What was here, Early Houston Advertisements – Part IIA

THeWeeklyTelegraph_1860HoustonMasthead

What was here, Early Houston Advertisements – Part IIA

05 April 2013

THE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH

TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1860

Apple-Touch-IconAI was able to locate another issue of The Weekly Telegraph in Houston. The day was Tuesday, 20 April 1860. This is nine years prior to the previous issue of The Houston Telegraph that contained the abundant Edward Wilder, Dr. John Bull and others advertisements. I tell you, Houston was swimming in product. It still is.

Read: Allen’s Landing – Houston (not everything is new here) – Part I

Read: What was here, Early Houston Advertisements – Part II

HoustonWeeklyTelegraph_1860_P1

TelegraphStarLogoX

B I T T E R S

AmericanBitterCordial_1860

American Aromatic Bitter Cordial and Tonic Aromatic Bitters sold by A. A. Peychaud – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

Read: Peychaud’s Cocktail Bitters – L.E. Jung and his Gators

ArgyleBitters_1860Houston

Argyle Bitters sold by A. D. McGowan, W. H. Eliot & Co. A. Sigesmund in Houston – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

Argyle Bitters_Meyer

ARGYLE BITTERS from New Orleans – Meyer Collection

ArabianBitters_Alvarez_1860

Arabian Bitters !!! – Fernandez Alvarez & Co. – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

DrHooflandsGerman_1860

Dr. Hoofland’s Celebrated German Bitters prepared by C.M. Jackson & Co, Philadelphia, For sale by W. H. Eliot & Co, Houston – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

Read: A larger Dr. Hoofland’s German Bitters spotted in the Hayfield

MillsBittersAd_1860

150 cases Mills Bitters – H. J. Trube – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

D R U G S   &   M E D I C I N E S

WH_Eliot_MainStreet_1860

W. Henry Eliot, Main Street – Drugs & Medicines – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

DrSiegisman_Ad_1860

Dr. A. Siegismund, Druggist & Apothecary, Travis Street – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

S C H N A P P S

SchnappsAd_Houston

100 Cases Wolfe’s Genuine Schiedam Schnapps – Henry Sampson Co. – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

Read: Tom Doligale and his Udolpho Wolfe’s Aromatic Schnapps

S P I R I T S   &   W I N E

Bininger&Co_Houston1860Ad

A. M. Bininger & Co. advertisement (note misspelling of Bininger with an ‘e’) Represented by C. Ennis & Co.- Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

See: Bininger Gallery

Daly'sAromaticWhiskey_Houston1860

Daly’s Aromatic Valley Whiskey – For sale in Houston by a number of merchants – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

Read: Looking at Daly’s Aromatic Valley Whisky…with Sandy

WinesBrandiesFernandezAd_Houston

Wines, Brandies, Whiskies, &c., – Fernandez Alvarez & Co. Main Street – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

B E E R   &   A L E

BreweryAdsHouston_1860

Gabel’s Brewery, Schulte’s Brewery and Flock & Bro. advertisements. – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

J_Riordan_Ale_1860Ad

J. Riordan Philadelphia Ale and Porter – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

M I N E R A L   W A T E R

CongressWater_WH_Eliot_1860

Clark & White Saratoga Congress Water on sale by W. Henry Eliot of Houston – Houston Weekly Telegraph Tuesday, April 10, 1860

CongressWater_1860

Received Today, Fresh, Congress Water – A. Siegismund, Travis Street – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

D E M I J O H N S

Houston Weekly Telegraphy, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

100 Demijohns for sale – Fernandez Alvarerez & Co. – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

S A R S A P A R I L L A

SmithsCelebrated_1860

Smith’s Celebrated Sarsaparilla, Soda and Mineral Waters – J. J. C. Smith – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

M I S C .   G O O D S

Henry_J_Trube_Grocer_1860

Just Received – Henry J. Trube, corner of Travis and Franklin Streets – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

MiscGoodsTrube_Houston_1860

New Goods including Baltimore Cove Oysters – H. J. Trube – Houston Weekly Telegraph, Tuesday, April 10, 1860

Posted in Ales & Ciders, Apothecary, Bitters, Cordial, Demijohns, Druggist & Drugstore, Gin, Mineral Water, Sarsaparilla, Schnapps, Spirits, Tonics, Uncategorized, Whiskey, Wine & Champagne | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

What was here, Early Houston Advertisements – Part II

HoustonEarly

What was here, Early Houston Advertisements – Part II

04 April 2013

U N D E R   M Y   F E E T

Apple-Touch-IconAYesterday I started a series about ‘looking in my own back yard’ for Texas history relating to the bottles we collect. You see, I live in Houston, aka “Bayou City”. Read: Allen’s Landing – Houston (not everything is new here) – Part I I know I am not going to discover a Houston Glass Works or rows of  houses and privies from the late 18th or early to mid 19th century but I want to see what is, in reality, under my feet. I mean, somewhere here downtown, there had to have been recycling plants, warehouses and dumps for the medicine and liquor that was available to the early Houston settlers, railroad workers, cotton exporters and wheelers and dealers. Houston is now a city on an old city. Everything, just about, has been covered up.

Read Part IIA – What was here, Early Houston Advertisements – Part IIA

EllerWagonWorks I have lived and worked downtown since 1983 and know quite a bit about how to navigate the complex roadways, pathways, railroad right-of-ways and bayou paths. That is the great thing about being a runner (actually jogger as I get older) and a dog walker. We have eight dogs here at our office on the corner of Crawford and Commerce Streets. The building pictured above is a historical photograph of the Eller Wagon Works Building where we have about 5,000 sq ft of studio space on the dock level, first floor. My space is the three windows on each side of the corner behind the workers. Read more about FMG.

S H O C K E R   U P   T H E   S T R E E T

Last year I did a post on St. Nicholas Stomach Bitters and was surprised to find out that cases of the stuff were, at some much earlier time, sitting close to my office. Probably off-loaded right at Allen’s Landing. This led me today to look at what else was being pushed and sold in early Houston. That is the topic of today’s post.

"Bitters –  200 cases of St. Nicholas Stomach Bitters, 50 cases Stouten’s | 50 cases Hostetters, 49 Turners Forest Wine”

St Nicholas_X

The large and small size of the pontiled ST. NICHOLAS STOMACH BITTERS (These bitters were being sold in Houston) – Meyer Colection

GentryAd

Here is an advertisement from the Southern Democrat. (Waco, Texas), Vol. 1, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1858. Wow…200 cases of ST. NICHOLAS STOMACH BITTERS and 50 cases of HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS sitting blocks from where I am sitting now.

J U L Y  8,  1 8 6 9  –  H O U S T O N

HoustonTelegraph1869Masthead

"the issue for April 14 was being readied when publication was again interrupted by the Mexicans, who captured the printers and threw the press into Buffalo Bayou.

TELEGRAPH AND TEXAS REGISTER

The Telegraph and Texas Register, later variously known as the weekly, tri-weekly, or daily Telegraph, was the first newspaper in Texas to achieve a degree of permanence. The paper was begun on October 10, 1835, at San Felipe de Austin by Gail Borden, Jr., Thomas H. Borden, and Joseph Baker. It became the official organ of the Republic of Texas, which was organized a few months later. By December 14 the paper claimed a circulation of 500. The advance of Antonio López de Santa Anna’s force compelled the publishers to retire after issuing their paper on March 24, 1836. On April 5 Baker withdrew from the firm to join the army. The press was removed to Harrisburg, and the issue for April 14 was being readied when publication was again interrupted by the Mexicans, who captured the printers and threw the press into Buffalo Bayou. Texas State Historical Association

BradysFamilyBittersAd

Brady’s Family Bitters advertisement (see examples below) – The Houston Telegraph, Thursday, July 8, 1869

B193Brady'sFamilyBitters

BRADY’S FAMILY BITTERS in two colors. Product being sold in Houston in 1869 (see advertisement above). – Meyer Collection

HoustonMedAds1869

Three very tall, single column, medicine advertisements in The Houston Telegraph, Thursday, July 8, 1869. Products from W. H. Eliot, Edward Wilder and Dr. John Bull.

EDWARD

EDWARD WILDER’S SARSAPARILLA & POTASH being sold in Houston in 1869 (see advertisement above) – Meyer Collection

Read More: Edward Wilder and his Building Bottles

B254_DrJohnBulls_Meyer

DR. JOHN BULL’S COMPOUND CEDRON BITTERS sold in Houston (see advertisements above and below) – Meyer Collection

BullsCedronBitters

Bull’s Cedron Bitters advertisement for sale by R. F, George Houston and Galveston. (see example above) – The Houston Telegraph,  Thursday, July 8, 1869

LouisHardeAd

Advertisement for Louis Harde Grocer and Commission Merchant, Main Street, Houston – The Houston Telegraph, Thursday, July 8, 1869

Barbaroux&CoAd

Barbaroux & Co bridge builder advertisement. Interesting ad placement in Houston with all of the train bridges over the bayous and rivers. – The Houston Telegraph, Thursday, July 8, 18

T H E   O R I G I N A L   C A S I N O  

S A L O O N

casino saloon

Advertisement for The Original Casino Saloon

CasinoSaloonHouston

Casino Summer Garden Saloon – Congress Street in Houston

WH_EliotDollar

Civil War Era Coupon for Medicine, from documents of W.H. Eliot – Texas Medical History Collections

HostettersGroup_Meyer

Grouping of HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS – Meyer Collection.

C O N C L U S I O N

As I suspected. This simple exercise tells me that this town was loaded with medicine, bitters and alcohol. I just need to dig deeper. Who knows, maybe some of my Wilder, Hostetter or John Bull bottles were once in Houston! Next in Part III we will deal with clues and paths.

Read more:

Stagecoach Stops and Bartletts Excelsior Bitters

The two embossed TEXAS Bitters

St. Nicholas Stomach Bitters – Gentry & Otis – New, York

F. Stresau – A Texas Bitters (Courtney, Texas)

Texas Window – Some Random Thoughts on a Gray Day

Posted in Bitters, Digging and Finding, History, Medicines & Cures, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Allen’s Landing – Houston (not everything is new here) – Part I

City of Houston Seal

Allen’s Landing – Houston (not everything is new here) – Part I

03 April 2013

H O U S T O N

On Monday February 17, 1840 at the regular City Council meeting a resolution was passed authorizing Mayor Charles Bigelow “to procure a seal to be styled, the seal for the City of Houston, Texas.”

At the next meeting, February 24th, “On motion of Alderman Stevens, it was resolved, that the seal purchased by F. Moore(e) Jr., Esq., be received as the city seal.”

Dr. Francis Moore, Jr. was a state senator and former mayor of Houston. It was he who had the original seal designed. The top half of the seal bore the words, “City of Houston.” The bottom half was originally empty. Dr. Moore was paid $50 for the seal, and “his honor the Mayor, caused the word ‘Texas’ to be cut on said seal.”

The center of the seal bears “The Lone Star, symbol of the newborn nation of the west…… the ‘Noble locomotive‘, heralding Houston’s spirit of progress; the humble plow, symbol of the agricultural empire of Texas, from which Houston would draw her wealth – by the iron rails.”

The original seal seemed to have disappeared until it was found in December 1939 by assistant city secretary, Mrs. Margaret Westerman, for whom the City Hall Annex is named.

S H I N Y   &   N E W

HoustonPanoramic1921 SONY DSC I have to admit, Elizabeth and I live in a great, huge city somewhat centrally located meaning I can hop on a plane and be almost anywhere in the country and world in short order. Houston has a reputation for being all shiny and new and of course, that is not the case. While it seems that there has been a mentality and mind set to tear something down and make something bigger (see 1921 panoramic above and recent skyline image), there are also areas embedded downtown that are just steeped in history. I see these hidden questions daily on my jogs, dog walks and general moving around. You see, I have lived downtown since 1983. I have been an antique bottle collector since 2002.

Texas Wagon Works before Eller Wagon Works

Texas Wagon Works before becoming Eller Wagon Works (see below). My design offices for FMG Design are located within this building on the first floor. The train tracks are beneath Commerce Street now. The building is on a raised dock platform.

My office here at FMG Design is in the old Texas and Eller Wagon Works Building on Commerce Street (see above illustration). There is actually a picture of Commerce Street further below. The asphalt now covers the old railroad tracks that ran down the street and serviced all the business and warehouses along Buffalo Bayou which connects to the Houston Ship Channel and then the Gulf of Mexico (see map below).

771px-Old_map-Houston-1873

Houston ‘Birds Eye View’ Map – 1873 – Buffalo Bayou runs on the north edge of downtown.

The purpose of this series is reflect back on the beginning of Houston and how Houston relates to antique bottle collecting. We get the history all the time from the New Englanders and the San Francisco Bay area collectors (among many other bottle rich locales) but rarely do we hear of Texas and specifically Houston. Where are the saloons, the groceries, bottlers and liquor merchants. If I was a bottle digger, where would I look? What was under or prior to the newer buildings? In Part I we will look primarily at Allen’s Landing. In Part II we will look at what was happening at and around Allen’s Landing.

TexasBirdsEyeView

Panorama of the Seat of War: Bird’s Eye View of Texas and Part of Mexico. A Perfect Recreation of the tinted lithograph. John Bachman. 1861. If you look carefully in this map, you will see Galveston and Galveston Bay. The Buffalo Bayou runs from Houston downtown to the bay and Houston Ship Channel. – Discovery Edition Maps

T H E   A L L E N   B R O T H E R S

John Kirby Allen and Augustus Chapman Allen founded Houston on Aug. 30 1836.

John Kirby Allen and Augustus Chapman Allen founded Houston on Aug. 30 1836.

Houston 1837 plan

Houston 1837 Street plan as envisioned by the Allen Brothers

Houston is the fourth most populous city in the United States, and the most populous city in the state of Texas. According to the 2010 U.S. Census, the city had a population of 2.1 million people within a land area of 599.6 square miles. This is huge compared to most cities.

SamuelHouston

General Samuel Houston

G E N E R A L   S A M   H O U S T O N

Houston was founded in 1836 on land near the banks of Buffalo Bayou, now known as Allen’s Landing and incorporated as a city on June 5, 1837. The city was named after former General Sam Houston, who was president of the Republic of Texas and had commanded and won at the Battle of San Jacinto 25 miles east of where the city was established. The burgeoning port and railroad industry, combined with oil discovery in 1901, has induced continual surges in the city’s population. In the mid-twentieth century, Houston became the home of the Texas Medical Center—the world’s largest concentration of healthcare and research institutions—and NASA’s Johnson Space Center, where the Mission Control Center is located.

Zieglar_and_Allen's_Landing

Photograph of a printed engraving illustrating the port of Houston looking north from Allen’s Landing across Buffalo Bayou. A side wheel paddle boat and barges towed by boats are all loaded with cotton. A train, also loaded with cotton bales, is crossing the bridge over White Oak Bayou. The Ziegler Warehouse stands in the top right of the illustration. The picture is labeled “Ziegler & Co.’s Cotton Warehouses.”

A L L E N ‘ S    L A N D I N G

Allen’s Landing is the birthplace of the city of Houston. In August 1836, just months after the Republic of Texas won its independence from Mexico, two brothers (and real estate developers) from New York – John Kirby Allen and Augustus Chapman Allen  – purchased 6,642 acres in the area and settled there on the banks of Buffalo Bayou. The campus of the University of Houston–Downtown sits atop Allen’s Landing. Allen’s Landing is at the confluence of White Oak Bayou and Buffalo Bayou and serves as a natural turning basin. A dock was quickly opened on the site, and the steamer Laura was the first ship to anchor at the landing on January 26, 1837. The landing was officially named a port in 1841 – the original Port of Houston. In 1910, the United States government approved funding for the dredging of a ship channel from the Gulf of Mexico to the present turning basin four miles to the east of Allen’s Landing. [Wikipedia]

“consisted of one dugout canoe, a bottle gourd of whisky and a surveyor’s chain and compass, and was inhabited by four men with an ordinary camping outfit.”

Dilue Rose Harris, in her memoirs recalling the days after the Battle of San Jacinto in 1836, wrote of the excitement that the proposed new town of Houston was creating among the people returning to Texas after the defeat of Santa Anna. In early June, 1836, some of the young men from the Stafford Point community (now, modern Stafford) rode over to Buffalo Bayou to check out the new town described in the circulars and handbills distributed by the Allen brothers. What they found there became more of a joke than anything else. The town, which was difficult to locate among the pine woods, “consisted of one dugout canoe, a bottle gourd of whisky and a surveyor’s chain and compass, and was inhabited by four men with an ordinary camping outfit.” That’s where the story takes a ominous turn. To escape the heat and the swarms of mosquitos, the men decided to take a swim in the bayou. No sooner had they all gotten into the water, when the “water was alive with alligators.” Three of the men got out on the south bank of the bayou from whence they entered, but one exited on the other side. Those on the south bank got a canoe and rescued him, bringing the separated man back to the south side. Not only did the man face death at the jaws of the alligators, but, he told his rescuers that while he was waiting for them, a large panther was lurking nearby. The big cat ran off as the canoe approached. By the end of the nineteenth century, Buffalo Bayou as a major shipping lane was on the decline. Ocean going vessels exchanged cargo at docks below the turning basin, and the traffic upstream to Allen’s Landing was primarily that of barges. By the turn of the twentieth century, the bayou has little or no commercial traffic. It is time to return the bayou to the canoes. Buffalo Bayou – An Echo of Houston’s Wilderness Beginnings by Louis F. Aulbach

B U F F A L O   B A Y O U

Houston&CentralDepot

Houston and Texas Central Depot – 1873. You can see Buffalo Bayou

Houdstonmap1891

Houston Map 1981 – Here you see the confluence of White Oak Bayou and Buffalo Bayou that for awhile served as a natural turning basin. Buffalo Bayou leads to the Gulf. Allen’s Landing is pretty much at the confluence.

E A R L Y   A L L E N ‘ S   L A N D I N G  

P H O T O G R A P H S

AllensLandingMainStreet

Allen’s Landing with Main Street running up a few degrees.

CommerceStreetHouston

Commerce Street, 1890, the “heart of produce row.” Photo from the George Fuermann “Texas and Houston” Collection, courtesy of Special Collections, University of Houston Libraries. My office is on Commerce Street.

AllensLanding1

Cargo offloading or onloading on Buffalo Bayou at Allen’s Landing in downtown Houston. Sometime around the turn of the century.

Historic view of Allen’s Landing

Historic Allen’s Landing. Look carefully at the “Liver Pills Tippecanoe” graphics on the fence. I can not read the first word.

Allen's_Landing1900

Allen’s Landing c – 1900

AllensLandingMain1911

Barge traffic at the warft at Allen’s Landing (left) with the White Oak Bayou entering on the right (c. 1911) – Photo courtesy TxDOT

HistoricCoffeeBldg

Historic Houston Coffee Building across Buffalo Bayou on the left

MainStreetTrolleys

Great picture of the prominence of Main Street. Look at the trolley’s.

Read Part II: What was here, Early Houston Advertisements – Part II

Read Part IIA: What was here, Early Houston Advertisements – Part IIA

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

The Color Yellow – A wide range of shades

XXX

Y E L L O W

Lemon&SuffolkPig

(above) Yellow figural whiskey bottle and Suffolk Bitters from the Meyer Collection

The Color Yellow A wide range of shades

02 April 2013

YellowColorChartYellow is an important color in bottle collecting but is usually, for some odd reason to some, less desirable than the ‘prettier’ blues and greens. It is actually a very tough color to obtain in many bottle areas such as bitters, medicines, flasks and ink bottles. When I walk my rooms and look at my shelves, many of the yellows have a degree of amber in them, which is probably the most common bottle color besides aqua. It is only when you focus on finding the purer yellow color shades do you really start to see and understand the beauty and range of yellow.

Yellow is the color of gold, butter, or ripe lemons. In the spectrum of visible light, and in the traditional color wheel used by painters, yellow is located between green and orange. Yellow is commonly associated with gold, sunshine, reason, optimism and pleasure, but also with envy, jealousy and betrayal. It plays an important part in Asian culture, particularly in China [Wikipedia]

Yellow is a misunderstood color with a wide range of possibilities. You may hear people describing a yellow bottle as yellow amber, apricot, citron, goldenrod, lime, saffron, lemon yellow, straw, olive yellow, school bus yellow, light yellow, canary, mustard, harvest gold, rye, ginger ale etc. To illustrate my point, I have created a gallery below of the wide range of yellow shades represented in antique bottles and related glass collectibles.

YellowInks_April

Gorgeous picture of a master ink and three umbrella inks in various shades of yellow – John April

Shades of Yellow

ShadesOfColor_Yellow

Yellow in Nature

YellowNature

Pantone Matching System

PantoneYellows

Yellow in Bottles and Glass

YellowGlob_GW

Free-blown Globular bottle in  straw yellow with olive tone – Glass Works Auctions

Spool&BeehiveYellow

Two shades of yellow ‘spool’ and ‘beehive’ insulators. Spool is in the Meyer Collection.

GW92_059_10

Scroll Flask, “LOUISVILLE, KY. – GLASS WORKS“, (GIX-6), Louisville Glass Works, Louisville, Kentucky, ca. 1845 – 1855, olive yellow quart, red iron pontil – Glass Works Auction #92

YellowNationals

Three shades of yellow NATIONAL BITTERS (figural ear of corns) – Meyer Collection

EagleEagleGW92_8

Eagle-Eagle (GII-25) in yellow – Glass Works Auction #92

A&MPB_Grickler

Two yellow beer bottles – ADLER & MAYER PITTSBURG, PA and a W F GRICKLER BATAVIA, NY – Meyer Collection

SuffolkBittersYellow

SUFFOLK BITTERS (figural pig) in lemon yellow – Meyer Collection

LightningFruitJarsYellow

TRADE MARK LIGHTING fruit jars in two shades of yellow – Meyer Collection

YellowOld Sachems_Meyer

Two very different shades of yellow OLD SACHEM BITTERS AND WIGWAM TONIC – Meyer Collection

LRBsYellow_Meyer

Yellow ‘Swirl” and Gold Mercury Raised Quilt Lightning Rod Balls – Meyer Collection

StiegelTypeScents

Stiegel type scent bottle in light straw yellow – Glass Works Auctions

LondonJockeyYellow

LONDON JOCKEY CLUBHOUSE GIN in a bubbly citron – Ex. Meyer Collection

BunkerHill_YO

Two shades of yellow SKILTON FOOTE BUNKER HILL PICKLE bottles – Meyer Collection

Read More: What is Puce or ‘Pooce’ as some call it?

Read More: The Color Purple or Amethyst in Antique Glass

Read More: Not Brown – Old Amber “Harvey’s Prairie Bitters”

Posted in Advice, Bitters, Color, Figural Bottles, Inks, Questions | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Unlisted 2-Headed Indian Queen Found!

IndianQueen2Headed

“A find that has certainly set the figural and bitters world ‘upside down’ rocks the airwaves this morning. I mean, “was it meant to be drunk from two people at once” as Bill Ham questioned? Bitters figural king Bill Taylor from Oregon thinks he might lay the queen on its side if he was fortunate enough to obtain this beauty for his shelves (possibly causing arm base wear). I myself, might start a color run of these two headed queens. Noted bitters collector Jeff Burkhardt seemed puzzled and somewhat worried about the stability of this possibly sitting in his favorite window, even though the lips seemed full and rolled perfect. Bob Ferraro from Boulder City said he might just ‘carry it with him’ or roll it up in a towel. Wow what a find!”

[Posted 01 April 2013 on PRG and PRG facebook]

PRG FB Logo

2HeadedQueen_FB

Posted in Art Glass, Early American Glass, eBay, History, Hutches | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Mailbox Letters – April 2013

www.studiomathewes.com

Apple-Touch-IconAPlease feel free to send any antique bottle or glass questions to ferdinand@peachridgeglass.com. The information will be posted if relevant or of interest to the readers. I will try to answer or wait for another reader to respond. Quality images are very important. Thanks! If you want to see previous questions,go to “Mailbox Letters” in “Categories” on the right column of each page.


Looking for Andrews & Johnson Bottle

Andrews&Johnson

Hi Ferdinand, I got your name from Matt Lacy, who said you might be able to help us. We are looking into the purchase of one bottle of the attached. It reads ANDREWS & JOHNSTON, PHILADA” on the front and “BRIDGTON GLASS WORKS NJ” on the back. Do you think that is something you might be able to help track down for us? Matt said he has sold out of all of his. Thanks, KIM


Milk Can Questions for History Channel Project

VintageMilkCansSepia

Good Afternoon! My name is Erin and I work for the History Channel show American Restoration. We are currently editing an episode for our fourth season which features antique milk cans. We are looking to add vintage photos or advertisements for milk cans to the episode to help enhance the history. I came across your website and was wondering if you or someone you knew had access to any. I would love to talk to you in more detail about what we are looking for.

I look forward o your reply!

Kind regards,

Erin

PRG: Erin was referred to the National Association of Milk Bottle Collectors


South Florida Bottle Question

Good morning, We were wondering if you could assist us or point us in the right direction. One of our Insured’s broke 3 medicine bottles from Key West & Palm Beach.

1. Key West Medicine 7 1/4 ” clear with slight purple tint embossed with 101 Duval Street, circa 1900 -1910
2. Key West Medicine 7″ clear Cuban embossed Farmacia El Aguila de Oro, Dr. Gabriel Diaz & Co, circa 1900 – 1910
3. Palm Beach Medicine 2 3/4″ clear embossed Doe & Gonya Royal Poinciana Pharmacy

We have been trying to find the values for these bottles and so far have struck out.
Do you know the values or can you refer us to someone who may be able to assist us?

Thank you. Marizena


Blue Barrel Question

Hello, I read with interest your article online about the mysterious blue barrel bitters. The reason I was researching is because I have one of these barrels that I am considering selling. I have had it since about 1970 when it was obtained as part of a collection of a Mrs Stahl in St Joseph, Mo. The collection had many bitters and barber bottles that were top notch. I was a young boy at the time and I had an affection for barrels, Mrs Stahl noticed my fascination with the bottle and rather than include it into the sale of the bottles to my Father she gave it to me. She literally took it out of the group and handed it to me.

I am unsure that I want to sell the bottle but am leaning in that direction. The bottle is actually about 200 miles from where I live and I don’t currently have any pictures of it but I can assure you it is one of the “mysterious” group and fully authentic. But that is neither here nor there. The reason for my email is this; can you recommend a place that I could find a current value? I’m confident that this will be difficult since very few of these bottles sell I am sure. I am out of the bottle collecting loop anymore and don’t even know where to start. Could you direct me to someone who could help me?

Thanks you and highest regards,

Kurt Surber
Kurt Surber-Museum Guest Services
Archery Hall of Fame and Museum

PRG: Kurt, if the bottle is in great condition and doesn’t have any problems such as chips or cracks, you could fetch in the $2k to $3k range depending on how crisp the bottle color is. This bottle is not terribly rare, just a highly desirable color. If it was embossed, that would be a different story. Go to FOHBC.org and check out the Auction houses should you want to move your bottle. You could also try ebay. You will need really good pictures. Good luck.


Please visit PeachridgeBarberShopChair.com

BarberChairRed

I’m trying to get an estimate of my barbers chair and I was hoping you could help. All I have is a picture, it’s fully restored.


New Ink Bottle I Just Purchased

ink 2

ink1

I found what I think is a cone flare top black glass ink bottle. But, I am not sure. On the bottom it is polished and engraved “ol.salv. B. dist.” I’m including some photos. I hope that you can tell me what it is and when it’s from. And if you like it, you are welcome to use the photos. I would appreciage any help. Thank you, – Vita


Later Atlanta’s Gate City Guard bottle knock-off

OddScrewFlask

I have a neat bottle that I would like to try to sell. I am not sure of the worth. Can you folks help me out?

I attached a photo. I wrote to you guys because I found this article. It mentioned Tom Lines as owning one of these bottles. I will attach a copy of the article. I have the same bottle. My bottle does not have the engraving on the front though.

Thanks Craig.

Read: High calibre bottle designed for Atlanta’s Gate City Guard


W J. Reading | Key West Florida Flask and another…

WJ_ReadingFlask

When in Key West last week I was shown 2 different flasks that seem to be pretty rare. The first one I saw 3 of them. One I saw at Alex’s neighbor’s (Ed Harper) house and 2 at Alex’s house. The second one Alex showed me and he had found diving. I told him I would try to find something out about it. The embossing is not very strong probably due to the sand and current. – Pam (Selenak)

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Druggist Bottle Found in Arizona

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Is this bottle worth anything? Clint found in Arizona. – Elizabeth (Meyer)


Vaseline Glass Collection

I have a very large collection of Vaseline glass for sale, I wasn’t sure if you buy it or not. I am located in MD, please email me back.

Thanks, Lauren

[PRG] I have asked Lauren for pictures.


Bottle Collection Headed to an Auction House?

Hi from Rochester, NY. We enjoyed your website very much. The last couple weeks my husband has been going through his bottle collection for auction. The collection is vast, most of which he hasn’t looked at in many years, approx 400 bottles (more or less, no exact count to date), apothecary, medicine/chemist, bitters, flasks, decanters, perfume, barbers, etc. As a young boy he was a runner for a local auction house, learned fast and started his collection over 40 yrs ago.

My husband has asked me to contact you ~ may we plz ask if you can refer a reputable auction house that specializes in antique bottles? We have several local auction houses, however my husband is insistent his collection go to an auctioneer who specializes in bottles with a broad bidder base.

We also are wondering what is customary for auction prep: Should we catalogue each bottle (massive) or would auctioneer do that? Should we plan on delivering this collection comprising many case boxes, or would auctioneer prefer to inspect at our residence?

Thank you in advance for any guidance.

Either myself or my husband (computer illiterate) would appreciate hearing back at your convenience.

Best Regards, Steve

[PRG] I have asked Steve for more information and pictures.


IXL California Bitters Question

CaliIXLI have a Dr. Henley’s IXL California bitters bottle in very good shape…It has a light green blue tint to it…What is the value of a bottle like this?… Thanks Doug Covington

[PRG] I have a really decent example and paid around $700 for it about 5 years ago. Really depends on color and condition.

Posted in Advice, Mailbox Letters, Questions | Leave a comment

Daily Dose – April 2013

A p r i l    2 0 1 3

Just some ramblings and thoughts that are not on the home page.

Tuesday, 30 April 2013

HoustonHouse

Ahhh, last posts of the month today. Look for another unlisted find, a Burnham’s Timber Bitters that Brian Wolff has uncovered online. Chattanooga, Tennessee will be announced today as the location for the 2015 FOHBC National Antique Bottle Show (see Press Release). I really like this picture from May 1943, Houston, Texas called “Old house fruit stand on Franklin Street.” 4×5 Kodachrome transparency by John Vachon that Tami Barber shared on my personal facebook page.

The M. S. James Family Bitters post has been updated with two new advertisements and pictures.

Monday, 29 April 2013

1752PhilaMap

Been digging through early Philadelphia material looking for Rosenbaum Bitters connection. Also just developed s post on the extremely rare Dr. Kreitzer’s German Stomach Bitters. Really like the art and graphics for this 1752 Map of Philadelphia and Parts Adjacent. I like that ‘parts adjacent’ bit. Scull and Heap’s map was originally published in Philadelphia in 1752 by Nicolas Scull. READ MORE

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Example of “Braille Dot” DeWitts Bitters added to existing post. Read: Braille Dots on a DeWitts Stomach Bitters. I just purchased this bottle as I type. So now you are looking at a Meyer example 🙂

Sunday, 28 April 2013

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SchenksAd_Phila

Been rummaging through 1860s and 1870s Philadelphia directories. Love these two ads. Read More: Blacking Bottles & a little more

Saturday, 27 April 2013

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Nice post over at the FOHBC site on the LAHBC Bitters Forum by Dave Kyle.

Yet another unlisted bitters found at a flea market.

Friday, 26 April 2013

Working out of Peachridge today. Sandor Fuss (Denver) will be by here around 3:00 pm or so. This will be like his fourth time out here. We also have a special project to discuss. Maybe more news on that later.

News from Bill Ham on yet another unlisted bitters find. The bottle is embossed M. S. JAMES FAMILY BITTERS. Working on a post now. No pictures yet. Bottle found at a flea market by Ron Tetrault. Look for a post later.

RexBittersFrame_Dale

Hi Ferdinand…See what a period frame and a color copier can do? Actually looks beautiful in my office. Thanks, Dale (Mlasko)

CCC

Mr. Meyer My wife and I are RVing thru the states and are now in Horse Cave, KY We were at an antique mall and I noticed a small barrel in a case marked Louisville bottle….Look for an upcoming post.

Thursday, 25 April 2013

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What nice Dr. Daniel’s medicine cabinet graphics from the Jack Stecher collection.

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Working on led lighting (see above). Smallest pickles, 6 to 7 in. – David Olson

Tuesday, 23 May 2013

Getting a call on an opportunity for an Alaska Bitters. That’s a rare bird. I will keep you posted.

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Having fun looking at old advertising for Manchester, New Hampshire, home of the 2013 FOHBC National Antique Bottle Show. Trying to figure out the timeline for Hayes and Company, wholesale and retail liquor dealers. Just love this old postcard of American Locomotive Company. Just bet there were some Hayes whiskey consumed near this plant.

Monday, 22 April 2013

jc&co 001

Hi Ferdinand, This was dug in an 1850s mining camp locally. I do not know much about these, but the “J.C. & Co.” seems tougher than the other brands. Are these scarce? Thanks,

Dale (Mlasko)

Read: Pineapple Bitters – The Different Variants

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Hayes&Co_Manchester

Get the latest FOHBC 2013 National Antique Bottle Show | Manchester, N.H. online. Updated often. Thanks to Pam Selenak for forwarding this nice Manchester flask currently on ebay.

Sunday, 21 April 2013

GrangerBitters3

Come to papa.

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An un-named source tells me that the FOHBC is close to announcing the locale of the FOHBC 2015 National Bottle Show. Think choo-choo. Three important phone conversations today about a possible candidate for the EXPO in 2016. Wow would this be a biggie.

Saturday, 20 April 2013

BobSheffield

Just love this picture of Bob Sheffield that David Olson posted. Bob sold me two great bottles in the past including my pinkish Drakes and a stunning Electric Bitters.

Read: H.E. Bucklen & Company of Chicago – Electric Bitters

Electric Bitters_Yellow

Friday, 19 April 2013

Diamond “M” post updated with new R/H number provided by Bill Ham.

Apple-Touch-IconAI would like to ask Bill Ham and Jeff Burkhardt (essential) and others (critical Dick Watson, Bob Ferraro, Warren Friedrich etc.) interested in joining a team to Charrette (a method I use in my profession often) at an upcoming show. Possibly Manchester. I will reserve a meeting room with internet access. We will have a long sheet of paper, markers, laptops and we will develop a timeline of all of the great Bitters events and milestones to date. Jeff has already tentatively signed on. We will be noting great collections, collectors, dates, books published, specific bottle movement etc. The end result will be a working and editable timeline for all of us to reference. Personally, I am foggy on many historical events and would greatly appreciate a better understanding of Bitters bottle collecting.

Obviously we will not have all the answers at this session but it be a start. This material might want to be published in Bill Hams next Supplement which is on the radar.

Please let me know if you would like to join this committee. Thanks

FOHBC Char

[Wikipedia] The word charrette may refer to any collaborative session in which a group of designers drafts a solution to a design problem.

While the structure of a charrette varies, depending on the design problem and the individuals in the group, charrettes often take place in multiple sessions in which the group divides into sub-groups. Each sub-group then presents its work to the full group as material for future dialogue. Such charrettes serve as a way of quickly generating a design solution while integrating the aptitudes and interests of a diverse group of people. Compare this term with workshop.

Thursday, 18 April 2013

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How about Jeff’s nice donation to the FOHBC for the Manchester show. That guy is so understated and generous. Been in the news plenty lately, more than usual, with the great bottles he has been pulling in like the the green Drakes, Pittsburgh Wolff’s, Constitution Bitters, I. Nelson’s etc.

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Look for posts on Mexican Bitters and the next installment on the Houston series. Anybody have anything on the Diamond “M” Bitters?

Tuesday, 16 April 2013

TealDrakesJeffsOffice

Holy Toledo, look at this new Drakes that Wichmann scored. The bent neck and crude mouth are off the chart.

DrakesTealJeff

Monday, 15 April 2013

CaseGinPam

While in Key West this week we were able to visit another bottle enthusiast. His name is Ed Harper and he is the neighbor of Alex. We had the pleasure to be invited into his home and were able to take some pictures of his beautiful collection. These will be in my next article but I thought I would entice you with a picture of his real big case gin. Enjoy.

Pam (Selenak)

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Jerry really working hard to capture the raw beauty and exciting color of the I. Nelsons Bourbon barrel he picked up last Saturday. What a bottle!

Sunday, 14 April 2013

Off to Augusta, Georgia today. I arrive during the Masters. That town ought to be insane. Hopefully I can sneak in.

I_Nelsons

Look at this I. Nelson Old Bourbon barrel that Jerry Forbes scored at Golden Gate Historical Bottle Show yesterday. Read more on I. Nelsons.

DrPlanettsAlex

I thought I would give you an update on the Dr. Planett’s from last year. Yesterday when we were over at Alex’s he showed me his Dr. Planett’s that he coincidentally brought up from a dive not far from where Bob brought mine up from. Makes you think what else could be down there. The other picture is the Key West welcoming committee.

Read: The Celestial Dr. Planett’s Bitters

KeyWestWelcoming

Saturday, 13 April 2013

HarterIronTonicCard

DavesGreatCardsGalore has a nice Trade Card on ebay that I added to the Dr. Harter’s Post. I am really into trade cards. Met two of the top TC players in Balto at the show. Hope to see their collections.

Tom Phillips (Memphis) had a nice response to the Memphis Privy post.

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Old Dr. Townsend’s spotted in this old photo from Bryan Grapentine. Some of these bottles now sit in my collection.

Friday, 12 April 2013

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How about those Elvin Moody collection photographs? Real missing link with me. Thank you again Marty Kuzmic for sharing. The method of lighting the bottles actually adds suspense and historical significance to these pictures which I assume were scanned.

Pictures from the Bill Heminger collection just coming in. Look for a post.

Thursday, 11 April 2013

TownsendsDaisy

Lightning, wind, rain and thunder this am. Home at Peachridge again. Very cold, low 40’s. I say this as Pam and Randy keep sending me updates on their bottle dive trip in Key West. What am I doing wrong!

I just got back from the program Alex gave on Key West bottles and general bottle diving. He had all of us in stitches with his presentation as well as a few songs he sang for us. Randy had a great idea that might interest you. He would be a great guest speaker for the southern region national banquet. Here are a few pics I took.
Pam (Selenak)

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Wednesday, 10 April 2013

Uggh..still hobbling around with a bum foot. Working out of the house again. Sure glad I am not traveling this week though I do fly out Sunday to Augusta.

Incredible amount of fun stories, information and finds coming in. Yesterday it was so cool to do posts on that great I. & L. M. Hellman’s bottle that Matthew Levanti submitted. What an exciting square. Couple that with the M. Nathan’s post that Gary Beatty assisted with and you can see why so many people are getting fired up about these rare squares, whether they have ‘Bitters’ embossed on them or not. I am just curious as to ‘who are the new big time square players’ are? Congrats to whoever you are. I bet some of you are reading this.

TownsendsMW

Great new example of an Old Dr. Townsend’s Celebrated Stomach Bitters (left handled) chestnut just coming in from Tom Phillips. Double pontiled like mine with ghosted text on front. Picture above credited to Mark Warne.

And wow-o-wow, wait to you see what Jack Stecher has sent in regarding Jacob’s Cordial. This guy amazes me.

Lots of new PRIVY information incoming from Reggie Shoeman from the Montana frontier. As many of you know, I am not a dirt digger (I’m a digital digger) and I am really fascinated by the privy ordinances. I guess I just assumed you found a spot in your yard and you dug a hole. Super interesting stuff. Stay tuned for Balto and Memphis privy updates.

B&ECover_MayJun13

Just finishing up the May June issue of Bottles and Extras. It is somewhat of a Paradox for me to be working on stories and information posts in a digital format and to also be working on a magazine that is put out bi-monthly. I mean, you all know I live in a digital world. If you are reading this, you do too. It is just that I have Fed Board members and still many members and collectors who are not online. They say. “I like to take my auction catalog or bottle magazine to the bathroom”. Well, it really won’t be to long now when paper goes away. Sorry to say that. I am just trying to find a happy medium for both now. And guess what, I take my Ipad in the BR!

Monday, 08 April 2013

Stayed home today. Twisted my ankle and hurt my big toe so bad I am immobilized. Was there a Bitters product for this? Had fun with the Argyle Bitters post. Updated this morning with clarification from Bill Ham about earlier variant A 83.5. Thanks Bill.

LexingtonART

Clue from yesterday.

Anybody watching that olive yellow OK Plantation square on ebay? Wow. Thought I had the only yellow example. XR bird.

Read: Charles Lediard and his Liquor Products

Sunday, 07 April 2013

Lexington Flyer

Been working on some art for something major, down the road. Can any of you all guess what this might be for? Shouldn’t be too hard…

PamsFloridaPickle

Enjoying ourselves down here in Key West. I will be writing an article for the B&E in regards to a revisit to Key West (last years article). We are planning a 2 tank dive on Thursday which I will be filming and taking stills. Alex has guaranteed us to find bottles. I’ve attached some pictures of a pickle jar we found in an antique store today. Super whittled, gnarly pontil and some absolute gorgeous benicia patina in it. I can’t get the right picture to show off the colors. It changes with every view from blues to pinks to fire orange. Pam (Selenak)

Read More: The Celestial Dr. Planett’s Bitters

Thursday, 04 April 2013

Historic view of Allen’s Landing Can anyone make out the first word in the fence advertising graphics in this Houston photo? I get __ Liver Pills Tippecanoe. Even at low resolution, this is a fascinating image as I believe this is the earliest ‘downtown’ shot I can find. Is that a trash dump to the right of the fence. That is a barge on the lower right sitting on Buffalo Bayou. Maybe ‘Log Cabin’ ?

Wednesday, 03 April 2013

KentuckyBitters

Look at these three really rare Kentucky Bitters. That Pasquier’s French Bitters is to die for. Trying to put together some graphics for the FOHBC 2014 National Antique Bottle Show in Lexington, KY. J_Boardman_PuceWill trade this puce J. Boardman & Co. for a cobalt blue R. Robinson from Wilmington, NC if anyone is interested?? Chris Whitehurst (Posted on FOHBC web site)

Tuesday, 02 April 2013

IndianQueen2Headed

“I laughed my heads off” 

WOODY DOUGLAS

Put a few of the facebook comments with my 2 Headed Indian Queen post yesterday. Like any April Fools joke some people believe. Been fooled many times myself.

Monday, 01 April 2013

YellowInks_April

Kind of weird having Easter in March. I think Easter and April are the color yellow. Maybe I will do a post later on the Color Yellow in the same vein as the Color Puce and the Color Purple posts. Speaking of yellow, how about that great ink picture (see above) posted by John April?

Posted in Daily Dose, Inks, News, Peachridge Glass, Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The latest from the The Museum of Connecticut Glass

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The latest from the The Museum of Connecticut Glass

31 March 2013

Apple-Touch-IconAThe following post reports on the latest news from the The Museum of Connecticut Glass and has been developed with cooperation and coordination with Noel Tomas.

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Noel Tomas – photo Dana Charlton-Zarro

Historical Synopsis of the Museum of Connecticut Glass, Inc.

Founded February 12, 1994, the Museum of Connecticut Glass was organized by a small group of interested Coventry residents (led by the late Pam Papanos) and registered as a historical not-for-profit corporation with the Connecticut Secretary of the State and the Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) non-profit.

Its mission:

To exhibit, preserve, research and provide education about historical glass made in the numerous glass works and artisans’ shops of Connecticut (from the 18th, 19th, 20th centuries on – this is the nation’s only museum dedicated to glassmaking statewide).

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Capt. John Turner House (circa 1813).

The state of Connecticut, through an act of the General Assembly, deeded the historic Capt. John Turner house (circa 1813) (Turner was the glass company’s manager and maintained the company store in the back “L” of his house) and 2 acres of property to the established organization for the sole purpose of operating it as a public museum dedicated to the Nutmeg state’s glass industries.

Through research and application by the late Jesse Brainard – an independent historian/writer – the federal National Register designated the district surrounding and including the historic Coventry Glass Company site (which includes several currently existing houses from that glassmaking period) as the “National Glass Factory District” (the only such designation in the nation on the National Register). The state of Connecticut followed suit accepting the national designation.

NoelTomasMugThe founders recruited Noel Tomas later in 1994 to serve as President. Noel was an avid bottle and glass collector since the mid sixties plus writer/photographer (Antiques & Arts Weekly, Maine Antique Digest, Hartford Courant, and other antique bottle and specialty publications) as well as publisher of The downeast GLASSMAN, a nationally but briefly circulated tabloid quarterly publication – 1969/1971 – for the bottle collecting hobby. (He is a Columbia Missouri School of Journalism graduate and worked on publications for the State of Missouri and then as a reporter-photographer for The Kansas City Star-Times, and was the Northeast Region organizer – chairman/vice president for the Federation of Historical Bottle Collectors)

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Personalities at the Museum’s annual outdoor show: Diane Seemann from R.I. and New Bedford Museum of Glass Director Kirk Nelson’s father, Ross Nelson

Under his leadership to date, the Museum built and has a modest membership, halted the major deterioration the historic Turner, Stebben, Chamberlain house re-roofing to stop the leakage of water into the brick 2-story building (plus single beam full attic) removing the dormer to restore the historical roof line, replaced a defective furnace and is beginning other exterior and interior restorations room by room plus acquiring a historic (circa 1935) University of Connecticut barn and one acre of land. Through grants he has submitted, work was paid for and ongoing utility and repair, renovation, insurance and other bills are covered. Unlike some other “house museums” in Connecticut, he has kept the museum’s funds “in the black” since the museum’s founding. He also has been instrumental in starting through donations and other contributions a small collection consisting of historic Connecticut-produced glass examples, historic early documents from the Pitkin family through other glass companies such as Coventry, Willington and the more recent Knox glass company. And a small, but prestigious annual outdoor antique glass, bottles and other collectibles show & sale is in its 9th year – set for Saturday, May 18, 2013 – the 200th anniversary of the founding of the Coventry Glass Company.

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Furnace Building photograph

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Rendering of Furnace Building

The museum has reached a significant milestone in its quest to become fully operational:

Plans are being developed to seek major funding for: renovation/reconstruction of the barn as the museum’s Education & Activity Center (to have temporary displays and other interactive exhibits, a furnace room viewing window, small group meetings space and a small museum store) and building a new adjoining structure to house an active two-pot electric furnace, glory hole and annealing oven(s).

A University of Connecticut School of Engineering Department of Mechanical Engineering (located less than 5 miles from the museum) senior class student team spent one year studying and determining from a feasibility study that the museum can generate enough electricity 24/7 for at least 10 months a year to provide utilities for its buildings and to power the glass furnace and its required accessories.

Current-day equipment and construction costs are being collected for the work on the Education/Activity Center and furnace building plus for installation-connection (to all buildings, etc.) of the solar grid power plant, and for the furnace and its required accessory equipment. This will set the stage for major funding-source applications that would include private investments/funding and other private sources for the planned model manufacturing plant, federal/state funding and from other grant sources.

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The Museum’s Activity & Education Center is a circa 1935 3-story barn. The attached furnace building and restoration, equipping will place this building into use for visitors. It will house temp. exhibits, a small Museum store and meeting space.

When funding is obtained and approved construction begins, additional cost estimates will be sought for two additional projects — the major restoration of the Turner house and the construction of an artists-in-residence temporary apartments with an adjoining “hot shop.” Plus for the grounds designs and work, a landscape architect (also an antique bottle person) has volunteered to prepare the outdoor designs on both sides of North River Road where the museum’s properties sit.

The major restoration work – pointing and repair/replacement of the Turner house bricks, reconstructing the roof, special basement work to eliminate periodic flooding, and completing the replacement of doors, windows and other interior walls and structures in order to fully climatize the building, replacing the present furnace with a heating/cooling plant, probably restoring chimneys to what is shown in an 1840s photograph, and building special permanent exhibit cases plus a 2nd floor library room and office space, bathrooms and a 2nd floor handicap lift.

Already, Noel has projected to the “grand opening day” of the operational museum with a known bottle collection owned by a world renown individual.

As the work progresses, contributors, volunteers and supporters from everywhere are sought to make this historically prominent statewide museum a full, operational reality for the world of collectors who have come to worship, collect and prize the glass produced in Connecticut.

G A L L E R Y

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Tours of the Capt. Turner house take place during annual shows

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Facebook bottle, glass collectors regulars pose at a Museum show (Noel Tomas on left)

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Westford glass witches ball sent to Museum from Colorado by a descendant of a glassblower at the factory – Museum of Connecticut Glass

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Westford blowing pipe (with blowers initials) and the witch ball affixed – Museum of Connecticut Glass

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Two cub scout packs visit the Museum and Turner house.

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New Museum Junior Board member Nickolas Wrobleski seeking another early bottle for his collection.

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Mike George (FOHBC 2013 New Hampshire co-chair) reaches for another New England flask.

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Interior main room of Turner house stripped and ready for re-painting.

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The finished room

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New Junior Board member Nick Wrobleski (12) blows a hot glass bubble – he’s the Museum’s only glass blowing member.

Posted in Early American Glass, Glass Companies & Works, Glass Makers, History, Museums, News, Witch Ball | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

2013 National Antique Bottle Show Seminars Announced

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Manchester, NH Seminars

Michael George, show chair and Rick Ciralli, seminar coordinator for the 2013 FOHBC National Antique Bottle Show in Manchester, New Hampshire just announced officially, an exciting line-up of seminars and presenters that will want to be added to your show agenda. Wow, what a line-up. The best-of-the-best and the who-of-the-who’s will share some time and insight with us in some fascinating areas.

All seminars will occur on Saturday morning, 20 July and are open to any member of the Federation or person attending the show. Actual times and locations will be posted at a later date. Please mark your calendar now!

Seminar_SheldonCrowd

Seminar List

Connecticut Glass RaritiesRick Ciralli

Last Links to the Past 20th Century South Jersey Glass – Thomas Haunton

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

New Hampshire Glass Factories and ProductsMichael George

Mount Vernon Glass Co. – History, Products & People – Brian P. Wolff

Early 20th Century Milk Marketing In New England* – Jim George

Markings & Seals Embossed on Milk Bottles* – Al Morin

Mineral Waters from Yankee CountryGeorge Waddy

Uncovering Demijohns Dave Hoover

* Co-Presented

Seminar Topics and Presenters


Connecticut Glass Rarities

Rick Ciralli

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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!


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.

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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!


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

Ian Simmonds

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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.


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.

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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.


Mount Vernon Glass Co. – History, Products & People

Brian Wolff

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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.


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.

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.


Mineral Waters From Yankee Country

George Waddy

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.


Uncovering Demijohns

Dave Hoover

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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.


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

A Thought Provoking and Inspirational Communication

By 14 I had my own bottle shop in our cellar, a sign on the tree out front, had a table at the local flea markets, went to several major auctions at Bob Skinner’s, was advertising in Old Bottle magazine and was a paid-up FOHBC ‘at-large’ member.

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My shop sign out front of the house (which I painted by hand) – Doug Watts

Dear Mr. Meyer,

I just spent a cold, crusty Maine Saturday poring over your Peachridge blog and website. It is all very inspiring.

I grew up in southeastern Massachusetts and starting digging bottles in the neighborhood at age 12 (ie. 1976). By 14 I had my own bottle shop in our cellar, a sign on the tree out front (see above), had a table at the local flea markets, went to several major auctions at Bob Skinner’s, was advertising in Old Bottle magazine and was a paid-up FOHBC ‘at-large’ member. After shipping out to college in 1982 (UMaine) I took a break and now at 48 am circling back a bit, hence these observations.

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Scan from Old Bottle Magazine in 1977 or so when I first advertised my little bottle shop when I was 13.

1. My brother, cousins and I were collecting in the late 1970s as kids, which was when the pursuit perhaps peaked in general popularity, certainly as gauged by average price. The Charlie Gardner auction at Bob Skinner’s was a catapult. Interestingly, the prices of low to medium range bottles today have not changed much in the past 35 years. A Doyle’s Hop Bitters is still about $30, a Drakes Plantation is $50, a run of the mill olive amber cornucopia and urn flask is still about $75; an aqua, smooth-based Union Clasped Hands is still about $50. Antique dealers are still trying to get $20 for a clean Hood’s sarsaparilla. In this respect, antique bottles are a terrible investment! Using the price of gasoline as a metric, a normal National Bitters or Indian Queen should cost nearly $1,200 today. If you bought a Drake’s Plantation bitters for $55 in 1978 and held onto it for all this time, it would only be worth about $15 today in 1978 dollars. But I think this is an incredibly good thing since it keeps fascinating old bottles well within the means of the most modestly endowed collector, ie. kids. And you can always go digging.

2. I like your blog piece  (Read: Bottle Shards in Window Jars) about keeping shards of oddball or unknown bottles even if they aren’t whole. This is important since it re-emphasizes the role of bottle diggers and collectors as historic archaeologists and preservationists. Regular archaeologists don’t toss shards — they are the purpose of the excavation. In my intense bottle digging phase (1975-1982) we were ‘trained’ by the market to leave behind in the dirt anything that wasn’t whole, displayable and saleable. Part of it’s an education thing, part of it might have been our youth, but there is a lesson here. Adding another scuffed up but whole root beer colored Drake’s Plantation to the world doesn’t add much (maybe $20 in your pocket) — but that shard of a really weird, unknown piece might be the key to a long lost puzzle or at least a new bread crumb along the way. Toss it, and all information is lost.

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Doug, Allan and Tim Watts in summer 1978 prepping for probe-rodding several 1850s cellar holes in the hillside behind them in East Corinth, Vermont. We never heard a single clink of glass after two days of probing down to six feet. We could never find the outhouses.

3. FOHBC at its outset had a mission (or at least I perceived it this way at 14) to create a sense of legitimacy to both the pursuit and end product of the efforts of a lot of disparate diggers and enthusiasts nation-wide. In the 1970s bottle collecting had a legitimacy problem – straight antique dealers felt a bit awkward setting up a table next to a bunch of grungy blue collar people (or kids) who got themselves happily muddy every weekend digging in dirt and put their newfound wares on a flimsy card table in a cow pasture. Bob Skinner and Norman Heckler at Skinner’s in Bolton, Mass. did a lot to change this – certainly the prices and turn-outs they were getting helped change perceptions amongst the more fastidious. But I think the biggest contribution Bob made, and Norm has now made many times over, is that a lot of these glass objects are truly deserving consideration as legitimate folk-art objects, even if they were ultimately intended, paid for and designed to serve a purely mercantile interest. Art and artistic expression will always squeeze itself like toothpaste out of the weirdest crevices. This is not something a 14 year-old fiendishly digging for a Berkshire Bitters might appreciate, but can easily be seen by the same person a few decades later.

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FREE SAMPLE – HENTZ’S CURATIVE BITTERS – Meyer Collection

4. Lastly, I note your keen interest in obscure bitters bottles. At 14 I was advised by older collectors to find and focus on one area and dig in as deep as possible. So I decided to focus on free sample bottles. My rule was it had to be embossed ‘sample’ or ‘trial size’ or be so small that it couldn’t be anything but a free sample (thus eliminating tiny pill or perfume bottles which were actually intended to be that size). Sample bitters bottles are the coin of the realm for this narrow field. The best embossed free sample bitters I have is a tiny Hentz’s Curative Bitters — Free Sample – which I bought from Tommy Mitchiner through the Old Bottle Magazine in 1978. Embossed sample bitters are really hard to find and easily confused from merely ‘small-sized’ bitters bottles which I believe were used post-1900 as flavorants for mixed drinks (ie. Angostura bitters, Abbott’s bitters). The key I’ve used as an indicator of a true ‘free sample’ bitters is the Dr. Harter’s wild cherry bitters. It’s an exactly replica of the one quart bottle but is only 3.5 inches tall; I think that was clearly a give-a-away at a medicine show. So this is kind of a request, but it would be cool if sometime you could do a little photo spread on your blog of some of the sample-sized bitters bottles in your collection and maybe a call-out to your other bitters fiends for what they might have kicking around in the sample-sized realm. They are a genre unto themselves.

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Sample bitters – Meyer Collection

Thanks for all your work,

Douglas Watts

Augusta, Maine

P.S. Here’s a funny story about Bob Skinner and Norm Heckler. Our dad was a landscaper but also pruned apple trees in the winter in Bolton, Mass., just a short distance from Bob’s auction gallery in Bolton. My brother and I bugged our dad drive us 50 miles to a few of their first post-Charlie Gardner bottle auctions. We would get our little gold plastic auction paddles and go through the whole preview and look at everything and figure how to spend our $50. I was 14, my brother was 16, and we knew the going price of everything, so we would sometimes bid over what we actually had for money, thinking that if we got it dirt cheap, we could get the money from dad to pay Bob Skinner and then sell it to the lurkers in the parking lot and get the paying price back and pay back dad. Bob and Norm would switch off at the gavel every hour or so. We loved the auction patter that Bob and Norm used and would copy it all the way home. After the first few auctions we had perfect Bob Skinner and Norm Heckler impersonations down. Neither Bob or Norm were hard sell. It was clear Norm knew exactly what a specific bottle should go for: he was and is an encyclopedia. So one day I was bidding and bidding and bidding all day but always got outbid by $10 at the very end by some guy in the back row because me and Timmy only had $50 between us. And finally I hung on to the bitter end and had the high bid on a deep olive amber cornucopia and urn flask for $80 and Norm looked around the room and said, “I have $80 in the front … is there any advance? …. And it is, $80 to 49.” And then Norm looked right down at me and said, “That’s 80 to 49.” And then the whole room burst in applause since everyone had seen us kids trying and trying to buy something all day but never succeeding. Then we thought, oh crap, we actually bought it. Gotta go talk to Dad and get some more money. He was out in the parking lot yakking with Fred Schwiekowicz, a bottle dealer from around Brockton, Mass. Dad paid the $30 extra that we didn’t have but told us we’d have to work it off mowing lawns and digging holes. Which we did. But we had a real Early American flask !!!

Apple-Touch-IconADoug.. I am so grateful for you taking the time to share some stories and insights. This is what it is all about. Thank you so much. Stay tuned. Ferdinand

Posted in Auction News, Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Digging and Finding, FOHBC News, History, Mailbox Letters, Miniatures, Peachridge Glass, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment