish knight. In the basement of the company there were currently over 100 thousand liters of liquor destined for domestic consumption only. The packing section employed 30 people, mostly women, and tax officials checked the packing of the liquor boxes, which were immediately sealed (after checking alcohol content). Shipments to foreign countries went to France, Denmark , South-West Africa, Central America, Brazil and Japan. Business correspondence was registered in huge ledgers and correspondence, which in the years 1823-1833 was located only in the box, now occupied a high counting-racks on the walls.

Bottles of various shapes were purchased from various glass factories: Silesian, Saxon and Czech. At segregation and shipping of bottles 20 people were employed. Mercantile affairs were dealt with by 15 officials, including three stenographers. The factory was also equipped with cherries extrusion machine, considered the best in Europe.

The Press at once crushed 80 centners of fruit (there were two hydraulic presses and one small). Every day, about a thousand centners of cherries was crushed. In addition, the company had a carpentry workshop and employed several carpenters, as well as its own wax seals plant (for sealing boxes.) In 1907 the company – because of the cramped Wroniecka premisses – moved to a new building at the then suburb: Grochowe Laki Str. No 6,. In the same year the business was converted into a Family Company whose head was, already mentioned, Dr. Franz Kantorowicz. It should be noted that the development and modernization of the company included the introduction of social facilities for workers and officials. The condition of the company was so good that even during the First World War the shareholders were paid up to 12% dividends.

End of the First World War brought a fundamental political change: independent Poland was reborn. Part of the Jewish population in Poznan, linked culturally and linguistically with the Germans left the city in the years 1919-1922. Same was done by the director of Hartwig Kantorowicz company, Dr. Franz Kantorowicz. He was not happy with the political change because of his business interests and even spoke out against the Poles. Therefore, he was interned for a few days in June 1919 by the People’s Guard as a result of complaints of the neighbors. He was released through the intervention of Count. Czarnecki of the Central Command headquarters in Poznan.

He left on August 12, 1920 to Berlin, but soon came back – without official check-in to Poznan. The Company was sold to the Poles, most probably the sale was already earlier prepared.

Dr. Franz Kantorowicz appeared on 5 November 1920, at 20 hours (i.e. after office hours, late in the evening) at the notary Ludwik Zachariasz and sold the company for 20 million marks (5 million for real estate and 15 million for the rights) to the Industrial Bank in Poznan, represented by Dr. Kazimierz Bajonski and Dr. Stanislaw Pernaczyński. It was stipulated in the contract that the prescriptions will be highly confidential. The next day, i.e. 6 November 1920, Dr. Franz Kantorowicz officially left Poznan, traveling to Berlin. According to the official tax, conducted in April 1919 by Petzold and Cybichowski experts, the company had a value of 1 million 504 thousand. 383 marks. After this change, Dr. Franz Kantorowicz continued operations in Berlin, linking it with the label belonging to a group Schultheiss named CAF Kahlbaum AG. The company however continued to operate under the (slightly changed) name: Hartwig Kantorowicz Successor – SA (from 9 December 1920). The good tradition was continued, as in 1929 at the Universal National Exhibition the company received a gold medal. Since 1930, the company was smartly and professionally managed by the economist Dr. Anthony Skowronski. Still located at Grochowe Laki Str No 6. In 1934, the new company statute was implemented – its purpose was now: operating the liquor and fruit juices factory and acquisition of liquor plants on Polish soil. The participation in other enterprises was also allowed, as well as the acquisition and maintenance of those. The share capital amounted to 1 million 237 thousand. 500 zł and was divided into 12,375 shares, at 100 zł each. The Supervisory Board consisted of five persons from among the shareholders elected by the General Assembly for three years. Chairman of the Board received an annual salary of 1500 zł, and members 50 zł for participating in the meeting. In 1938 the buildings were completely renovated.

In mid-September 1939, after the invasion of German troops in Poznan, the Head of the Civil Board confiscated Hartwig Kantorowicz company and appointed, as it’s manager a Volksdeutsche Hans Gohlke. On 5 October 1939, the management of the company was given to Gauselbstverwaltung and on their behalf the company was managed by Gohlke and Volksdeutscher Stanislaus Wiechec. But he soon died, and Gohlke resigned in May 1941. After them, the company was managed by Baron Ernst von Rosen and Joachim Bindemann as directors. Same function also had Baron Claus von Rosen, who in 1943 was appointed to the army. The company employed in 1941, 116 people (including 97 Poles), and at the end of 1942 – 81 people (including 64 Poles). The factor produced in 1940, 687 thousand 750 liters of liqueurs and spirits, 262 thousand 870 liters of fruit juice and 18 thousand 500 kg of jam, and in 1942 275 thousand liters of liqueurs and vodkas, 207 thousand 550 l of juice and 42 thousand kgs of jam. Mainly the military was catered for. During the war, processing capacity was reduced by 50-60%.

Hartwig Kantorowicz Bitters

HartwigK_Meyer

HARTIG KANTOROWICZ / POSEN / HAMBURG / PARIS embossed circle, 9 1/2 x 2 3/8 (6 5/8) square case gin, Milk Glass, LTC, applied top – Meyer Collection

HartwigK_GW255

“HARTWIG KANTOROWICZ / POSEN / HAMBURG / PARIS”, (L-106), German, ca. 1875 – 1895, deep teal green case gin form, 9 1/4”h, smooth base, applied mouth, perfect condition. Common in milk glass but extremely rare in this vibrant color! One of only two or three known examples. – Glass Works Auctions

HartwigBittersBlue

Attached is a pic of one of maybe two of these in this colored bluish milk glass; it is in Australia. – Gary Katzen

HartwigSizes_Katzen

Outstanding run of miniatures of various sizes and shapes – Katzen Collection

HartwigMiniHand

L 107.5 – Miniature Hartwig Kantorowicz Posen

L107.5_HartwigKMini_Meyer

Unlisted H. KANTOROWICZ Co. HAMBURG / BERLIN / POSIN / NEW YORK miniature – Meyer Collection
4 x 2 7/8 Square case gin, Milk Glass, LTC, Unlisted

KantorowiczSmall

Fully labeled miniature Hartwig Kantorowicz. Un-embossed – ebay

HartwigTrio

Trio of Hartwig Kantorowicz milk glass bottles. Center bottle with label extremely rare – Katzen Collection

Hartwig Kantorowicz Product Gallery

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Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising booklet – poznan.wikia.com

LitthauerMagenbitterAd

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Litthauer Magenbitter – poznan.wikia.com

CarthauserHartwigPage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Carthauser, gelp and Carthauser, grun – poznan.wikia.com

PodbipietaHartwigPage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Podbipieta – poznan.wikia.com

KummelPage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Kummel Nr. O – poznan.wikia.com

EckauerPage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Eckauer Nr. OO – poznan.wikia.com

TroikaPage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Troika – poznan.wikia.com

DubeltPage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Dubelt grun Pomeranzen, Dubelt Goldwasser and Dubelt Kurfurstl. Magenbitter – poznan.wikia.com

AdvocattEierCremePage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Advocaat, Eier-Creme B – poznan.wikia.com

LikoreHolland. ArtPage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Likore Holland. Art – poznan.wikia.com

MillenniumPage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Millennium

PolnischerPage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Polnischer FRUchte-Branntwein (Nalewka) – poznan.wikia.com

AllaschPage

Hartwig Kantorowicz advertising page for Allash ,,Orlow” – poznan.wikia.com

Read More: Germania Herb, Root and Fruit Tonic Bitters and the Germania Magen Stomach Bitters

Read More: Litthauer Stomach Bitters by Josef Lowenthal

Read More: Warren Mortimer Watson and his German Balsam Bitters

Posted in Advertising, Article Publications, Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Glass Companies & Works, History, Liquor Merchant, Medicines & Cures, Milk Glass, Miniatures, Spirits | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Litthauer Stomach Bitters by Josef Lowenthal

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Litthauer Stomach Bitters by Josef Lowenthal

29 December 2013 (R•102115)
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S. B. Rothenberg’s (Louis Roth) Berlin Magen Bitters advertising envelope. Note the San Francisco return address. The NY return address has been marked out. – 1899

Apple-Touch-IconAI made a comment in yesterdays Germania Magen Stomach Bitters post and said at some point, I hope to untangle, in my mind at least, all of the German and Polish case gin, bitters bottle brands such as Hartwig Kantorowicz, Josef Lowenthal, Luhenthal Brothers, Rudolph Bader, S. B. Rothenberg, Louis RothFritz Rueter Bitters, Litthauer Stomach Bitters and Lohengrin Bitters to name a few. The Germania Stomach Bitters (see picture below) specifically listed the Luhenthal Bros. & Co. from Cleveland, Ohio on the label which surprised me. Why Cleveland, Ohio?

