The Winners – Manchester Display Photo Gallery

D_AwardsMikeFerdKenThe Winners – Manchester Display Photo Gallery

Displays & Displayers + Awards

D_Stoddard_FlagSolo

D_Gingerale_Grouping

Apple-Touch-IconAPushing out some pictures of the two displays that won awards at the FOHBC 2013 National Antique Bottle Show in Manchester, New Hampshire. Awards were announced this past Sunday afternoon near the conclusion of the show.

Congratulations are in order to Michael George and his Stoddard Glass Factory exhibit which won the “People’s Favorite Award”. This fantastic display anchored one of the three rooms used for the exhibitors and their material.

The second award was won by Ken Previtali and his incredible, jaw dropping, Ginger Ale Display. This exhibit won the prestigous “Most Educational Award”.

Look for more coverage of the other wonderful displays, an article in Bottles and Extras and videos of the displayers and their displays by Alan DeMaison.

All photographs by Scott Selenak (FOHBC Show Photographer)


Michael George

D_Stoddard_Shelves

Stoddard Glass Factory Production

** Peoples Favorite Award **

D_Stoddard_MikeAward

D_Stoddard_CabinetTall

D_Stoddard_LightCabinet

D_Stoddard_Shelves

D_Stoddard_Flags

D_Stoddard_Shards

D_Stoddard_Shelves2


Ken Previtali

D_Gingerale_Full

Ginger Ale Bottles / Go Withs

** Most Educational Award **

D_GingerAle_KenAward

D_Gingerale_Ken2

D_Gingerale_Display1

D_Gingerale_Display2

D_Gingerale_Display3

D_Gingerale_Display4

D_Gingerale_GreenCap

D_Gingerale_Holders

D_Gingerale_Labeled

D_Gingerale_Train

D_Gingerale_GroupA

D_Gingerale_GroupB

Posted in Bottle Shows, Club News, Collectors & Collections, Display, Early American Glass, Ephemera, FOHBC News, Ginger Ale, Glass Companies & Works, History, News, Soda Bottles | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

“Madness in Manchester” Auction Pictures

glswork

A_Crowd1

Apple-Touch-IconAThe Glass Works Auction #99 The “Madness in Manchester” Auction began online and concluded at the FOHBC 2013 National Antique Bottle Show in Manchester, New Hampshire on Saturday evening, July 20th 2013 (7:00 PM) at the Raddisson of New Hampshire Expo Center Ballroom. The room was packed and from all accounts was a GREAT success! Look for a full story in the upcoming September | October issue of Bottles and Extras. I wanted to get a few pictures out while the auction was so fresh in my mind.

A_CallingBids

John Pappas with Gallery at Knotty Pine called the auction (see above pic) in a clean efficient way as Glass Works was not licensed in New Hampshire.

GermanBalsamBitters

For you western bitters guys, I’m the one who won the German Balsam Bitters at that steep price. Love the bottle though and a portion of the money is for a good cause.

The FOHBC thanks Jim Hagenbuch, his staff and Glass Works Auctions for this First Class event. Glass Works Auctions will also be conducting the auction at the 2014 Lexington National.

WideMouthSunburst_ManchesterGW8x

The Wide Mouth Sunburst Flask was the piece receiving the highest hammer price. This extraordinary piece went to a Rocky Mountain area collector and broke the $25,000 line including auction house premium.

Signature Auction Piece

ManchesterLocomotiveWorks

Lot 100. Advertising Sign, ‘Manchester Locomotive Works / Manchester, N.H.’, New Hampshire, ca. 1865 – 1875, photograph on white stock showing a steam locomotive with the letters ‘C.B. & Q.R.R.’ (Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad), 28” by 23” in size, the wooden frame has age but may not be original. A photo credit for ‘J & M Prendergast, 258 Washington Street, Boston’ is below the lower edge of the picture. Some minor water stain exists around the edges, but no tears or creases. The Manchester Locomotive Works was in operation from 1855 to 1913.
The first locomotive built by the company was for the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. It was also the sole provider for engines used on the Mount Washington Cog Railway.

G A L L E R Y

All photographs by Scott Selenak (FOHBC Show Photographer)

A_Poster

A_JimWelcome

A_GWCrew1

A_Bottles1

A_Bottles2Fox

A_Bottles3

A_Bottles4

A_Bottles5

A_Bottles6

A_Bottles7

A_CallingBids2

A_Bid1

A_Crowd2

A_Crowd3

A_Crowd4

A_Crowd5

A_Crowd6

A_Crowd7

A_Crowd8

A_Crowd9

Posted in Auction News, Bitters, Bottle Shows, Club News, FOHBC News, News | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Manchester Seminar Pictures

ManchesterCalendar

Manchester, NH Seminars

Apple-Touch-IconAI wanted to get some pictures up as quickly as I could. Returned today from Manchester with Elizabeth. The seminars, simply put, were awesome, informative and well attended. It was truly hard to select a topic each of the three hour periods. Look for more coverage in Bottles and Extras.

All photographs by Scott Selenak (FOHBC Show Photographer)

Seminar Topics and Presenters

SeminarSchedule


Connecticut Glasshouse Rarities

Rick Ciralli

RickCiralliTalk_8

Rick Ciralli was born in Springfield, Massachusetts and was raised in New Britain, Connecticut. He currently resides with his family in Bristol, Connecticut and is the Vice President of Remarketing for North Mill Equipment Finance Company. In 1976, on a weekend in Vermont, he stopped at a tag sale, bought an old Seltzer water bottle with an 1870s patent date on the pewter closure and got bit bad by “the bottle bug”. After collecting in many categories in his earlier days, he has settled down to studying and collecting bottles, flasks and glass from the Connecticut Glasshouses of Pitkin, Coventry, West Willington, Westford and New London. He also has an antiques business and hobby nickname under “RCGLASS”

Rick is a past president and current member of the Somers Antique Bottle Club. He is also a past president and current Vice President of the Pitkin Glass Works, Inc., with affiliations at the Manchester, Coventry and Willington historical societies. Also a current member of the FOHBC and the Connecticut Museum of Glass in Coventry, Connecticut, Rick has done numerous presentations on Connecticut Glass in a variety of forums throughout the state and beyond. Rick was a featured speaker at the Eastfield Village workshops on Pitkin glass and was the keynote speaker for a Manchester Historical Society’s event on early glassmaking. Rick has also displayed portions of his collection at past bottle shows, club meetings and historical societies. He has also studied and consulted on New England glass at Old Sturbridge Village and on early glass in the American Decorative Arts department at the Yale Art Gallery. Rick has also written numerous articles on Connecticut glass for Antique Bottle & Glass Collector magazine, Bottles and Extra and for many clubs and organizations. He is also very connected to the bottle shows in New England and a regular at the Keene and Baltimore shows. Rick’s passion for Connecticut glass is obvious and his enthusiasm is contagious!

S_RC_Title

S_RC_RickPointing

S_RC_Crowd

S_RC_Crowd2


Last Links to the Past 20th Century South Jersey Glass

Thomas Haunton

Thomas C. Haunton has pursued career paths in two separate fields, following his favorite interests in high school, music and American history. Ironically, it was his travels as a musician that would eventually take him into the field of history, and in a strange twist, back to his southern New Jersey roots.

ThomasHauntonSeminar

Tom attended the New England Conservatory of Music, and for 35 years until his recent retirement from performing, lead the active life of a professional French horn player, touring throughout the United States, Canada, Japan, Korea, and New Zealand as a member of the Boston Pops and numerous other performing ensembles. He serves on the music faculty of Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, a position he has held since 1988.

In the early 1980s, Tom began collecting violin bottles, a decorative connection to his love of music. At the suggestion of a family friend, Tom visited the Clevenger Brothers Glass Works in Clayton, New Jersey, where he found his violin bottles and a multitude of other glass pieces. It was then that the American history bug found its way back into Tom’s life, beginning his thirty years of collecting and the study of American glass.

As a historian specializing in glass made in southern New Jersey, Tom is the author of two books; Tippecanoe and E. G. Booz Too!, a book about cabin bottles, and the first volume of a larger work entitled Last Links to the Past 20th Century South Jersey Glass, as well as over a dozen articles about glass. His Last Links to the Past book has been described as a “spectacular piece of research and writing” by Dwight Lanmon, former director of both the Winterthur Museum in Wilmington, Delaware, and the Corning Museum of Glass in New York.

Recognized as an authority on 20th century American Glass, Tom has appeared as a guest lecturer for historical societies and other organizations throughout the Northeastern United States and New England. He assisted with the 1987 Clevenger Brothers Glass Works The Persistence of Tradition exhibition and catalog by the Museum of American Glass at Wheaton Village in Millville, New Jersey, and presented his own exhibition, The Colorful Clevengers, at the Gloucester County Historical Society in Woodbury, New Jersey in 1992, writing and designing an accompanying catalog and slideshow.

Tom appears at numerous Northeast US antique and collectible shows as the owner/operator of Jerseyana Antiques and Collectibles. He is working on the second volume of Last Links to the Past 20th Century South Jersey Glass, and writes a quarterly column, Jerseyana Corner, for Antique Bottle & Glass Collector magazine. He resides in Wilmington, Massachusetts with his wife, Robin and daughter, Aline.

Tom’s presentation is called Last Links to the Past 20th Century South Jersey Glass. Based on his two-volume work of the same title, the presentation will cover the history and production of 20th century New Jersey glassblowers such as the Clevenger brothers, Emil Larson, and others, as well as glass operations such as Beacon, Dell, Old Jersey, Downer, the WPA, and more! Can you tell the “real” from the “repro?” Find out who made those violin and Booz bottles everyone looks for, not to mention the early freeblown South Jersey and Stiegel reproductions and even paperweights!

S_TH_Screen

S_TH_Tom

S_TH_TomTalking

S_TH_UpClose

S_TH_Crowd


American mold blown tableware, 1815-35: A fresh look at “Blown Three Mold”

Ian Simmonds

IanSimmonds

George and Helen McKearin’s 1941 book American Glass brought order to the two earliest categories of American molded glass: the large variety of figured and historical flasks, and the equally large and varied group of mold blown tableware. Both were first made around 1815 but while flasks were made until at least the Civil War, mold blown tableware was gradually replaced by pressed glass starting in 1828. Both categories contain great rarities and both attracted high prices from early collectors.

Ian Simmonds ‘fresh look’ at “blown three mold” will start by showing what is unique about this glass. Just like historical flasks, this glass was blown, shaped and patterned in hinged molds. However, a great many pieces of blown three mold were further shaped by hand, leading to many other forms including bowls, pitchers, tumblers and salt dishes. Next, Ian will show some of the many varieties of blown three mold and how Helen McKearin went about classifying them. Finally, he will share his new research about which pieces were made first and which came later. In particular, Ian will present the first TEN recorded examples of tableware molds that were modified, and help clean up the story of which blown three mold was made at Keene and when they made it.

Ian Simmonds is a leading researcher and dealer in early American glass. He has published many articles and given many talks including on early cut glass, blown three mold, early glassmaking inventions, and Midwestern glass. His most important rediscovery is of New York City machine cut glass of the 1850s, which is the subject of his fall 2013 article in The Corning Museum of Glass’s Journal of Glass Studies.

Ian started collecting as a child in England. His first collection was of United States postage stamps. He moved to New York in 1995 and bought his first piece of glass – a GIII-21 blown three mold dish – in 1997. Ian became a full time glass researcher/dealer at the start of 2012. Before that Ian worked at IBM’s T.J. Watson Research Center where he researched and designed software for use by business and IT consultants. He is joint inventor of many issued and pending software-related patents. He lives in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Ian’s website is at www.iansimmonds.com.

S_IS_ScreenStart

S_IS_Display2

S_IS_IanTalking

S_IS_IanTalkingHand

S_IS_Crowd2

S_IS_Crowd3


New Hampshire Glass Factories and Products

Michael George

Michael George was born and raised in New Hampshire, and currently resides with his family in the countryside of New Boston. He has a bachelor’s degree in Commercial Art from Notre Dame College, and is currently employed as a Marketing Director. His passion for American glass started at an early age, as a collector of medicine bottles that were discovered at local auctions or unearthed in old dumps. Over the years, his expertise and knowledge for bottles expanded into historical flasks and early American glass wares, as he researched the production of 18th and 19th century glasshouses throughout New England.

MichaelGeorgeSeminar

Michael has become an avid collector and premiere antique glass dealer. In 2004, he launched a website, www.bottleshow.com, an online venue for buyers and sellers of bottles, flasks and early American glass. He has also conducted numerous lectures for historical institutions and produced formal appraisals for collectors or estate settlements, while actively coaching new collectors in the hobby. His glass articles have been published in such magazines and newsprints as Antique Bottle & Glass Collector, Bottles & More, Unravel The Gavel, and Antiques & Arts Weekly. Recently, Michael served as organizer and curator of the New Hampshire Glassmakers Exhibit at the Peterborough Historical Society. He is a member of the Federation of Historic Bottle Collectors, member of the Yankee Bottle Club, and member of the Merrimack Valley Bottle Club. He is also very active in the bottle and glass show circuit, participating in over a dozen events annually throughout the East Coast.

S_MG_BigFish S_MG_FullHouse S_MG_Projector S_MG_Seminar2


Mount Vernon Glass Co. – History, Products & People

Brian Wolff & Mark Yates

BrianWolff_MtVernonPose

Brian P. Wolff is a technical data analyst for a high voltage testing and engineering firm in Central New York. He makes his home in Sherrill, New York. Brian is a current FOHBC member, has been involved in bottle collecting since 1973. His introduction into collecting began with bottle digging in Batavia, New York and the surrounding Western New York area. Immediately interested in learning more about the bottles he was finding; he volunteered his time at the Holland Land Office Museum in Batavia and as a teenager was the youngest member of the now defunct Tonanwanda Valley Glass & Bottle Collectors Association, at that time. During his high school years he spent much of his time performing historical research and trying to located more places to dig.

Brian enjoys collecting pontiled (NY) medicines, Saratoga type mineral waters and other early New York State bottles. His collecting took a brief hiatus in the 80’s while moving about the state with work and raising a family. His affection for bottles, glass and historical research was rekindled when he relocated, in 1988, to the town in which the Mount Vernon Glass Company had operated. Brian has been excavating at Mount Vernon for a number of years and has spent a tremendous number of hours researching and gathering shards for identification; logging 28 visits to the site just last year alone. He has dedicated the last three years exclusively to researching the history, people and products in an effort to shed new light on this factory.

His presentation on the Mount Vernon Glass Co. will briefly touch on other early Central New York glass houses and will provide information on key people and a historic timeline of the Mt. Vernon/Granger operation. We will walk in the footsteps of pioneer researcher Harry Hall White and rediscover the evidence he found in the 1920’s. Flasks, medicine and utility bottles, blown three mold patterns and other item will be discussed, confirmed and New Discoveries will be revealed!

Additional commentary will also be provided by Mark Yates, collector, researcher and enthusiast of early Central New York glass. Mark brings a wealth of knowledge on early CNY bottles and has been collaborating with Brian, for the last four years, with shard identification and additional research.

S_BW_Jefferson S_BW_MarkToo S_BW_Pointing S_BW_Rapt


Early 20th Century Milk Marketing In New England

Jim George

Jim George

Jim George was born in Nashua, New Hampshire and raised in Milford, New Hampshire, where he currently lives with his family. Jim’s dad, Ernie George, was an avid milk bottle collector and dairy agent for the UNH Cooperative Extension for over 30 years, as well as the co-author of the first New Hampshire milk bottle book “Milk Bottle Collector’s Guide to New Hampshire and Vermont Dairies” with A. B. “Jerry” Jerard. After Ernie’s passing in 1998, Jim has carried on the milk bottle tradition as a passionate collector and dealer of all things “dairy related”. He spent several years working with a New Hampshire team of milk bottle collectors to publish a new reference book “New Hampshire Milk Bottles”, authored by Richard Clark, Jr, now in its Second Edition. Jim has travelled around New Hampshire giving milk bottle talks and lectures to various organizations and historical societies.

Jim currently works as an Antique Sales Associate at the New Hampshire Antique Co-op in Milford, New Hampshire, as well as being self-employed as an antique dealer and mobile disc jockey. He is also the current treasurer of the Merrimack Valley Antique Bottle Club, host club for this year’s FOHBC National Antique Bottle Show.

S_JG_JimGeorge

S_JG_Crowd

S_JG_MilkCar

S_JG_Milks

S_JG_MilkSexy

S_JG_TableDisplay


Markings & Seals Embossed on Milk Bottles

Al Morin

Al Morin, Merrimack Valley Bottle Club member, longtime member “The Milk Route” National Association Milk Bottle Collectors, and 40 year glass enthusiast who has spoken about milks and a variety of glass topics at clubs in Massachusetts and West Virginia. Al is a longstanding supporter of the West Virginia Museum of American Glass in Weston, West Virginia.

He will speak about “Markings & Seals Embossed on Milk Bottles” and will also answer collectors questions on the subject. This should interest all bottle collectors, as there are many embossings found on milk bottles from all over the United States.

S_AM_Al2 S_AM_AlMorin S_AM_Milks2 S_AM_Shirt S_AM_Solo S_MilkCards


Mineral Waters from Yankee Country

George Waddy

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

George Waddy has been collecting Saratoga-type mineral water bottles since the late 1960’s. He has been a member of the Hudson Valley and Genessee Valley Bottle Clubs, and is past president of the Saratoga-type Bottle Collectors Society. He has presented seminars at two previous national shows and at numerous historical and museum societies across New York. He has also written over 200 articles on collecting bottles in various hobby magazines, including a column on “Saratogas” in the Bottle and Glass Collector magazine through the late 1960’s to the early 2000’s. The seminar will include information on identifying the forms and ages of various Saratoga bottles, as well as illustrations of “color-runs” and actual examples of the range of colors and rarities available in these popular Northeastern bottles. Some folky stories about interesting mineral water finds in his 40+ years of collecting will add some variety to the program!  Research materials will also be suggested and a brief hand-out with key information to assist both newer and advanced collectors will be available.

S_GW_GeorgeWaddy

S_GW_CabinetHand

S_GW_Crowd

S_GW_CrowdTrio

S_GW_GeorgeCabinet

S_GW_Rock&Bottles


Uncovering Demijohns

David Hoover

davidhoover

David Hoover lives in Michigan with his wife of 38 years, Shirley and their four cats. He retired in 2012 after more than forty years working in the communication technology field.

He has had an interest in bottles for many years. However, he only became a serious collector after finding an early Hutchison bottle in the Tattabawassee River in eastern Michigan. When he saw a demijohn at an antique show, he was hooked. “I have no idea why that particular style intrigued me, but it did.” David said. In addition to demijohns, David also collects early blown glass.

He has been collecting and studying demijohns and related go withs for over 15 years. His collection spans all types, colors and sizes from many different countries. He displayed some of his collection at the 2005 FOHBC National Antique Bottle Show in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He regularly sells at bottle shows in the Midwest and at National Shows.

David is an FOHBC member and a regular contributor to Antique Bottles & Glass Collector magazine and is responsible for the Heard it Through the Grapevine monthly column.

S_DH_DavidHoover

S_DH_Talking2

S_DH_Talking4

S_DH_Crowd2

S_DH_Crowd3


Posted in Advice, Bottle Shows, Club News, Collectors & Collections, Demijohns, Early American Glass, FOHBC News, Freeblown Glass, Glass Companies & Works, Glass Makers, History, Milk & Creamers, Mineral Water, News, Soda Water | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

2013 FOHBC Semi-Annual Board Meeting – Manchester, NH

BM_All

The semi-annual FOHBC Board Meeting kicks off at the 2013 National Antique Bottle Show in Manchester, New Hampshire on Friday morning from 8:00 am to 12:00 noon.

2013 FOHBC Semi-Annual Board Meeting Manchester, New Hampshire

19 July 2014 – Manchester

For four straight hours, the FOHBC 2012-2014 term elected board members met to have their semi-annual board meeting. The other annual meeting was held earlier in the year (03 March 2013) prior to the Baltimore Antique Bottle Show. All board members were present with the exception of Martin Van-Zant (Bottles and Extras Editor), Jack Hewitt, Southern Region Director (arriving to show late due to family emergency), Jamie Houdeshell, 2nd Vice President (family emergency), Ed Kuskie (Northeast Region Director) and John Panek (Director at Large).

The time went by fast with only about 60% of the agenda being covered. The balance will be covered during the next monthly board conference call. All FOHBC meeting notes are posted for review at FOHBC Notes of Record.

Microsoft Word - FOHBC_Manchester2013Agenda.doc

See Meeting Agenda

I can assure you, some major new inroads were made during this meeting. Look forward to upcoming announcements.

Note: All photographs are by Scott Selenak, official FOHBC Manchester show photographer. Scot flew in from Los Angeles, California.

BM_FerdinandMeyer

FOHBC President, Ferdinand Meyer V (Houston, Texas) listens to various reports and comments.

BM_Papers

Manchester meeting agenda and brand new 2014 National Antique Bottle Show contracts being passed around for Lexington, Kentucky.

BM_Mike&Maureen

Manchester co-chairs Michael George and Maureen Crawford were invited to give a last minute show preparation report.

BM_Program

2013 National Antique Bottle Show programs being passed around and reviewed. Michael George led this project with outstanding results.

BM_AlanDeMaison

Bob Ferraro, FOHBC 1st Vice President, and Alan DeMaison, FOHBC Business Manager. Bob is from Boulder City, Nevada while Alan is from Painesville, Ohio.

BM_AlanDeMaison2

Alan DeMaison, FOHBC Business Manager, giving FOHBC business and operational report. Alan notes an all-time membership high.

BM_BobFerraro

Bob Ferraro, 1st Vice President, listens on to Alan DeMaison.

BM_TomPhillips

Tom Phillips, FOHBC Conventions Director. Tom has led the effort for the 2013 Manchester show. Tom also set up the upcoming 2014, Lexington, Kentucky and 2015, Chattanooga, Tennessee National Shows. Tom resides in Memphis, Tennessee.

BM_DaveMaryo

Dave Maryo (Western Region Director) comments on a more direct relationship with FOHBC clubs. Dave is the Los Angeles Antique Bottle Club president.

BM_DickWatson

Hall of Famer and bottle legend, Dick Watson (FOHBC Historian). Dick resides in Medford, New Jersey.

BM_GaryBeatty

Gary Beatty, FOHBC Treasurer. Gary is from Northport, Florida.

BM_GeneBradberry

Past FOHBC President and future Hall of Famer, Gene Bradberry (At Large Director). Gene is from Memphis, Tennessee.

BM_GeorgeTalking

Board members hearing about last minute show preparations from show co-chair Michael George.

BM_Group

A lot of history and great bottle leadership behind these guys.

BM_JimBender

Jim Bender, FOHBC Membership Director. Jim resides in Sprakers, New York.

BM_JimBerry

Jim Berry, FOHBC Secretary. Keeping notes which are always posted on the FOHBC web site. Jim resides in St. Johnsville, New York.

BM_JohnPastor

John Pastor, Director at Large (New Hudson, Michigan). Most of us know John from American Glass Gallery Auctions and Antique Bottle & Glass Collector.

BM_PamSelenek

Pam Selenak, FOHBC Public Relations Director and John Pastor. Pam came in from Orange County, California.

BM_RandeeKaiser

Randee Kaiser, FOHBC Midwest Director. Randee is from Holts Summit, Missouri.

BM_SheldonBaugh

Sheldon Baugh, FOHBC Merchandise Director (Russellville, Kentucky) next to Bob Ferraro. Sheldon Baugh and Randee Kaiser will be the Lexington National co-chairs.

Posted in Bottle Shows, Club News, FOHBC News, News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

2013 Manchester Banquet Picture Gallery

CrowdBanner

FOHBC 2013 National Antique Bottle Show Banquet

Apple-Touch-IconAI wanted to get a few pictures of the 2013 FOHBC Manchester Antique Bottle Show Banquet out as fast as I could. Look for an upcoming article in Bottles and Extras. Great turn-out, cocktail party, meeting old and new friends, good food, awards, speaker and off to the New England Bottle Battle.

All Photography by FOHBC Official Show Photographer, Scott Selenak (Los Angeles)

COCKTAIL PARTY

CoctailParty3

Healthy crowd at cocktail party

CoctailParty2

Many conversations with old and new friends at cocktail party

CoctailParty

Banquet cocktail party

Alan&Bob

Cocktail Party before the Banquet

RedWine

An nice Pink Zinfandel pour

DaveMaryo

Cocktail Party – Some serious talk with FOHBC Western Director, Dave Maryo (Los Angeles Antique Bottle Club President)

EnteringBallroom

Call to Banquet seating

WELCOMES

Welcome

Manchester co-chairs Michael George and Maureen Crawford welcoming the crowd

IMG_0150

Ferdinand Meyer V, FOHBC President, welcoming Federation crowd to Banquet. Good things ahead.

DINNER

FoodService1

Dinner service

FoodService2

White glove service. In good hands at the Radisson Manchester

FoodService3

Full tables

Desert

Dessert Time

SPOTTED IN THE CROWD

Aprill

Legendary Charles Aprill (New Orleans) sits in rapt attention.

Blakeman2

Alan Blakeman (United Kingdom)

PamJeff

Pam Selenak (Orange County), FOHBC Public Relations Director and Jeff Wichmann (Sacramento), American Bottle Auctions President

RaptAttention

Bob Ford (Baltimore), Steve Charing (Baltimore) and Pam Selenak (Orange County), FOHBC Public Relations Director.

ThreeAmigos

Three great Georgia guys. John Joiner (Atlanta), Mike Newman (Augusta) and FOHBC Southeast Director, Jack Hewitt (Lawrenceville, GA).

KEYNOTE SPEAKER

MarkVuono

The legendary Mark Vuono (Stanford) is Keynote Speaker

BenderQuestion

Jim Bender (FOHBC Membership Director) makes a comment about Mark Vuono.

ElizJerSandor

Elizabeth Meyer (Houston), Jerry Forbes (Carmel) and Sandor Fuss (Denver) listing to keynote speaker, Mark Vuono

AWARDS

AlanBlakeman

Alan Blakeman from the United Kingdom winning the FOHBC Hall of Fame award from FOHBC President Ferdinand Meyer V and one of his nominators, Ralph Finch.

AlanDeMaison

Alan DeMaison (FOHBC Business Manager) receiving the 2013 President’s Award

BlakemanAward2

Alan Blakeman (UK) accepting the FOHBC Hall of Fame Award

GeneBradberry

Gene Bradberry (Memphis) receives the FOHBC Hall of Fame Award

JamesCampiglia

James Campiglia (Butte, Montana) receives, 1st Place Best Show Flyer/Poster award. Hug by Pam Selenak.

Rogers

Legends, Jim and Joyce Rogers receiving special FOHBC Award.

SteveCharing

Steve Charing (Baltimore) receives 1st Place award for best club web site. Baltimore Antique Bottle Club.

ANNOUNCING THE BOTTLE BATTLE

MichaelGeorge

Michael George (Manchester Show co-chair) dresses up in period and reminds everyone that the New England Bottle Battle follows the Banquet in an adjoining Hall.

Posted in Bottle Shows, Club News, FOHBC News, News, Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

2013 Bottle Battle Highlights

MichaelGeorge

Michael George (show co-chair along with Maureen Crawford) was the Master of Ceremonies for the Bottle Battle. Mike dressed the part and did a great job.

New England Bottle Battle

Apple-Touch-IconAI wanted to get some posts and pictures out as quickly as I could. It has been insane here in a good way. A few pictures have been put up on the PRG facebook page. The Bottle Battle was another great event and was hugely popular. This was similar to last years Bottle Shootout at the Reno Expo. Next year it will be the “Run for the Roses” in Lexington, Kentucky for the FOHBC 2014 National Antique Bottle Show. Look for full coverage in the September | October issue of Bottles and Extras.

All applicants had to fill out and sign a form for liability purposes.

All Photographs by FOHBC Official Show Photographer Scott Selenak

FOHBC_Bottle_Battle_1

New England Bottle Battle marketing material designed by Michael George. This design was used on all Federation applications. Show co-chair.

NewEnglandBottleBattle

New England Bottle Battle marketing material used by Norman C. Heckler for their applications. They were the sponsors for the event.


GALLERY

Registration

Fed member and volunteer Dana Charlton-Zarro signing in our youngest applicant, Nicholas Wrobleski.

CheckInTrio

Applicant sign-in pose. Janet George (left), Dana Charlton-Zarro (center) and Maureen Crawford (right, show co-chair)

Nicholas

Applicant Nicholas Wrobleski has numerous submittals. He is one of our newest fed members.

WhimsicalJudging

Judging Whimsical Objects. Look at this crazy handled cathedral pickle. (Steve Swiechowicz, Tom Marshall and Eric Correla)

FullHouse

Great turn-out for the New England Bottle Battle.

WinnerWhim

Winner of the Whimsical Objects category. Handled E. Waters, Troy, NY ink (possible creamer w/o spout)

KevinWinner

Kevin Sives winner of the Whimsical Objects category gets his acrylic award in the shape of New Hampshire.

MedicineJudging

Some serious judging for the Colored Medicine category. Jimmy Chebalo (left), Holly Noordsy (center) and Mark Yates (right)

MedicineCabinet

Final three contenders for the Colored Medicine category in a light cabinet.

AprillWinner

Winner of the Colored Medicine category. The legendary Dr. Charles Aprill (New Orleans) with his prized Dr. Wynkoop’s Sarsaparilla.

UtilityJudging2

Some serious judging for Utility Bottles category – Brian Wade (left), Greg Bair (center) and Jeff Noordsy (right)

OddUtility2

Gorgeous cylinder in the Utility Bottle category.

UtilityTrio

Top three contenders in the Utility Bottle category. The multi-sided bottle on the top won.

CiralliWinner

The colorful Rick Ciralli, winner of the Utility Bottle category. Multi-sided Connecticut utility.

Posted in Bottle Shows, Club News, Early American Glass, FOHBC News, Freeblown Glass, Inks, Medicines & Cures, News, Utility Bottles, Whimsies | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

The extraordinary Pony Bitters from St. Louis

PonyBittersGroup

“the bottle came out of an estate. The gal that had it dealt in vintage cloths and didn’t know the value. She almost listed it on ebay with a Buy it Now option of $50”

PONY BITTERS – ST. LOUIS

The extraordinary Pony Bitters from St. Louis

18 July 2013

Apple-Touch-IconAEllen Haas Faulkenberry posted the above picture of some killer, early St. Louis bottles recently on Facebook. Of course I recognized the only known example of the Pony Bitters. This bottle was found somewhere around 2002/2003 in Las Cruces, New Mexico and was auctioned off on ebay shortly thereafter. According to Ellen, “the bottle came out of an estate. The gal that had it dealt in vintage cloths and didn’t know the value. She almost listed it on ebay with a Buy it Now option of $50”.

PonyBittersEbay

Amberish 9″, 6-sided J.B. BLACK & Co. / PONY BITTERS / ST LOUIS, MO. sold on eBay by vistadeoro in late 2003 – images cropped from Southeast Bottle Club News | Jan Feb 2004 digital newsletter (Reggie Lynch)

Back in late 2003, I remember being so excited about this bottle on ebay that I drove in to Houston to my office from Peachridge. I thought it was a Saturday morning or afternoon. You see my internet connection out in the county was horrific at the time. Well I set up at my work station and anxiously waited to enter my bid at the right moment. Gues what, I was so nervous I keyed in the wrong amount and screwed it up. By the time I righted my bid amount, the auction was over. I believe Bill Ham was also doing the same from California as he was the underbidder.

Bill and I both finally saw this bottle at the 2007 FOHBC National Antique Bottle Show in Collinsville, Illinois. I remember being really impressed while Bill seemed a little underwhelmed. Make no mistake, this is a killer, pontiled bitters that is a one-of-a-kind example and in a shape and form unlike no other bitters. I suppose that I am glad the Pony Bitters is in its’ home locale St. Louis if it could not be in Houston. One of these days.

Anyway, the Carlyn Ring and Bill Ham listing for this bottle in Bitters Bottle Supplement is as follows:

P 121.5  PONY BITTERS
J. B. BLACK & CO’S // PONY BITTERS // ST LOUIS Mo // f // f // f //
9 x 2 3/4
Six sided, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, Metallic pontil mark, Extremely rare
Example was found in Las Cruces, New Mexico

So far, just about the only information I can find is this listing below for J. B. Black & Co, liquor dealers in a 1857 St. Louis City Directory. At first I suspected that this bottle was referencing the Pony Express but that did not start until 1860. It also reminds me of my uniquely shaped Bartlett’s Excelsior Bitters which was found in a stagecoach stop in Texas. It is also the only known example. Both, absolutely killer bottles.

JB_Black&CoSL

J. B. Black & Co. Liquor Dealers, 76 N. Levee listing – Kennedy’s St. Louis City Directory, R.V. Kennedy & Company, 1857

PONY BITTERS CLOSE-UPS

PonyBitters1f

Pony Bitters – Faulkenberry Collection

PonyBitters2f

Pony Bitters – Faulkenberry Collection

PonyBitters3f

Pony Bitters – Faulkenberry Collection

PonyBitters4f

Pony Bitters – Faulkenberry Collection

PonyBitters5f

Pony Bitters – Faulkenberry Collection

PonyBitters6f

Pony Bitters – Faulkenberry Collection

All pictures in the top gallery provided by Ellen Haas Faulkenberry. All pictures cropped by PRG.

Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Digging and Finding, eBay | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Wicker Visit – Austin Healey’s and Elephants

HealeyMampeART

Wicker Visit Austin Healey’s and Elephants

18 July 2013 (R•043019)

Frank&FrankWicker

Apple-Touch-IconAAs I work my way east to Manchester, New Hampshire for the FOHBC 2013 National Antique Bottle Show, I had the chance last night to run from Fort Wayne, Indiana, where I was completing some business, up to the Kendallville area to visit long-time bitters collector Frank Wicker, his son Frank Wicker, Jr. and his charming wife, Cheryl. Many of you may know Frank from his Bottle Pickers web site.

JensenHealeyFrankCreamfront

The Wickers are also super passionate about restoring Austin Healey’s and had quite a few spectacular examples to look at in their restoration sheds. Every car was a different model, color and had a set of special details. Frank says his business is Austin Healey and his passion is bottles. Not a bad way to spend your time. Their Austin Healey web site is Wickerized Healey where you can really see some great classic car pictures in his gallery.

BottleTreeFrank2

Finding their location was easy as Frank runs Wicker’s Body and Paint Shop and the sign out front tipped me off that I had arrived. Their property is really cool and the grounds were anchored visually with a cobalt blue bottle tree. I also liked some onions that were hanging on the porch drying. Kind of reminded me of Zulu Bitters and shrunken heads.

HangingOnionsWicker

When I went in to their house, it was a bit overwhelming as the living room and adjoining rooms are full of glass bottle cabinets with cases and displays in every possible area. The light was coming from the west windows, and with the mirrors and reflections, it was quite a wow factor. I probable could have spent many more hours looking at all the cool bottles Frank has dug or ‘picked’ over the years.

MampeFamily_Wicker

Besides seeing some really nice labeled bitters like the Severa’s Stomach Bitters, Lincoln Bitters and King Solomon Stomach Bitters, and an unlisted Polo Bitters from Australia, I think I focused most on the Carl and Ferdinand Mampe bitters and liquor bottles with the prominant embossed elephant. The Mampe’s were primarily Frank Jr’s, and he had just about every possible shape, size and variant of the German bitters. Really quite fascinating to look at all these rather crude bottles and compare the embossings.  It seemed that all of the elephants were slightly different. Frank has also written extensively on the Mampe subject.

The new listing for the forthcoming Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

M 23 L . . . Mampe’s Bitters
// b // (motif elephant enclosed in an oval) / CARL MAMPE / BERLIN // f // f // f //
8 1/4 x 4 3/8 (4) 3/8
Square, Green (various shades), LTC
Additional sizes of this square bottle are 2 3/16, 3 ¼, 4 ¼, 61/8, 7 ¼, 7 ½, 8 ½ and 9 inches tall. There are differences in the elephants placement and embossing. All are labeled bitters.

Read: The Carl Mampe Liquor Empire (Part 1)

Read: Ferdinand Johnann Mampe Liquor Empire (Part 2)

ChangBeer

What I nice way to start this great bottle weekend meeting passinate collectors and enjoying some beautiful glass. The Wickers collect so many things that you can see they have fun and fit the bill as to what a collector is and how they share their passion. It was also nice to see Frank pass so much off to his son who is almost just as knowlegable and passionate. I thought it was ironic, when I had dinner later by myself at a Thai restaurant and ordered a beer, that my my Thai beer was a Chang emblazened with two facing elephants on the label. The Wicker’s allowed me to take a few pictures and share on the web site.

W I C K E R   V I S I T   G A L L E R Y

IMG_4543 IMG_4549 IMG_4554 IMG_4560 IMG_4562 IMG_4567 IMG_4569 IMG_4575 IMG_4578 PoloBittersFrank SeverasFrank1

IMG_4574 IMG_4581 IMG_4584

Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Display, Liquor Merchant, News | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

43rd Annual Atlanta Antique Bottle Show

JackAtlantaConst

Jack Hewitt (left) and John Joiner

43rd Annual Atlanta Antique Bottle Show

by Jack Hewitt

On June 8, 2013 the 43rd Annual Atlanta Antique Bottle Show was held in Smyrna, Georgia, just 15 minutes north of Atlanta. There were 80+ sales tables and Jim Sanders, long time Atlanta collector, displayed what is probably the largest collection of Atlanta bottles ever assembled. Howard Pousner writer and Phil Skinner photographer for the Atlanta Journal and Constitution, came by my house and interviewed co-show chairman John Joiner and myself, a couple of weeks before the show. The result was a 2-page article that appeared on the 6th of June in both the Atlanta Journal and Constitution print addition as well as the online addition about the show and bottle collecting in general. We had no idea how the article would affect our show. Read Article

We were overwhelmed with the positive response, we had over 40 early admissions and a steady flow of public all day, many of which had never been to, or heard of, a bottle show in their life. The final tally was over 400 thru the door.

One gentleman brought in a Canadian Mist bottle that I believe he may have finished the night before the show.

We offered free appraisals and approximately 75 people came thru the doors with bottles in tow. Among the bottles we appraised were the usual suspects including a very pretty, light cobalt blue, Phillips Milk of Magnesia, a sample Listerine from the early 1900s, an olive Bitterquil, mason jars, etc. One gentleman brought in a Canadian Mist bottle that I believe he may have finished the night before the show. I told him the kiss of death in old bottles being valuable is usually a screw top, though there are exceptions to every rule (I thought of some really nice screw top label under glass bottles). Then his next bottle was a Coke bottle with a bar code on the side of it. I think it may have been used as a mixer for the Canadian Mist, I had told him earlier that there were always exceptions, but I could not think of an empty bottle with a bar code that might be valuable.

When he came back to get his prized bottles his ex-wife told him she had sold them at a yard sale for a little of nothing.

The very next person to pull out a bottle for appraisal was a lady in her 80’s who pulled out a really nice, amber, Kelly’s Old Cabin Bitters, and then she pulled out a green Flaccus Brothers fruit jar. When I told her the Kelly’s was a $2,000 bottle, she and her daughter both were excited and shocked. For the first time in my life I felt like one of the Keno Brothers on the Antiques Road Show. Another couple brought in four figural bitters, a Plantation, a Fish, an Old Homestead, and an ear of corn, all amber but they were mint. They had an interesting story. The lady said her parents had gone thru a divorce several years ago and her father had left the bottles in the house when he left. When he came back to get his prized bottles his ex-wife told him she had sold them at a yard sale for a little of nothing. Her father passed away a few years later thinking someone had bought his bottles at a yard sale but after her mother had died they were cleaning out her house and they found his prized bottles tightly wrapped up safe and sound in her mothers sock drawer. She was excited when we told her what the bottles were worth.

I threw them in the back of my truck before the show and we gave a bottle to all the children who came to the show.

It was also nice meeting Larry and Beth Schubach. Beth has been collecting bottles since she was a little girl and had no idea that bottle shows existed until she read about it in the newspaper. She said she had a great time and wanted to know when the next one was, because she couldn’t wait. I had a few boxes of miscellaneous bottles that I had from a collection I bought that had been in my garage for sometime. I threw them in the back of my truck before the show and we gave a bottle to all the children who came to the show. We gave away about 50 bottles to the kids and I still had a couple of boxes left. I told Beth if she would like the rest of them after the show closed she was welcome to them. I just received a note thanking me for them.

All the dealers at the show that I was able to talk to said they had a great show, and they could not get over how many people came to the show. The newspaper article really was a boost. I received several thank you cards and emails from dealers who said it was the best show they had ever done. As always the BBQ lunch catered by Low Country BBQ was a big hit.

Perry Driver came up from Florida and said he had a great show and couldn’t wait until next year. We had some first time dealers like Roscoe Googe who was recently inducted into the state of Georgia High School Sports Hall of Fame (he was a long time track coach at Marietta High School). He has been collecting soda bottles for several years and has attended the show as a buyer for a several years but because of his schedule he could not set up. Now that he is retired, he was able to get a sales table this year.

Shelby West, who is a folk potter from north Georgia, and has been a featured artist at the “folkfest” folk art show in Atlanta..

Shelby West, who is a folk potter from north Georgia, and has been a featured artist at the “folkfest” folk art show in Atlanta, set up with some of his pieces including a few face jugs that he is known for. Jim Scharnagel from Gainesville, Georgia and Tom and Mabel Hicks from Eatonton, Georgia set up with their usual selection of quality bottles and pottery. Tom Lines and James Smith came over from Birmingham and also had some nice things. Vic Svenson had some of his recent findings from a dig in Charleston. Ed Provine was able to come over from Memphis this year after a couple years having scheduling conflicts.

Mike Newman came over from Augusta as an early buyer to try and add to his wonderful collection. Bill Peek was not able to set-up this year but did come over early and as always found some things he could use.

A few people got a chance to see a cobalt blue, Duffy’s Crescent Saloon figural pig that was recently was purchased.

As always, some of the dealers and attendees brought some recently acquired additions to their collections for show and tell. A few people got a chance to see a cobalt blue, Duffy’s Crescent Saloon figural pig that was recently was purchased. Read: Figural Pig Series | Duffy Crescent Saloon Figural Pig Bottle

JacksLouisvillePig

Duffy’s Crescent Saloon figural pig in cobalt blue. There are only two known examples. – Hewitt Collection

Going to shows is always fun. You often times, see people only once a year, as they may only attend that particular show. On a sad note, I found out that Steve Johnson, who has been a staple at the Atlanta and other southern shows over the years, passed away April 4, 2013. His southern drawl and overalls will certainly be missed. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family. Also, Wanda Lee, the wife of long time collector and new Federation member James Lee, from Flovila, Georgia died on April 23, 2013. Talking to James at the show and later on the phone helped me appreciate how supportive our loved ones are, what they mean to us, and how they are missed when they are gone. Again our prayers and thoughts go out to those who have lost loved ones.

ChatConvCtr

Venues for the 2015 National Antique Bottle Show in Chattanooga, Tennessee

All in all, everyone had a great time and said they couldn’t wait until next year. And when we told them we would not be having a show in 2015; because we would be hosting the FOHBC 2015 National Antique Bottle Show in Chattanooga, Tennessee, they couldn’t wait to sign up. This also helped renew interest in reestablishing the Atlanta Antique Bottle Club after a several year hiatus. We are in the final stages of securing a location to meet in Lawrenceville, Georgia, as soon as we finalize the location and meeting nights we will let everyone know.

Those of you who attended the show as a vendor, early admission or regular attendee, we would like to thank you and hope to see you next year in Smyrna on the 14th of July 2014.

SHOW PICTURE GALLERY

DSC_0568

Bill Keys And Curtis Marbut

DSC_0569

Jim Scharnagel

DSC_0570

Frank Langston

DSC_0571

Folk Potter, Shelby West (on left), John Wood (on right)

DSC_0572

Sandy and Ed Gray

DSC_0573

Vic Svensen

DSC_0574

Shelby West sales table

DSC_0575

Dennis Humphrey

DSC_0576

Bill Johnson

DSC_0577

Steve Fitts, Ray Behunin and Danny Gann

DSC_0578

Jim Sanders

DSC_0579

Jim Sanders Atlanta Bottle and Pottery Display

DSC_0580

Jim Sanders Atlanta Bottle and Pottery Display

DSC_0581

Jim Sanders Atlanta Bottle and Pottery Display

DSC_0582

Jim Sanders Atlanta Bottle and Pottery Display

DSC_0583

Jim Sanders Atlanta Bottle and Pottery Display

DSC_0584

Jim Sanders Atlanta Bottle and Pottery Display

DSC_0585

John Joiner sales table. Terry Wright in background

DSC_0586

Tom Lines and Ed Provine

DSC_0587

Tom and Mabel Hicks talking to a customer

DSC_0588

Steve Lambert, Cheney Lambert and Skyler Alley packing pp

Posted in Bitters, Bottle Shows, Club News, Collectors & Collections, Figural Bottles, FOHBC News, Folk Art, News, Pottery, Stoneware | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

N. K. Brown’s Iron & Quinine Bitters – Burlington, Vermont

Iron&QuinineBitters_Package&Bottle

N. K. Brown’s Iron & Quinine Bitters

Burlington, Vermont

“Iron is King” Brown’s Iron & Quinine Bitters is the King of Tonics!

Apple-Touch-IconAThis early bitters for dyspepsia, indigestion, general debility, fever and ague was prepared by N. K. Brown & Co. of Burlington, Vermont. Nathaniel K. Brown was the successor to Fred Smith of Montpelier, Vermont. They produced Smith’s Anodyne Cough Drops with great success. Nathaniel Brown also produced Brown’s Teething Cordial, Star Broches, Bronchial Elixir, Fluid Extract Buchu among others.

Iron&QuinineAd2

Iron & Quinine Bitters advertisementOxford Mirror – November 12, 1891

Along with an example from my collection, I was able to locate a great package and fully labeled Iron & Quinine Bitters bottle image from the Smithsonian’s, National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center, Gift of Mr. James Harvey Young. These images are positioned further below. The example from my collection is the earlier bottle while the museum example is a later (1910 or so) product by the same company but from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Iron&Quinine_Ham

Iron & Quinine Bitters (I 28 & I 29) IllustrationsBitters Bottles (Carlyn Ring & W.C. Ham)

There are two listings in the Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham Bitters Bottle book:

I 28  IRON & QUININE BITTERS

IRON & QUININE / BITTERS // BURLINGTON, VT // sp // N. K. BROWN //
8 1/2 x 3 x 2 (6 3/8) 1/4
Rectangular, Aqua, NSC, Tooled lip, 4 sp, Rare

Child’s Gazetter Of Crittenden County 1882: Nathaniel K. Brown, 11 South Union Street, The drug catalogues indicate two sizes, 8 oz and 16 oz.

I 29  IRON & QUININE BITTERS

IRON & QUININE / BITTERS // BURLINGTON, VT // sp // N. K. BROWN //
7 1/8 x 2 1/2 x 1 3/4 (5 1/4) 1/8
Rectangular, Aqua and Clear, NSC, Applied mouth and Tooled lip, 4 sp, Rare

Brown&QuinineI29A_FLT

Iron & Quinine Bitters (I 29) – Meyer Collection

Most bitters collectors will immediately wonder if there is a relationship between this Vermont bitters and the Baltimore, Brown’s Iron Bitters. From the clipping below, you can see there was a problem.

Iron&Quinine_vs_BrownsIron

Bound to happen. Brown’s Iron Bitters (Balto) vs. N.K. Brown’s Iron & Quinine Bitters (Burlington) from the Western Druggist, Volume 8 – 1886

BrownsIron&QuinineTC

Brown’s Iron & Quinine Bitters – Misdirected Phone Call. Wife accidentally listens to a call from her husband’s girl friend, front advertises Brown’s Star Troches and R-adv is for N. K. Brown’s Iron and Quinine Bitters. F, inked number on reverse.

BrownMedicineCo

N. K. Brown Medicine Co. product listing – The Pharmaceutical Era, Volume 27 – 1902

Iron&QuinineTestimonial

Iron & Quinine Bitters testimonialKeesling’s Book of Recipes and Household Hints – 1890

I 29_Iron&QuinineBitters_FM5

Iron & Quinine Bitters (I 29) – Meyer Collection

Iron&QuineBittersBottleLabel1

Labeled Iron & Quinine Bitters – Smithsonian Museum of Natural History

Iron&QuinineBittersPackage

Package for Iron & Quinine Bitters – Smithsonian Museum of Natural History

Iron&QuinineBittersPackage2

Package for Iron & Quinine Bitters – Smithsonian Museum of Natural History

Iron&QuinineBittersPackage3

Package for Iron & Quinine Bitters – Smithsonian Museum of Natural History

Iron&QuinineBittersAd

Iron & Quinine Bitters advertisementKeesling’s Book of Recipes and Household Hints – 1890

Cinchona_calisaya_Quinine

19th-century illustration of Cinchona calisaya

QUININE

[Wikipedia] Quinine is an effective muscle relaxant, long used by the Quechua, who are indigenous to Peru, to halt shivering due to low temperatures. The Peruvians would mix the ground bark of cinchona trees with sweetened water to offset the bark’s bitter taste, thus producing tonic water.

Quinine has been used in unextracted form by Europeans since at least the early 17th century. It was first used to treat malaria in Rome in 1631. During the 17th century, malaria was endemic to the swamps and marshes surrounding the city of Rome. Malaria was responsible for the deaths of several popes, many cardinals and countless common Roman citizens. Most of the priests trained in Rome had seen malaria victims and were familiar with the shivering brought on by the febrile phase of the disease. The Jesuit brother Agostino Salumbrino (1561–1642), an apothecary by training who lived in Lima, observed the Quechua using the bark of the cinchona tree for that purpose. While its effect in treating malaria (and hence malaria-induced shivering) was unrelated to its effect in controlling shivering from rigors, it was still a successful medicine for malaria. At the first opportunity, Salumbrino sent a small quantity to Rome to test as a malaria treatment. In the years that followed, cinchona bark, known as Jesuit’s bark or Peruvian bark, became one of the most valuable commodities shipped from Peru to Europe. When King Charles II was cured of malaria at the end of the 17th Century with quinine, it became popular in London. It remained the antimalarial drug of choice until the 1940s, when other drugs took over.

The form of quinine most effective in treating malaria was found by Charles Marie de La Condamine in 1737.[6][7] Quinine was isolated and named in 1820 by French researchers Pierre Joseph Pelletier and Joseph Bienaimé Caventou. The name was derived from the original Quechua (Inca) word for the cinchona tree bark, quina or quina-quina, which means “bark of bark” or “holy bark”. Prior to 1820, the bark was first dried, ground to a fine powder, and then mixed into a liquid (commonly wine) which was then drunk. Large-scale use of quinine as a prophylaxis started around 1850.

Quinine also played a significant role in the colonization of Africa by Europeans. Quinine had been said to be the prime reason Africa ceased to be known as the “white man’s grave”. A historian has stated, “it was quinine’s efficacy that gave colonists fresh opportunities to swarm into the Gold Coast, Nigeria and other parts of west Africa”.
To maintain their monopoly on cinchona bark, Peru and surrounding countries began outlawing the export of cinchona seeds and saplings beginning in the early 19th century. The Dutch government persisted in its attempt to smuggle the seeds, and by the 1930s Dutch plantations in Java were producing 22 million pounds of cinchona bark, or 97% of the world’s quinine production. During World War II, Allied powers were cut off from their supply of quinine when the Germans conquered the Netherlands and the Japanese controlled the Philippines and Indonesia. The United States had managed to obtain four million cinchona seeds from the Philippines and began operating cinchona plantations in Costa Rica. Nonetheless, such supplies came too late; tens of thousands of US troops in Africa and the South Pacific died due to the lack of quinine.[9] Despite controlling the supply, the Japanese did not make effective use of quinine, and thousands of Japanese troops in the southwest Pacific died as a result.

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