Read: History of Kantorowicz Family and their Factory

LitthauerSF

Early Litthauer Stomach Bitters advertisement. Prepared by the Inventor and Sole Manufacturer Hartwig Kantorowicz, Posen, John T. Cutting & Co., Sole Agents – The San Francisco Chronicle, 29 May 1883

Dr. Richard Cannon notes that “An industrial revolution began in Germany in the mid-1800s which promoted the interests of a growing class of business men, and by the late 1800s, Germany had become a great industrial nation, importing goods to other nations.” This certainly included bitters products and it included Cleveland, Ohio among other locales.

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Unlisted (as the WM. C. OESTING embossing is missing) Germania Magen Stomach Bitters, Luhenthal Bros. & Co., Cleveland, Ohio  – Katzen Collection

Today, I approached one of my ‘non-window’ shelves and pulled out a few of my Litthauer Stomach Bitters examples which will be the primary subject of this post. My label only, L 106 (similar) – Litthauer Stomach Bitters (pictured below) was invented in 1864 by Josef Lowenthal in Berlin, Germany. My example measures 9 1/2 x 2 3/8 (6 5/8) and is a square case gin, applied top, milk glass bottle with 95% original label, cork and partial contents. There is no mention of Hartwig Kantorowicz on the label which is perplexing.

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L 106 (similar) – A label only, Litthauer Stomach Bitters, Invented by S. Loewenthal, Made in Cleveland, Ohio – Meyer Collection

Part of the top shoulder label reads, “Bottled in Cleveland, Ohio under the direct supervision of Mr. S. Lowenthal, son of the former prop. and sole inventor, Berlin Germany.” I also see, “Medals awarded 1879 Berlin, 1896, 1891, 6 Preise Melbourne 1880.”

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Trade mark number 961. Mr E Waters for Hartwig Kantorowicz – “Stomach Bitters, Litthauer, Magenbitter, 1883 – National Archives of Australia

When I search online I find the following which seems to refer to my bottle:

NOTICE OF JUDGMENT NO. 2207.

(Given pursuant to section 4 of the Food and Drugs Act.)

MISBRANDING OF STOMACH BITTERS.

On May 21, 1912, the United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey, acting upon a report by the Secretary of Agriculture, filed in the District Court of the United States for said district a libel for the seizure and condemnation of fifteen cases of bitters remaining unsold and in the original unbroken packages and in possession of Zucker-Steiner & Co., Newark, N. J., alleging that the product had been shipped on or about December 11, 1911, by the Lowenthal, Strauss Co., Cleveland, Ohio, and transported from the State of Ohio into the State of New Jersey, and charging misbranding in violation of the Food and Drugs Act. The product was labeled: (On cases) “Bottled in Cleveland, Ohio, under the direct supervision of Mr. S. Lowenthal, son of the former proprietor, Josef Lowenthal, Berlin.”

The principal ingredients being imported. Litthauer Stomach Bitters, invented 1864 by Josef Lowenthal, Berlin. Bottled under the supervision of S. Lowenthal, son of the former proprietor and sole inventor, Berlin, Germany.” (On bottles) “Invented 1864 by Josef Lowenthal, Berlin. Trade Mark, The L. S. Co., Litthauer Stomach Bitters, bottled under the supervision of S. Lowenthal, son of the sole inventor and former proprietor, Berlin, Germany. Medals awarded 1879 Berlin, 1896, 1891, 6 Preise Melbourne 1880.”

(Supplemental label on bottles) “Bottled in Cleveland, Ohio under the direct supervision of Mr. S. Lowenthal, son of the former prop, and sole inventor, Berlin, Germany. Guaranteed under the Federal Food and Drug Act June 30, 1906. As registered with the U. S. Gov’t. Washington, D. C. Registered No. 13057.” Upon the sides of the bottles there was also a label containing statements in English, German, French, and Spanish, concerning the history and merits of the preparation, and also the declaration that it was 45 per cent alcoholic strength.

Misbranding was alleged in the libel for the reason that the statements upon the labels conveyed the impression that it was of foreign manufacture, to wit, that it was manufactured in Germany, whereas, in truth and in fact, it was manufactured in the United States, and therefore was falsely branded as to the country in which it was manufactured.

On August 8, 1912, no claimant having appeared for the property, judgment of condemnation and forfeiture was entered and it was further ordered that the product should be sold by the United States marshal.

W. M. HAYS,
Acting Secretary of Agriculture.
WASHINGTON, D.C. January 16, 1913.

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LITTHAUER STOMACH BITTERS

Litthauer1864Frank Wicker over at Bottle Pickers is an authority on German Bitters. This past summer, I had the good fortune to see his collection. Read: Wicker Visit – Austin Healey’s and Elephants. Frank confirms that Litthauer Stomach Bitters was invented by Joseph Loewenthal in 1864 in Berlin, Germany as the label states. According to Frank, the bottles that are embossed Litthauer Stomach Bitters, Invented by Joseph Loewenthal Berlin are the earliest variants. These case gin style bottles were a milk glass color.

Dr. Richard Cannon adds that Litthauer Stomach Bitters was patented in May, 1880, by Mayer Brothers and Company, New York, N.Y. The labels on the Hartwig Kantorowicz, Posen, Hamburg, Germany bottles and related variants read: Litthauer Stomach Bitters; Invented by Joseph Loewenthal; Manufactured by Hartwig Kantorowicz; Taken over by S. Loewenthal, son of sole inventor. Berlin, New York, Paris, and Nachflig are also embossed on the variants. One label reads: The S. Loewenthal Co. Sole Manufacturer, Cleveland, Ohio. All of this would indicate that the bottle embossed Litthauer Stomach Bitters, Invented 1864 by Joseph Loewenthal Berlin, is an earlier variant of the same product. However this label appears on some of these bottles: Litthauer Stomach Bitters; Invented 1864 by Joseph Loewenthal; Bottled under supervision of S. Loewenthal, son of sole inventor and former proprietor; Made in Cleveland, O., U.S.A.; Metals awarded, 1879, 1891, Berlin. This bottle, my example, would then be one of the earliest variants.

Per the Litthauer Stomach Bitters 1883 advertisement above, Hartwig Kantorowicz, Posen. was noted as the Inventor and Sole Manufacturer of Litthauer Stomach Bitters. Some of these case gin style milk glass color bottles were embossed Hartwig Kantorowicz, Posen, Hamburg, Germany. Other variants had Berlin, New York, Paris and Nachelg embossed on them. The label reads Litthauer Stomach Bitters: Invented by Joseph Loewenthal: Manufactured by Hartwig Kanaorowicz: Taken over by S. Loewenthal, son of the sole inventor.

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Hartwig Kantorowicz, Berlin, Posen, Hamburg advertisement for Litthauer Magenbitter

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Litthauer Russian Stomach Bitters advertisement, sold at Renard & Co., LTD. – Stead’s Review (Melbourne, Australia), 1899

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Litthauer Russian Stomach Bitters advertisement, sold at The M. S. Jacobson Family Liquor Store – Dunkirk Evening Observer (New York), 3 July 1914

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“LITTHAUER STOMACH BITTERS / INVENTED 1864 BY / JOSEF LOEWENTHAL, BERLIN”, (Ring/Ham, L-101), German, ca. 1880 – 1900, clear glass, case gin form, 9 3/4”h, smooth base, tooled lip. Perfect condition, and considerably harder to find than the milk glass bottle with the same embossing. – Glass Works Auctions

Select Timeline Events:

As you can see, this product, in various packages and forms, had a life span between 1864 and 1914, at least. This is a rare bottle were very few surviving bottles. Where are they?

1864: Litthauer Stomach Bitters (pictured below) was invented in 1864 by Josef Lowenthal in Berlin, Germany.
1879: Litthauer Stomach Bitters “Medals awarded 1879 Berlin, 1896, 1891, 6 Preise Melbourne 1880.”
1880: Litthauer Stomach Bitters was patented in May, 1880, by Mayer Brothers and Company, New York, N.Y.
1883: Early Litthauer Stomach Bitters advertisement. Prepared by the Inventor and Sole Manufacturer Hartwig Kantorowicz, Posen, John T. Cutting & Co., Sole Agents – The San Francisco Chronicle, 29 May 1883
1883: Trade mark number 961. Mr E Waters for Hartwig Kantorowicz – “Stomach BittersLitthauerMagenbitter, 1883 – National Archives of Australia
1899: Litthauer Russian Stomach Bitters advertisement, sold at Renard & Co., LTD. – Stead’s Review (Melbourne, Australia), 1899
1912: NOTICE OF JUDGMENT NO. 2207., Misbranding was alleged in the libel for the reason that the statements upon the labels conveyed the impression that it was of foreign manufacture, to wit, that it was manufactured in Germany, whereas, in truth and in fact, it was manufactured in the United States, and therefore was falsely branded as to the country in which it was manufactured.
1914: Litthauer Russian Stomach Bitters advertisement, sold at The M. S. Jacobson Family Liquor Store – Dunkirk Evening Observer (New York), 3 July 1914

Read More: History of Kantorowicz Family and their Factory

Read More: Germania Herb, Root and Fruit Tonic Bitters and the Germania Magen Stomach Bitters

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Collectors & Collections, History, Legal, Liquor Merchant, Milk Glass | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Germania Herb, Root and Fruit Tonic Bitters and the Germania Magen Stomach Bitters

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Germania Magen Stomach Bitters – Katzen Collection

Germania Herb, Root and Fruit Tonic Bitters and the Germania Magen Stomach Bitters

28 December 2013 (R•062519)

Good morning Ferd,

Couldn’t help noticing the beautiful Jesse Sailer pics of a Germania Bitters (pictured above) from the post named Part 2 Medicines” featuring milk glass bottles from the Gary Katzen collection.

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Four sides of the Germania Magen Stomach Bitters – Katzen Collection

Don’t want take away anything from a post devoted to his collection, but if you think it works in, I do have a really great TC (trade card) for Germania Bitters. Apart from advertising the bitters, it also has a tie in to the 1893 World’s Fair: Columbian Exposition here in Chicago.

Have a great day… Joe (Gourd)

Joe’s Trade Card

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Germania Bitters Trade Card front – Joe Gourd Collection

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Germania Bitters Trade Card back – Joe Gourd Collection

Apple-Touch-IconAJoe: As usual, a really great bitters trade card that I was unaware of. Your card might be the G 35 L … Germania Herb Root & Fruit Tonic Bitters that Ring & Ham note in Bitters Bottles as possibly being the label for their G 33 and G 34 listings. I doubt this and suspect it is a later and separate brand even though there are similar graphics, verbiage and Chicago links. A real puzzler!

In her right hand she is proudly holding the recovered crown of the emperor, with her left she leans self-confidentially on the sword of the empire.

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Who are you? Katzen G 33 label (left) and G 35 Gourd trade card graphics (right). At first glance the same image but there are lots of differences if you look closer!

I would also like to confirm who the seated figure is on the milk glass bottle (pictured below) and the “warrior goddess” represented on your trade card and Gary’s label. Could it be a very feminine Christopher Columbus? Is it Queen Isabella?

I believe this Bitters was exhibited at the Chicago Columbian Exposition of 1893. My own interpretation of the female warrior is that she could be the German mythological character “Brynhildr”, the heroine in the Volsunga saga” and “Eddic poems”. Other symbolism includes a “Handshake” and the “Seeing Eye” indicating the friendship between the U.S. and Germany. – Joe Gourd

The Niederwalddenkmal or Germania

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Germania Monument

GermaniaArtSearching “Germania”online, I find the subject image represented in the monument is called the Niederwalddenkmal or Germania, built in 1871. It is located above the city of Rüdesheim in the federal state of Hessen and can be regarded as the landmark of the region.

Each year thousands of tourists as well as locals pilgrimage to the Germania in order to commemorate the victims of the Thirty Year War. The Niederwalddenkmal was constructed shortly after the end of the German-French War in order to remember the foundation of the new German Reich. It was developed by the sculptor Johannes Schilling and the architect Karl Weisbach.

The foundation stone was laid on September 16th, 1871, by Wilhelm Friedrich Ludwig (Kaiser Wilhelm der Grofle / Emperor William the Great). After six years of construction and costs of more than one million gold marks, the Niederwalddenkmal was finally inaugurated on September 28th, 1883. The monument measuring 38 meters is regarded as a symbol of the union of all German tribes.

The central figure Germania is the 10.5 meters high and weighs 32 tons. In her right hand she is proudly holding the recovered crown of the emperor, with her left she leans self-confidentially on the sword of the empire. Data and emblems on the pedestal she is standing on tell from the time of the foundation of the empire. The largest relief shows emperor William I on his horse amidst of sovereigns, army commanders and soldiers of all corps.

The Seated Lady

The seated lady (pictured below) embossed on the bottle reminds me of some of the images from the 1893 US postage stamp series for the Columbian Exposition. Look carefully at the flanking figures on the $5 Christopher Columbus stamp below. Very strange, and this is a GERMAN brand!

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“Seated Women” embossing on Katzen milk glass bottle

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$5 Christopher Columbus United States postage stamp. The Columbus stamp was issued in 1893 as part of the Columbian Exposition Issue. Alfred Jones engraved the “Columbus” portrait, which faced the opposite direction from his similar engraving work on the Columbian Exposition half dollar. The two framing figures were engraved by Charles Skinner.

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Engraved Certificate from the World’s Columbian Exposition issued in 1892. Notice vignette of a majestic allegorical woman flying over a city with buildings and trains in the background. There is also a beautiful underprint of the Exposition. This item is hand signed by the president, H. N. Higinbotham. – scripophily.net

Statue of the Republic or “Golden Lady”

I believe the goddess or warrior is not the bronze Statue of the Republic sculpture in Jackson Park, Chicago which was erected in 1918 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition and the Illinois statehood centennial. According to Wikipedia, The Statue of the Republic was funded by the Benjamin Ferguson Fund which commissioned Daniel Chester French, the sculptor of the original 65-foot-tall statue that stood on the grounds of the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893, to sculpt this smaller replica. Henry Bacon, architect of the Lincoln Memorial, designed the pedestal for the 1918 Republic.

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Statue of the Republic sculpture overlooking the Court of Honor and Grand Basin of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition (Chicago, Illinois).

The original statue stood in front of the Court of Honor at the World’s Columbian Exposition. However, in 1896, the original 65-foot statue succumbed to a fire, destroying it. The current statue stands on the site of the Exposition’s famous Electricity Building.
The statue is widely known in Chicago by the colloquial name of the “Golden Lady.” It was designated a Chicago Landmark on June 4, 2003.

One of these days I hope to untangle all of the German and Polish case gin bitters bottle brands such as Hartwig Kantorowicz, Josef Lowenthal, Luhenthal Brothers, Rudolph Bader, S. B. Rothenberg, Louis Roth, Fritz Rueter Bitters, Litthauer Stomach Bitters and Lohengrin Bitters to name a few.

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L 106 – A labeled Litthauer Stomach Bitters, Invented by S. Loewenthal, Made in Cleveland, Ohio – Meyer Collection

I had a tough time searching for information on the trade card but note the following, mostly taken from the card text:

F. G. Nordmann, M.D. , Preparer, Office Hours 7 to 8 A.M. and 7 to 8 P.M.

1912: Germania Herb, Root and Fruit Tonic Bitters, Dr. F. G. Nordman, Chicago, Illinois, Practical Druggist and Spatula, Consolidated, 1912

Germania Medicine Company, 517, Preston Street, Bet. Jefferson and Green, Louisville, Kentucky

Helmkamp Bros., 36 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, Ill., Sole Agents

“I’m looking for any information regarding grandfather; ADOLPH F. HELMKAMP. Born in Chicago Illinois, 1889. Mothers maiden name was either BECKMEYE or BECKEMEYER. I believe he had several brothers and a sister. I think the brothers name was GEORGE HENRY HELMKAMP, born 1894 in Missouri.”

F.V. Simms, Druggist, Telephone 2072

The proprietor for Gary’s, Germania Magen Stomach Bitters was Luhenthal Bros. & Co. from Cleveland, Ohio. This would make it similar to a G 33 Germania Bitters without the WM. C. OESTING embossed on the bottle along with the motif of the seated lady. This will require a new listing by Bill Ham.

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World’s Columbian Exposition

[Wikipedia] The World’s Columbian Exposition (the official shortened name for the World’s Fair: Columbian Exposition, also known as The Chicago World’s Fair) was a World’s Fair held in Chicago in 1893 to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus’ arrival in the New World in 1492. The iconic centerpiece of the Fair, the large water pool, represented the long voyage Columbus took to the New World. Chicago bested New York City; Washington, D.C.; and St. Louis for the honor of hosting the fair. The fair was an influential social and cultural event. The fair had a profound effect on architecture, sanitation, the arts, Chicago’s self-image, and American industrial optimism. The Chicago Columbian Exposition was, in large part, designed by Daniel Burnham and Frederick Law Olmsted. It was the prototype of what Burnham and his colleagues thought a city should be. It was designed to follow Beaux Arts principles of design, namely French neoclassical architecture principles based on symmetry, balance, and splendor.

Read More: Litthauer Stomach Bitters by Josef Lowenthal

Read More: History of Kantorowicz Family and their Factory

Posted in Advertising, Art & Architecture, Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Ephemera, History, Liquor Merchant, Medicines & Cures, Milk Glass, Postage, Questions, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

El Aliso, Jean Louis and Pierre Sainsevain and their California Wine Bitters

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El Aliso, the immense sycamore tree, is visible in the distance in this 1857 photo of the Los Angeles Plaza. Courtesy of the Photo Collection, Los Angeles Public Library.

El Aliso, Jean Louis and Pierre Sainsevain and their California Wine Bitters

24 December 2013 (R•101217)

Apple-Touch-IconAA little over a year ago, I did a post titled 1865 San Francisco Directory – All Quiet before the Quake. Within the directory, I came across a listing and advertisement for Sainsevain’s California Wine Bitters. I hadn’t thought about this listing until I saw a bitters square on ebay this week also called California Wine Bitters. My excitement was high until I realized it was embossed on one panel, “Wm. Ritmeier’s”. A great bottle nonetheless, but not Sainsevain’s Wine Bitters.

Looking in Bitters Bottles by Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham I see a listing:

S 8 L … Sainsevain’s California Wine Bitters

Manufactured and sold by Mercado & Seully, San Francisco, California

There is no mention of the Sainsevain brothers in the listing which may want to be updated. I am also not aware of any existing bottles with the Sainsevain Wine Bitters label.

Early California Winemaking

Wine making in Los Angeles was raised from a domestic craft to a commercial enterprise by a Frenchman with a name too good to be true, Jean Louis Vignes – because of his name, a French compatriot has written of him, “he seemed predestined to become the Noah of California.” Given his destiny, Vignes was not only well named but well born, for his native place was Cadillac, a winemaking community in the Premieres Côtes de Bordeaux, where his father was a cooper. Jean Louis learned the cooper’s trade, married, and lived quietly until 1826, when, at the age of forty-seven, and for reasons still quite obscure, he left home, wife, family, and trade to go to Hawaii. He could not get satisfactory work in the islands, however, and he had to live from hand to mouth for a time. At last, in 1831, he left for Monterey. The precise date of his arrival in Los Angeles is not known, but he was established in that town by 1833, perhaps drawn there by the reputation of its vineyards and the presence of a Frenchman or two.

and was marked by a great sycamore tree of venerable age called El Aliso

He was somehow able to buy a hundred acres of land. The property lay on the east side of the pueblo, along the river, and was marked by a great sycamore tree of venerable age called El Aliso, to give it the capital letters that all observers agreed that it deserved. Vignes himself came to be called Don Luis del Aliso in honor of his splendid tree. Here Vignes laid out a vineyard that ultimately occupied thirty-five acres and began the manufacture of wine and brandy.

It did not take him long to recognize the inadequacy of the Mission grape, for in 1833 Vignes imported European varieties from France, sent to him by way of Boston and then around the Horn. Vignes thus lays claim to be the first to take the crucial step of obtaining better varieties. We do not know what varieties he imported, however, nor what success he may have had with them, nor whether they entered importantly into the wine he made. The high reputation that his wines established in competition with others from Los Angeles suggests that perhaps they did, but it is also clear that the Mission continued as the overwhelmingly dominant variety in Los Angeles vineyards. If Vignes did actually show a better way, no one yet troubled to follow him. For many years in California it was the custom to call all grapes other than the Mission, “foreign.” The Mission is an unquestioned vinifera, and so just as “foreign” as any other European grape: but the distinction made by the locals is an interesting reflection of their experience.

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Edward Ord’s map of Los Angeles, 1849, from the copy in the Huntington Library. This is the earliest map of the town after the American annexation. The fields between the town and the river shown closely dotted are planted in vines. Just above and to the right of the island in the river are the vineyards of Jean Louis Vignes. – A History of Wine in America

Pierre Sainsevain

Sainsevain loaded a ship at San Pedro with white wine and brandy and took it to Santa Barbara, Monterey, and San Francisco;

By making acceptable wine in considerable quantity, Vignes was able to take another step forward in 1840, when, through the agency of his nephew. Pierre Sainsevain, newly arrived from France, he made the first recorded shipment of Los Angeles wines. Sainsevain loaded a ship at San Pedro with white wine and brandy and took it to Santa Barbara, Monterey, and San Francisco; at each of these places he was able to get good prices for his cargo. This venture does not seem to have been regularly followed up, but it at least showed the way to an important-later trade.

when he sold his property to his Sainsevain nephews for $42,000, one of the greatest commercial transactions that Los Angeles had ever seen.

Vignes, who was born in 1779, continued to cultivate his vineyard and make wine until 1855, when he sold his property to his Sainsevain nephews for $42,000, one of the greatest commercial transactions that Los Angeles had ever seen. Seven years later, Vignes died. The huge sycamore, El Aliso, that stood at the gate of his property, lasted some years longer, but was cut down before the end of the century; the remarkable grape arbor that ran from Vignes’s house down to the river, perhaps ten feet wide and a quarter of a mile long, has long since been displaced by industrial building. It was, while it stood, one of the public places of Los Angeles, where receptions could be held and parties given under the grateful shade. Vignes himself is still remembered for his effective pioneering, a fact that would have pleased his friend Davis, who wrote in affectionate memory of Vignes.

The Sainsevain Brothers

The wine trade of Los Angeles moved into its next phase in the middle of the 1850s, when two commercial wine houses, like those developed in Cincinnati at about the same time, were set up to consolidate the production, storage, and distribution of the region’s wines. Second in order of founding, but older by virtue of continuing an already operating winery, was the firm of Sainsevain Brothers, Jean Louis and Pierre, the nephews of Jean Louis Vignes. When they bought out their uncle in 1855, they immediately proceeded to expand the scale of operations at the old El Aliso vineyard. They bought wine from other growers, as well as making it from their own grapes and those purchased from local vineyards. In 1857 they opened a store in San Francisco; by 1858 they led the state with a production of 125,000 gallons of wine and brandy.

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Sainsevain Brothers listing Sainsevain’s California Wine Bitters1862 San Francisco City Directory

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Sainsevain Bros. advertising Native California Wine and Sainsevain’s Wine BittersSacramento Daily Union, 23 April 1863

The fata morgana of the Sainsevain brothers was the wish to make champagne. Pierre, the younger, returned to France in 1856 to study the manufacture, and brought a French champagne maker back with him. In the season of 1857-58 sparkling wine was produced at the San Francisco cellars of the Sainsevain brothers. They called it Sparkling California Champagne, and it was greeted with much interest, shipments being made to New York and Philadelphia to give it the widest publicity. It was not, however, a success. The Mission grape was a poor basis for sparkling wine, which calls for a far more acid juice than the Mission can provide; besides, the Sainsevain methods were not good enough to prevent large losses from breaking bottles and from other causes. The brothers were soon in financial difficulties as a result of their investment in sparkling wine—they are reputed to have lost $50,000 in the venture. Their partnership was dissolved some time early in the 1860s, and only Jean remained at the El Aliso property in 1865 when it was sold. Both Sainsevains, at different times and at different places, kept their hands in the California wine trade thereafter, but the firm was no longer a factor in Los Angeles. A History of Wine in America

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Very similar Sainsevain Brothers listing Sainsevain’s California Wine Bitters. Note addition of Mercado & Seully – 1864 San Francisco City Directory

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Mercado & Seully’s California Wine Bitters label – eBay

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Sainsevain Bros. advertising Native California Wine and Sainsevain’s Wine Bitters – Golden Era, 1865

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Mercado & Co., Notice to the Public regarding other similar products to Sainsevain’s Wine Bitters being sold. – San Francisco Chronicle, 6 October 1868

Pierre Sainsevain

Pierre “Don Pedro” Sainsevain (November 20, 1818 – October 4, 1904) was a French settler in California during the Mexican era. Sainsevain was the recipient of a Mexican land grant, and built a lumber mill and a flour mill. He was a member of the first California Constitutional Convention; and became a winemaker and the first producer of sparkling wine in California.

and became a winemaker and the first producer of sparkling wine in California.

Sainsevain, a carpenter, came from Bordeaux, France to Santa Barbara, California on the ship Ayacucho on July 4, 1839. He had been sent by his family to find his uncle Jean-Louis Vignes in Los Angeles. He settled on Vignes’ property, El Aliso, and assisted with growing grapes and oranges, and with winemaking. In 1840, he loaded a shipment of wine and brandy on a ship to sell along the California coast. On this trip, he made his first visit to Monterey and Branciforte. In 1841 he worked at Vignes’ sawmill near San Bernardino.

In 1843, Sainsevain was granted Rancho Cañada del Rincon en el Rio San Lorenzo near Santa Cruz, California by Governor Manuel Micheltorena, and in the Fall of 1843 he built one of the first sawmills in the valley of the San Lorenzo River, in association with Charles Roussillon (also known as “Rochon”), another Frenchman. In 1844, he was granted permission to start a flour mill with a daily capacity of 75 fanegas on the Guadalupe River in San Jose. In 1845, Sainsevain married Paula Suñol (1827–1883), whose father Antonio Maria Suñol owned Rancho Los Coches. In 1846, Sainsevain and Charles Roussillon built a schooner (the Antonita) on the beach at Santa Cruz. She was launched on June 25, and sailed to the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii) to have a copper bottom installed. In 1847, Roussillon was the defendant in the first jury trial (Isaac Graham vs. Charles Roussillon) in California.

In 1848, Sainsevain and Roussillon went to the gold mines near Coloma. Sainsevain, Roussillon, Antonio Sunol, and Amador, with help from twenty-five Indians, mined gold at Don Pedro’s Bar on the Tuolumne River. Sainsevain and Roussillon soon had enough of mining and returned to Stockton in 1849 to open a store supplying the California Gold Rush miners. They owned a hotel in San Jose that became California’s first State House. Sainsevain was a delegate to the 1849 California Constitutional Convention in Monterey.

In 1859, Sainsevain sold Rancho Cañada del Rincon en el Rio San Lorenzo, and with his brother, Jean Louis, bought the El Aliso vineyards in Los Angeles from their uncle, Jean-Louis Vignes (also known as “Don Luis Del Aliso”). The firm of Sainsevain Brothers, immediately proceeded to expand the scale of operations at the old El Aliso vineyard. In 1857 they opened a store in San Francisco; and by 1858 they led the state with a production of 125,000 gallons of wine and brandy. In 1857, the San Francisco cellars of the Sainsevain Brothers produced champagne. However, it was not a success, and as a result of their investment in sparkling wine, Sainsevain Brothers was soon in financial difficulties. The partnership was dissolved in the 1860s, and only Jean Louis Sainsevain remained at the El Aliso property when it was sold in 1865.

In 1865 the Sainsevain brothers bought part of Rain’s Rancho Cucamonga and set out a large vineyard.

In 1865 the Sainsevain brothers bought part of Rain’s Rancho Cucamonga and set out a large vineyard. In 1868 his Claret won best wine at the county fair. In 1870, the Sainsevain brothers moved to Cucamonga, and ran the vineyard and winery with Joseph S. Garcia. In 1874, the Sainsevains purchased land in Hawker Canyon four miles east of Etiwanda and built a large stone house and a reservoir.

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Sainsevain’s Wine Bitters by Pierre Sainsevain – California Farmer, April 27, 1871

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Sainsevain’s Wine Bitters brand sold to E. G. Lyon’s & Co. – January 28th, 1874

In 1875, Pierre Sainsevain went to Central America, returning in 1880 to his Sainsevain Villa in San Jose. After his wife’s death in 1883, he returned to France, where he spent the rest of his days. – Wikipedia

Jean Louis Sainsevain

Jean Louis Sainsevain was born at Begney, Department of the Gironde, France, in the year 1816. He came to Los Angeles in 1855, where his uncle, Jean Louis Vignes, the earliest of the French pioneers, and his brother, Pedro Sainsevain, had been living many years. After living here some time, the two brothers bought out the extensive property of their uncle, and carried on the wine business on a large scale till 1867 or 1868.

The brothers Sainsevain were the first manufacturers of champagne in California. They were involved in litigation at one time with the Internal Revenue Department, and also with M. Racoulliat, husband of one of the heirs of their uncle, Don Louis Vignes. Obtaining a franchise to supply the city of Los Angeles with water for domestic use, Don Louis Sainsevain and D. Marchessault, at one time mayor of the city, laid wooden pipes for that purpose, iron pipes being thought at that period too expensive. In 1868 they sold out to the City Water Company, which secured a lease from the city for thirty years, Mr. Sainsevain remaining one of the members of the new company, whose lease expires in 1898.

 The immense old “Aliso” (sycamore) tree, around which Don Louis Vignes built his adobe wine cellars, is now surrounded by the modern brick-built plant of the Philadelphia Brewery

The vineyard was sold to Alexander Wiel and others, and was eventually divided up into lots and sold, and it is now occupied by homes and business houses. The immense old “Aliso” (sycamore) tree, around which Don Louis Vignes built his adobe wine cellars, is now surrounded by the modern brick-built plant of the Philadelphia Brewery, and a street railroad runs along where the dwelling of both Vignes and Sainsevain once stood. In after years Sainsevain planted a vineyard at Cucamonga, where he lived some time. Latterly, however, and until his death, which happened in the early part of this year (February 16, 1889), he resided in Los Angeles, where he was well and favorably known as goodhearted, genial “Don Louis” Sainsevain. The street in this city bearing his name was so called in his honor. He had two sons, Michel and Paul. The former died in this city before his father, leaving a widow and several children. Paul and family live in San Diego. Vital Fernando and Jean M. Vignes, for many years residents of Los Angeles, are cousins of the Sainsevains. Pedro Sainsevain, now an old man, who came here when a boy, still lives in San Jose.  An Illustrated History of Los Angeles County, California and Chicago, The Lewis Publishing Company, 1889 Page 814

More: What’s the story behind this ad?

More: Origin of the E.G. LYONS & CO MANUFACTURERS SAN Fco bottle

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

Looking again at Rosenbaum’s Bitters

R93A_FDLooking again at Rosenbaum’s Bitters

Who was this Dr. Rosenbaum?

23 December 2013 (R•052814)

Apple-Touch-IconAQuite a bit has been written about N. B. Jacob’s & Co. and Dr. Rosenbaum’s Celebrated Stomach Bitters from San Francisco. Periodically, I try to reach back and find the earliest advertising and directory listings for Dr. Rosenbaum hoping to land on evidence to further support that the brand started in Philadelphia and prospered in the west. There is a copy of a Rosenbaum’s Bitters advertisement within Early Glassworks of California by Warren B. Friedrich that says,”Prepared by Dr. Rosenbaum, Manufacturer and Proprietor, South Front Street, Philadelphia.”

The western ads can be found and are numerous. A few are included in this post dating from 1858 to 1868. As far as finding any eastern advertising or directory listings, I am still coming up short. Who was this Dr. Rosenbaum?

Philadelphia: G. Rosenbaum, N. Front Street – Journal of the Common Council, of the City of Philadelphia, 1886

Kentucky: It certainly was not the Rosenbaum Brothers who were whiskey dealers from Louisville, Kentucky who were listed in directories from 1886-1905 selling Buchu Gin, Glee Club and Kentucky Home among other items.

San Francisco: It is not A. S. Rosenbaum & Co., Importers and Jobbers in Foreign and Domestic Cigars and Tobacco. S.E. corner California and Battery streets, San Francisc0, around 1878

Philadelphia: Seeking information on my GGGG Grandparents, Charles Casper Rosenbaum of Coblenz, Germany and Christinia Hunter of Holland. They arrived in Philadelphia and had nine children before settling in Indiana.

Rosenbaums_LA1858

Early, Dr. Rosenbaum’s Stomach Bitters advertisement noting Geo Thatcher & Co., as General agency for the Pacific Coast and M. Keller, Agent for Los Angeles. – Los Angeles Star, 9 October 1858

Rick Simi over at Western Bitters News states “The first mention of Rosenbaums Bitters is in an 1858 advertisement listing George Thatcher, a liquor merchant residing in San Francisco, as an agent for the product and Dr. Rosenbaum of Philadelphia as proprietor and manufacturer. In 1859, N.B. Jacobs was listed as the general agent for Rosenbaums Bitters while he was working at the George Thatcher & Co. In November of 1859, N.B. Jacobs removed himself from Thatcher & Co. and started his own liquor concern, still advertising that he had the depot for Rosenbaums Bitters. Meanwhile Thatcher & Co. is still advertising that they are also an agent for Rosenbaums Bitters. In 1860, Jacobs starts to advertise more aggressively, pushing the Rosenbaums Bitters in several large ads, stating that he is the sole agent for the Pacific Coast.” Rick is also the author of “Gold Rush Camps & Bottles of Sierra County”

The Carlyn Ring and Bill Ham listings in Bitters Bottles and Bitters Bottles Supplement is as follows:

R 93 ROSENBAUMS BITTERS
ROSENBAUMS / BITTERS // SAN FRANCISCO // f // N. B. JACOBS & CO //
9 7/8 x 2 3/4 (7 1/8) 5/16
Square, LTCR and LTC, Applied mouth, Amber, Yellow olive, and Green, Rare. Light blue green and Claret, Extremely rare. Light puce, Extremely rare. Ampersand slants left.
Note: This bottle was probably blown first in an Eastern glass house and then the mold was taken to San Francisco where more bottles were blown at the Pacific Glass Works. Bottles dug from the early 1860’s site in San Francisco have characteristics of bottles blown at eastern glasshouses and bottles from the late 1860’s sites have characteristics of Western blown bottles.
R93_RosenbaumsBitters_amber_FM5

The larger R 93 – Rosenbaum’s Bitters

R 94 ROSENBAUMS BITTERS
ROSENBAUMS / BITTERS // SAN FRANCISCO // f // N. B. JACOBS & CO //
9 x 2 1/2 (7 1/8) 5/16
Square, Amber, Puce, Medium Green and Olive. LTCR and LTC, Applied mouth,
Very rare.
This bottle was probably Western blown. R 94 is rarer than R. 93. T R 94 mold was altered to make the H 70 Dr. Hauseman’s German Bitters mold.
R94_RosenbaumsBitters_AppGreen_Grap

The smaller R 94 – Rosenbaum’s Bitters, American Bottle Auctions – Grapentine I, Auction 41, Lot #198

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The smaller R 94 – Rosenbaum’s Bitters – Bitters Bottles Supplement

Dr. Rosenbaum’s Advertising

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Dr. Rosenbaum’s Celebrated Stomach Bitters advetisement – Sacramento Daily Union, 25 February 1860

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Dr. Rosenbaum’s Celebrated Stomach Bitters advertisement noting N. B. Jacobs & Co. as agents – The Hunter, 1860

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The Consumers of Rosenbaum’s Celebrated Stomach Bitters are cautioned about Rosenchf’s Bitters – Sacramento Daily Union, 1 February 1860

25CasesRosenbaumsBitters

25 cases of Rosenbaum’s Bitters. This make’s me think there were coming in from the East Coast. – 1860 San Francisco advertisement

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N. B. Jacob’s & Co. advertisement noting Rosenbaum’s Bitters – Directory of Nevada Territory, 1862

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Dr. Rosenbaum’s Stomach Bitters advertisement – Santa Cruz Weekly Sentinel, 5 November 1864

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Rosenbaum’s Bitters advertisement – The Golden Era, April 30, 1865

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Simple posting for Rosenbaum’s Bitters in the San Francisco Chronicle, 1868

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Rosenbaum’s Bitters being sold by Smith & Davis in Portand, Oregon – The Salem, Oregon Directory, 1871

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, History, Liquor Merchant, Questions, Remedy | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Madame Doctress Ross – The Wonderful Astrologist and Healing Medium

Venice_ast_smMadame Doctress Ross The Wonderful Astrologist and Healing Medium

20 December 2013 (R•112915) (R•090619)

“Madame Ross, doctress and astrologist, was born with a natural gift and was never known to fail. She can tell your very thoughts, cause speedy marriages and bring those together and those long separated”.

Shoulder-straps: A Novel of New York and the Army, 1862

Apple-Touch-IconAI had fun today tracking down an interesting woman related to the bitters trade named Madame (also spelled Madam) Ross. She was a Doctress, Healing Medium and Astrologist and must have really moved around as people figured out her game. I found advertisements for her saying she was from Europe (yes, that is vague) and then she shows up living in New York (1868) and traveling to Chicago (1869), New Orleans (1872 and 1873), Galveston (1873), Staunton, Virginia (late 1873), Dallas (1874) and Charleston, South Carolina (1879). I’m sure there are many more locations. I picture her traveling by rail to each of these cities, doing her trade and maybe having a private Pullman rail car similar to the old television series Wild Wild West.

Pullman

What surprised me in one of her advertisements was the mention of an Australian Bitters (see below) which she was hawking. This appears to be unlisted. Of course there is the Melbourne Australian Hop Bitters but that is an Aussie product.

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

Newspaper Advertisement
A 139.3 AUSTRALIAN BITTERS, Austrailian Bitters, the permanent cure of Female Complaint. Madam Doctress Ross. – Times Picayune (New Orleans, Louisiana), 1872
Madame Ross said she was from Europe and advertised in U.S. newspapers as an Astrologist, Doctress and Healing Medium. She traveled the country and pitched her powers and products.
AustralianBittersTimesPicayune1872

Australian Bitters advertised by Madam Doctress Ross in New Orleans – Times Picayune (New Orleans, Louisiana), 1872

A typical advertisement for Madame Ross might read:

ARRIVED.- Madame Ross, the wonderfal Astrologist, Doctress and Healing Medium.

Madame Ross offers $5,000 to any one who can equal her. She has astonished thousands of people who have witnessed her. She is the only lady that is really endowed with the natural gift of revealing the past and present, and foretelling the future. This lady has travelled throughout Europe and America, and wherever she has visited has never failed to give unbounded satisfaction. She has been pronounced by the most scientific phrenologist to be tho most wonderful in her profession. Her advice on business is invaluable. She respectfully invites all to call and be convinced.

She can bring the Separated Together!

And convert misery and dissension into pleasure and contentment. Happiness, health, long life, good luck and success in all undertakings, by water or land, to all who visit her. The Madam has been endowed with wonderful natural gifts from infancy. All that visit her are satisfied.

Charges Moderate. Ladies, $1.50. Gentlemen, $2.00. Satisfaction Guaranteed.

I thought this was also pretty cool talking about a nest of  astrologists and clairvoyants in New York City:

An Astrological Neighborhood

About Twentieth street and Seventh avenue are clustered a galaxy of astrologists and clairvoyants, among whom are the following:

Miss Decolam, No. 49 East Twenty-eighth

Mrs. Webster, No. 61 Eleventh.

Madame Ray, No. 336 Seventh Avenue

Madame Ross, No. 98 West Twenty-seventh

Prof. Nelson, No. 168 West Thirty-fifth

Broughton’s Monthly Planet Reader and Astrological Journal1860

Some of her advertisements that were placed in local newspapers to let customers know she was on the way or already in town.

MadamRossLookHereNY

Look Here! – Are You in Trouble? Madame Ross lives and works in New York – Three years among the working-classes in the United States during the war, 1865

MadamRossNY

A Sure Cure, With or Without Medicine by Doctress Ross. – New York Herald, August 7, 1868

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Madam Doctress Ross, The Wonderful Astrologist and Healing Medium advertisement, 39 Rampart – The Times-Picayune (New Orleans, Louisiana) – 13 December 1872

MadamRossCured

Madam Ross, Doctress and Astrologist advertisement – The Times-Picayune (New Orleans, Louisiana) – 10 March 1873

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Madam Ross – The Great and Real Astrologist – The Galveston Daily News, 19 March 1873

ArrivedMadamRossStaunton

Arrived. – Madam Ross, the wonderful Astrologist, Doctress and Healing Medium – Staunton Spectator, 5 August 1873

MadameRossinDallas

Madame Ross (this time from Galveston) now in Dallas – The Dallas Daily Herald, 27 March 1874

MadamRossArrivedFromEurope

Arrived from Europe! Madam Ross – The News and Courier (Charleston, South Carolina), January 8, 1879

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

F. Pasquier’s French Hygienic Bitters – Louisville

PasquiersClipped_10F. Pasquier’s French Hygienic Bitters – Louisville

18 December 2013

Apple-Touch-IconAA few of you may have noticed the 1871 advertisement (see below) within the post for the Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters from Louisville, Kentucky the other day. That advertisement listed bitters manufacturers and brands in Louisville including Brady’s Family Bitters, Victor Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters and J. H. Schroeder for Schroeder’s Cocktail Bitters.

PasquiersBitters

Pasquier’s French Hygenic Bitters, F. Pasquier, Louisville City Directory advertisement, 1871

There was also a listing for the extremely rare Pasquiers French Hygienic Bitters. Man-o-man, is this a rare bird. I believe only one example exists and it is held in a Kentucky collection. That bottle is pictured within this post. This might be the bottle that was found in the Chicagio river front area according to Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham in Bitters Bottles. That listing is as follows:

PasquiersR&HP 29  Pasquier’s French Bitters

PASQUIER’S / FRENCH BITTERS // LOUISVILLE, KY // sp //
Francis Pasquier, Market Street, Louisville, Kentucky
10 x 3 (6 3/4)
Triangular, Amber, LTC. Applied mouth, 3 sp, Extremely rare
25 rings decorate body of bottle., 2 rings at base of neck
Louisville City Directory, 1855-83 Francis Pasquier inspector and dealer in foreign and domestic liquors. 1870-78 listed as manufacturers of French Bitters. All business at different numbers on Market Street.
One found in the Chicago river front area.
See: German Wine (G 32) Exact same mold for German Wine Bitters, Charles Schlitz, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. One dug in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

Not much is know about Francis Pasquier. I do see a Philadelphia Passenger and Immigration List showing a brig arriving in Philly from Havana in 1810 with a Francis Pasquier. Possibly the father. Stay tuned.

Select Date Milestones

1817: Francis Pasquier born, France

1850: In June, 1850, a hysterical and chlorotic young girl, affected also with anaesthesia, amyosthenia, amenorrhcea, and dyspepsia, was two months in one of Dr. Eostan’s wards, vomiting every day almost all the solids and fluids which she was prevailed upon to swallow. Iron, it is remarkable, had been prescribed in vain, as well as many other substaoces, and only pills of oxide of zinc had appeared to do a little good.

Chance having led me to examine this patient, the eminent physician of the Hotel Dieu kindly allowed me to try my treatment. I begun by ascertaining the suitable metal, and it proved to be brass, in plates. Afterward the Committee of the Academy, many distinguished physicians, Drs. Jobert (de Lamballe), Hourteloup, Pasquier, Beau, Tardieu, and Gosselin, whom I had assembled to witness the power of the metals on sensibility and motility, and Dr. Eostan himself, and his numerous clinical pupils, had satisfied themselves that this metal, applied experimentally, removed the anaesthesia and analgesia at the spot of its application and nowhere else. – The Richmond and Louisville Medical Journal, 1881

1859: F. Pasquier advertisement noting a Dr. Raspail’s celebrated Higiene Bitters. Possibly a predecessor to the French Hygienic Bitters – Louisville Daily Courier, June 1, 1859

PasquiersAd3

F. Pasquier advertisement noting a Dr. Raspail’s celebrated Higiene Bitters. Possibly a predecessor to the French Hygienic Bitters – Louisville Daily Courier, June 1, 1859

1860: F. Pasquier (43 years old), liquor merchant, wife Mary from Germany (24 years old), daughter Mary (2 years old), Louisville, Ward 6, Kentucky, born in France, 1860 United States Federal Census

1861: Wines and Liquors, Retail & Wholesale, Francis Pasquier, 515 E. Market, Louisville City Directory

1865: F. Pasquire, Wines & Liquors wholesale, ss Market, bet. 5th & 6th, Louisville City Directory

1870: F. Pasquier (49 Years Old, Female), manufacturer of stomach bitters, Louisville, Kentucky, born in France, 1870 United States Federal Census

1870: Bitters, F. Pasquier, 293 W. Market, Louisville City Directory

1870: F. Pasquier, mnfr. French Bitters, 293 W. Market, bds. ss. Market, bet. 5th and 6th,  Louisville City Directory

1871: Pasquier’s French Hygenic Bitters, F. Pasquier, Louisville City Directory advertisement, 1871

PasquierListing_1873LV

Pasquier’s French Hygenic Bitters, F. Pasquier, Louisville City Directory advertisement, 1871

1873: Bitters Manufacturer, F. Pasquier, 390 Main, nr 10th, Louisville City Directory

1875: Bitters Manufacturer, F. Pasquier, 652 Market, nr 16th, Louisville City Directory

1880: Francis Pasquier, r. 465 Portland Ave., nr. 21st, Louisville City Directory

1881: F. Pasquier, r. 38 1/2 Main, nr 2nd, Louisville City Directory

1883-1885: F. Pasquier, porter A. Rassinier & Co.,, nw cor 1st., Louisville City Directory

1893: Francis Pasquier, lab, r 310 3rd, Louisville City Directory

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

Victor Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters | Louisville

RivaudsClip4Victor Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters Louisville

17 December 2013
RivaudsImperialBitters1870Louisville

Logo for Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters1870 Louisville City Directory

Apple-Touch-IconAWhile looking around some Louisville archives for the Walker’s Tonic Bitters, I came across the above art in an 1870 directory for Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters. This rang a distant bell. Six or so years go, an ultra rare example showed up for sale. The bottle pictures in this post have been cleaned up and represent possibly the only known example of the bottle I mention. The listing in 2007 read:

Very Rare Rivaud’s Louisville Bitters

This rare, possibly unique bitters has been in the collection of and found by an older long time friend that was one of our original New Orleans Antique Bottle Club founders. She has decided to sell her collection since her husband’s passing a couple of years ago.

RivaudsClip3_Duo

Very rare Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters as represented in a 2007 sale.

Description

Semi cabin, medium to golden amber, 10 ½” tall x 3” square. It has a slight tapered collar lip, 4 recessed panels on the shoulder, and 4 recessed side panels, 3 embossed. It has a slight recessed smooth base. It is embossed: RIVAUD’S / IMPERIAL BITTERS (front), VICTOR RIVAUD (left panel), LOUISVILLE KY (right panel), blank back panel. It has original dug beautiful rainbow iridescence. I have included pictures of the bottle wet to show its original color. The only minor spots is a 5/16” rough edge on the rear panel edge and a 1/8” shallow tool scratch on the neck by the lip above the bitters panel. A couple of edge soil scratches and a few very light etch lines as usually found on a dug bottle, but will easily be removed with a professional cleaning. This large bottle will draw respect and be the centerpiece in any bottle collection.

RivaudsClipped1

Very rare Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters as represented in a 2007 sale.

Victor Rivaud was a liquor merchant from France who settled in Louisville, Kentucky. He was born in 1840 to French parents. His wife’s name was Elizabeth Clerget and they had three children. The two males, Victor L. and Louis F. Rivaud carried the torch after Victors death which occurred around 1890. He was drafted in the Civil War when he was 23 years old and worked first as a clerk in 1865. In 1866 he started on his own selling liquors, wines, tobacco and cigars both wholesale and retail. In 1870 it was Victor Rivaud & Co. This is also the year that Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters first makes an appearance. I see that it was only advertised in 1870 and 1871.

Select Listings

1840: birth Victor Rivaud, France, about 1840

1863 – 1865: Victor Rivaud (age 23), 5th District Kentucky, born France – U.S., Civil War Draft Registrations Records, 1863-1865

1865: Victor Rivaud, book-keeper, John Smidt & Co., r. 438 main, bet. 11th and 12th, Louisville City Directory

1866: Victor Rivaud, liquors, wines, tobacco and cigars, whole. and ret., 438 W. Main bet. 11th and 12th, res, same, Louisville City Directory

1871: Victor Rivaud & Co., Wines & Liquors (also Whiskies), 430 Main bet. 10th & 11th, Louisville City Directory

RivaudsLouidsville1871

Louisville Bitters Manufacturers as listed in 1he 1871 Louisville City Directory. Listing for the subject Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters

1871: Louisville Bitters Manufacturers (see above) as listed in 1he 1871 Louisville City Directory. Listing for the subject Rivaud’s Imperial Bitters

1871: German will be taught next year in all the Public School buildings of the city, which is another proof of the efficiency of our present system. Respectively submitted, Wm. H. Meffert, Victor Rivaud, W. F. Miller – Municipal Reportsorder of the General Council [of the City of Louisville], 1872

1880: Victor Rivaud (age 40), Clerget F. (mother in law? 54). Wife works in liquor store. Victor is clerk. Wife Elizabeth (33), Victor L. (15), Louis F. (12) and Charlotte (11). Parents born in France. 1800 U.S. Federal Census

1890: Rivaud & Co., Victor Rivaud; George V. Lebre, whiskies, 1112 and 1114 W. Main, Louisville City Directory

1891: Elizabeth Rivaud, wid Victor, Louis F. Rivaud, whiskies, 114 W. Main, Victor Jr., clerk same, Louisville, Kentucky City Directory, 1891

Late 1890s: On the east side of Vernon Street was Pete Requet’s saloon and they had a watering trough for the horses on the street side and in front on Main Street they had platform scales to weigh wagons (of course, while being weighed and the horses watered, the drivers could get a nickel beer and a free lunch at that spa). Up on the next corner (Plum Street) was Zeigler Bakery (later Louis Rivaud grocery) and in a frame building, Ed Trigg’s barber shop (these two buildings were torn down and the late Mike Garber built a brick home on the site).Dean Miller Walking Tour, AS I REMEMBER MADISON IN THE LATE 1890s, By Dean L. Miller

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Civil War, Club News, Digging and Finding, History, Liquor Merchant, Spirits, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

William H. Walker and his Tonic Bitters

WalkersTonicBitters1869LouisvilleDaiyExpress

William H. Walker and his Tonic Bitters

17 December 2013 (R•072719)

Apple-Touch-IconAI came across this 1869 advertisement above for Walker’s Tonic Bitters that I found in the Louisville Daily Express. I think I may have an unlisted bitters. Doing a little research on W. H. Walker, I find some rather interesting information.

“Chesapeake Bay canvas-back ducks, New York oysters in the shell, venison and grouse from the prairies, mutton and beef from Bourbon Country, pheasants, quail, woodcock, plover, salmon, bass, etc.”

The first tavern or inn to open in Louisville opened on Fourth Street near Main Street in August 1834 by William H. Walker. It quickly became the informal headquarters of the Whig Party in Louisville and the venue where Henry Clay met with local party leaders when he was in the city. By 1845 it was called Walker’s Restaurant Hotel and advertised that “all the substantials and delacies of this and other markets can be had at all hours” (Louisville Morning Courier and American Democrat, February 22, 1845).

In 1851 the establishment was moved to a newly erected building on Third between Main and Market Streets. Its culinary fame was maintained with “Chesapeake Bay canvas-back ducks, New York oysters in the shell, venison and grouse from the prairies, mutton and beef from Bourbon Country, pheasants, quail, woodcock, plover, salmon, bass, etc.” (Louisville Daily Courier, July 19, 1851. After the move it became Walker’s Exchange and continued business until the early 1890s. – The Encyclopedia of Louisville

In the early 1860s, William H. Walker went in to the wholesale liquor business with William M. Ward dealing in pure old Bourbon and other Kentucky whiskies at 49 W. Market (Main) Street. In 1870 or so Frederick K. Walker, his oldest son, replaces William Ward. William H. also has a son named William M. working as a clerk. The elder William H. dies around 1874 and the business is carried on by Fred K. Walker and Frank Walker.

The Walker’s Tonic Bitters first make’s an appearance in 1869 and is advertised in Louisville as late as 1881.

As it turns out, Walker’s Tonic Bitters is listed in Bitters Bottles as W 13 and W 13.5. In this discovery, I did find that William H. Walker was selling a stomach bitters in 1849. The listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2 will be:

Newspaper Advertisement
W 13.x WALKER’S STOMACH BITTERS, Purchasers may always rely on the quality of the articles they may purchase at Walker’s City Exchange, The Louisville Daily Courier, July 18, 1849. See W 13 and W 13.5

Select Listings:

1834: The first tavern or inn to open in Louisville opened on Fourth Street near Main Street in August 1834 by William H. Walker.
1845: Now called Walker’s Restaurant Hotel and advertised that “all the substantials and delacies of this and other markets can be had at all hours“, Louisville Morning Courier and American Democrat, February 22, 1845.
1849: Newspaper Advertisement: Walker’s Stomach Bitters sold at Walker’s City Exchange. – The Louisville Daily Courier, Wednesday, July 18, 1849

1851: Walker’s Restaurant moved to a newly erected building on Third between Main and Market Streets. After the move it became Walker’s Exchange and continued business until the early 1890s
1860: Walker’s Exchange, 229 and 231 Third, The Louisville Directory and Business Advertiser
WalkersExchangeAd

1860 Advertisement for Walker’s Exchange, The Louisville Directory and Business Advertiser

1860: William H. Walker (Corwin & Co.,) 231 Third, The Louisville Directory and Business Advertiser
1865: W. H. Walker & Co. (William H. Walker and William M. Ward), whol. dealers in pure old Bourbon and other Kentucky whiskies, 49 W. Market, bet, 2d and 3d,  City Directory for Louisville, Kentucky
1866 & 1867: W. H. Walker & Co., (William H. Walker and William M. Ward), whol. dealers in wines and liquors, 49 W. Main, City Directory for Louisville, Kentucky
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Combination W. H. Walker & Co. advertisement and Walker’s Tonic Bitters advertisement – Louisville Daily Express, April 26, 1869

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W. H. Walker & Co. liquor advertisements – Louisville Daily Express, September 6, 1869

1870: W. H. Walker & Co. (William H. and Fred K. Walker), whol. liquor dealers, 25 W. MainCity Directory for Louisville, Kentucky *William M. Walker, clerk
1875: W. H. Walker & Co. (W. H. Walker’s estate and Fred K. Walker), whole liquors, 25 main, nr. 2d,  City Directory for Louisville, Kentucky
1875: Walker’s Exchange Hotel, John Cawein & Co. proprs; 81 3d. nr Market
1881: Walker & Co., (Fred K. and Frank Walker), whol liquors, 4 Main, abt 1st, City Directory for Louisville, Kentucky
1881: Walker’s Tonic and Cocktail Bitters, Walker & Co., proprs, 4 Main, ab 1st, City Directory for Louisville, Kentucky
1889: Walker v. Walker’s Ex’rs, Will to give testator’s son, one of three executors, the entire management of a business in which the testator and the son were partners, May 25, 1889. The Southwestern Reporter, 1889
Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Bourbon, History, Liquor Merchant, Spirits, Tonics, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments