TeaKettle Ink Price and Reference Guide

TeaKettle Ink Price_Coversmall

TeaKettle Ink Price and Reference Guide

by Joe L. Mathews Jr. – 2016

26 July 2016

Apple-Touch-IconAAs noted within my Houston Antique Bottle Show report yesterday, I said I would be reporting on a new book by Joe Mathews called TeaKettle Ink Price and Reference Guide. Joe presented me with an advance copy draft and stated that he will be printing and binding 100 initially. The book is all color and printed on glossy paper, 60 pages.

“I have already pre-sold 20 copies to the UK and France collectors, 10 copies to Australia and New Zealand collectors and 8 to the United States collectors before any real advertising. It appears there will be a demand for more than 50 copies so I am now going to limit it to 100 copies.” – Joe

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Alicia Booth (left) Paulette Mathews and Joe Mathews. Alicia has the new book open in her hand.

The book will be published in a soft and hard bound format and contains information about the author, acknowledgments and sections on Teakettle Ink History, New Fountain Inkstands, Tealkettle Ink Rarity, Teakettle Ink Molds and Identification Numbers, Color, Neck Rings and Caps and great photo/description sections on Barrels, Beehives, Concave Panels, Cut Glass, Embossed Flowers, Fancy, Figural, Flat Panels, Freeblown, Imari/Ku Tani Japan, Pen Rests, Porcelain/Pottery, Unique/Unusual and Uranium Glass teakettles. There are also nice group photographs from collections.

For copies of this book contact: Joe Mathews, joe@mathewsgroup.org

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Posted in Advice, Collectors & Collections, Color Runs, Figural Bottles, History, Inks, News, Photography, Price Guides, Publications | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

2016 Houston Bottle Show fun as usual!

Star Bottling ColeSmall

2016 Houston Bottle Show fun as usual!

25 July 2016

HoustonPatchCircleThe Houston Bottle Show is usually a tough one for me because it is usually a week or two before the Federation National Show (FOHBC 2016 Sacramento National Antique Bottle Convention & Expo) where a lot of my attention has been focused. This year was no different but I must say, it was well worth setting up and visiting with the Texas and southwest bottle crowd. I even picked up a few pieces that will work their way into my house which is under major renovation from the Houston floods this past April and May.

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This past Friday started out early for me as I was in Dothan, Alabama for business the day earlier. I had a 6:15 am flight to Houston from Pensacola, Florida so I had to arise at 3:15 am and drive southwest. It now occurs to me that maybe I should have just stayed in Alabama and hit the 1st Tuscaloosa Antique Bottle, Pottery and Advertising Show. Nah, I had reserved a table in Houston and needed to stay the course. I did miss set-up and early admission on Friday night as getting around Houston during rush hour is a nightmare. There is construction everywhere and they had closed down all Easy Pass lanes to upgrade equipment.

Rooster

Kind of a sparse Meyer table this year as much is in storage from the floods while we restore and renovate our house. Check out that cool Edwin Meaders rooster in a dark green glaze.

Read More: Really glad I made it to the 2015 Houston Antique Bottle Show

Read More: Workin’ the 2014 Houston Antique Bottle Show

Read More: 2013 Houston Bottle Show Sightings

Read More: 2012 Houston Antique Bottle Show – Rain or Shine!

Read More: Meyer Table at the 2011 Houston Bottle Show

Saturday morning I got up around 4:30 am. Most of my bottles are packed up and in storage so I had trouble putting enough material together for a table. I usually get two tables and set up light boxes and display bitters and other figural color runs. You can see some previous table set-up at the links above. The material is not for sale, and just for fun as it draws people to the table where I have a table display rack of BOTTLES and EXTRAS and FOHBC memberships. I meet so many cool people this way.

Alton

Alton Neatherlin

This year my table was next to Alton Neatherlin who is a legend with the Houston bottle scene. I hope to do a story on him at some point. I also very much missed Dan Cowman who passed away earlier in the year. Dan was the king of bottle ephemera and had so many killer pieces of bitters material…and great bottles. Most is at auction now with Terry McMurray (McMurray Antiques & Auctions) in New York. The second Cowman auction had just ended a week before. Terry reported very strong prices which is good.

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Alicia Booth, Paulette and Joe Mathews.

I also ran into Joe and Paulette Matthews who presented me with a copy of their upcoming Teakettle Ink Price and Reference Guide. Alicia is holding the book. I will be doing a separate piece on this super book.

Alicia&Brad

Alicia Booth & Brad Seigler

FOHBC board member elects Alicia Booth (Public Relations Director) and Brad Seigler (Southern Region Director) were also present. Brad has a great collection of Texas bottles and had a table full of material including black glass from a collection he just picked up. He also had this killer Chippewa Salt framed advertising piece (pictured below) from Wadsworth, Ohio which I snatched up and I will hang at Peach Ridge when the time is right. Still painting and staining the walls for the next few weeks. Alicia Booth will be heading to Sacramento next week with us for the National. We leave on Tuesday, 02 August. Bags are packed. Elizabeth is also coming along with my granddaughter Isabella and Coco, my Weimie.

ChippewaSalt

Framed Chippewa Salt advertising from Wadsworth, Ohio.

The Houston Bottle Show each year is headed up by Barbara and Kathy Puckett (pictured below). Barbara always does a great job as Show Chair. I especially like the carpeted floor and fully covered tables. I wish more bottle shows would consider the full coverage as it hides valuables and other material beneath the tables. It also makes for better pictures.

Chairs

Kathy Puckett (left) and Barbara Puckett.

Also spotted in the crowd were a number a familiar faces such as Jay Kasper, Chris Renaudo, Earl McIntyre, Ronnie Britton, Henry Tankersley, David Cole, Robert Vaughn, Mike McGrew, Dee Mondey, Will Beauchamp, Courtney Frioux, Tracy & Barbara Bradford, Casey Roby, Phil Lambert, Jeff Yaun, Ronnie Britton and more.

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Large PYREX insulator in pale orange carnival (one piece) to go with my smaller one. Kinda cool. Raw on my Saltillo tiles as my house being renovated.

I was able to pick up this large PYREX insulator in a light orange carnival color from Chris Renaudo which will go with my smaller one. Thanks Chris. I put them on some raw butcher block on my raw Saltillo tiles at home. Made for a nice picture.

Casey Roby reports that he is building a bottle making museum in East Texas, I hope to do a separate story on that too.

Anyway a fun day. I even asked a select few if they would be interested in putting together a proposal to bring the FOHBC National Convention to Houston in 2019. The answer was always a strong yes. You see, at one time in the 1970s or so, Houston was the epicenter of bottle collecting. Could it be again?

Whistle

A smiling Phil Lambert… just whistle

Caps

Soda bottle caps always make a nice graphics display. I’d keep em’ all and hang on a wall framed!

DiamondDyes

I wonder if Jeff Yaun was playing Pokémon GO? Actually I really liked the Diamond Dyes Box. Great condition.

Earl

Earl McIntyre…proud as a 5c Peacock

DavidCole

Texas bottle KING, David Cole. Hoping to do a story on David too. Saturday was his birthday!

Will

I thanked Will Beauchamp for wearing a shirt that went so well with his bottles! Will is a Houston anchor.

Persian

A super Persian Saddle flask showed up. A quick check with Phil Culhane up in Canada proved this to be an original.

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Ronnie Britton with a table full of bottles.

CaseyRobey

Casey Roby on the right. Misplaced the gentleman’s name on the left. Gonna do a post on Casey’s museum project.

Sandwich

I was able to grab a few of my Sandwich monument colognes. Always striking. Would have looked better on my light box!

Henry

Henry Tankersley down from the Tulsa. Representing the Tulsa Antique Bottle Club. They have a show each year. Another anchor down this way.

DecoPerfume

Someone brought over this deco perfume and said if it wasn’t broken it would be worth a fortune. I could not identify it but will contact the International Perfume Bottle Collectors Assoc. Would love to have an Indian Queen or Old Sachem’s in that color!!!!

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Rene Saenz with a table full of Art Deco bottles.

MarshallTex

I really like this hand holding a bottle. What a great marketing piece from Marshall, Texas.

LotsOfBottles

A zillion Three Rivers Texas bottles.

LoneStarBrewery

Just a KILLER Lone Star Brewing piece. Love it! Color and condition outstanding.

LoneStarBeer

Can’t remember this guys name. Please wear your badges and help me out 🙂 or maybe I should do a better job!

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Dynamite Anheuser-Busch piece. Cropped a bit tight but striking none-the-less.

Tracy&BarbaraBradford

I met Tracy and Carol Bradford for the first time. What great people. Postcard dealer at his first Houston show. Talk about coordinated shirts!

HiloDrugCo

Alton Neatherlin let me photograph his extremely rare drug store bottle from Hilo, Hawaii.

Insulators

Super insulator display case on Chris Renaudo’s table.

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ACL sodas on Don Wininger’s table.

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

Daily Dose | July 2016

July  |  2 0 1 6

28 July 2016

It is with great sadness that I report that Jerry & Helen Forbes, dear friends of ours, lost their house yesterday in the Soberanes Fire. Here is a PRG Facebook screen capture from last Saturday before they evacuated.

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24 July 2016

Consumed with the Sacramento National. Houston Bottle Show yesterday. That was fun. Started out Friday in Pensacola and headed back late. Missed Friday evening Early Admission. Off to Baltimore this week for meetings.

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Hi Ferd. Found this in an old bottle collection and have never seen one. Thought it may interest you! – Mark Newton

Reminded me of a pic I had from a previous Glass Works auction.

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Friday, 15 July 2016

A nice piece below that Richard Sheaff sent me that he recently came across during some research on S. O. & W. L. Richardson.

Read More: S.O. Richardson’s South Reading Mass Bitters Bottle + letter Civil War 34th Reg

Read More: W.L. Richardson’s Bitters – South Reading

Read More: Dr. S.O. Richardson’s Jaundice Bitters – South Reading

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Sunday – 03 July 2016

Hello F., Liberty can come with a steep price; something to remember on the Fourth of July. This ca. 1914 postcard brings to mind another liberty worth noting. – Ken Previtali Read: The Bust of Columbia Liberty Cap Eagle Historical Flask

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Was thinking about whiskey bottles yesterday and remembered a scene from the HBO Deadwood series where Al Swearengen (last names fits) discusses the merits of owning a saloon. Of course his language is a bit more colorful. Watch.

Fred Holabird reports that the 49er Bottle Jamboree has a number of whiskies in their auction including, “about 20 fifths and flasks. Includes his green Thos Taylor, VC; about 10 rare western flasks, from Washington to Nevada and California, with several unlisted.”

Swerengen in Saloon

Saturday – 02 July 2016

A series of communications from my friend, fellow bitters collector and FOHBC treasurer, Gary Beatty:

Hey Ferd, here is a blue bottle that I picked up at a thrift store. It is probably from the 1940s or 50s? It’s not valuable but it fits in my small “Blue” collection. Read the label, Ryd•D•ers Tar Solvent. I always used to use turpentine. Best Regards, Gary

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Hey Ferd, This is a WOOD’S TONIC & / WINE BITTER / CINCINNATI OHIO. It is W 153 in Ham’s Bitters Bottles Book, and listed as rare. I think should be updated to extremely rare. Dug by a St. Louis privy digger. I had to clean it. It has a 3″ crack on one shoulder but I am thrilled to have this Buckeye in my collection. Best Regards, Gary Beatty

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Gary, here is my example. Difficult bottle to photograph.

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Hey Ferd: here are two great bottles found art an Indiana garage sale in the past week. A.G.W. Merchant Lock Port N.Y and a yellow Drake’s Plantation Bitters. Keep Looking Folks! Gary Beatty

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Ferd, here is the bottle I won in the Antique Bottle & Glass Collector magazine for my article. Best Regards, Gary

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Friday – 01 July 2016

children-story-on-crocodile-attitude-clip-artOK, please pardon me for my absence this past month or so which has been extreme to say the least. Super busy and traveling with work and knee deep in alligators with all the details for the FOHBC 2016 Sacramento National Antique Bottle Convention & Expo and getting the contracts ready by 28 July for the FOHBC 2017 Springfield National Antique Bottle Convention & Expo. This period of time has been daunting. Throw in the renovations from two catastrophic 500 year floods on the property and house, just wow. As Chuck Thompson, a long ago famed Baltimore Oriole and Colt’s radio and television announcer used to say, “Ain’t the Beer Cold!

I’ll just start the month off here with the present FOHBC President’s Message as that recaps some of where we are at down here. Good progress. On any given work day we have pavers, pool repairers, roofers, drywallers, painters, carpenters and tilers. Fortunately we have a good general contractor. Today they started security wiring for cameras and alarms. Yesterday, Elizabeth picked out all new appliances. Painters will be here soon.

Pres_Message_July August 2016

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Lost California Bear found in North Carolina

WalkingBearDuo

Lost California Bear found in North Carolina

19 June 2016

Marty Vollmer, the South Carolina show chairman, called me and said a friend found an ad on Craigslist for a bottle with a bear on it. I asked if it was clear and he informed me that it was amber. I got on-line and the ad read;

“Antique Bottle $3000.00.”

There were several pictures that were not very good but I recognized it as the Wm. H. Spears & Co. Old Pioneer Whiskey.

I contacted the gentleman and we agreed to meet the next day in Charlotte to see the bottle. I walked into a McDonald’s in south Charlotte and met Mr. Donald Hurst, his wife Mary and his granddaughter who helped him post the ad and pictures. The bottle was red shading to honey amber in the shoulder and so heavily whittled that the “Sole Agents, S.F.” was almost illegible. The condition was almost mint. We agreed on a price and I purchased the bottle. I thought it would be best if Don wrote a history of the bottle.

May 25, 2016

My story begins in 1951, when I was on a trip to the beach with my family. I was digging in the sand for clams when I found the bottle. That was in Netarts, Oregon in Netarts Bay.

I kept it over the next 65 years, often showing it to friends. In 1980, my wife, children and I moved to Charlotte, North Carolina. It has always been kept in the closet, only bringing it out to show it off and telling people the story of how I found it.

Two weeks ago we had people over for a cook out and the right man was there. He had an app on his phone and found the bottle. Our Granddaughter listed it on Craigslist and from there it found a new home with David Jackson.

Foot Note: In 2008 we bought a beach house in Netarts, Oregon. The address is Whiskey Creek Road.

Best Wishes,

Don Hurst

I have collected bottles since 1975 and I never thought I would have the opportunity to add this bottle to my collection. Thank you Mr. Hurst, I promise to take good care of it.

David Jackson

Read More: David Jackson and his Applied Seal Bottles

Posted in Collectors & Collections, Digging and Finding, Spirits, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

A silver lining in that storm?

BrownsTallr_Klotz

A silver lining in that storm?

by Jack Klotz

15 May 2016

Here is the story of finding the elusive “Brown’s/ Aromatic/ Bitters/ Hannibal/ Mo” bottle. I knew they were out there, just never expected to dig one up, as I discovered on the Peachridge Glass web site, the article written about the only other (amber) one known had listed them as “extremely rare.” Only one known and they call it extremely rare??? I call it unique! Well, there are/is at least one, possibly as many as two aqua ones that appear to be a newer variant. Now there are two amber ones. Ferdinand Meyer, president of FOHBC, owns the previously unique example and is nicely pictured in his website article. So now back to mine.

Read: Brown’s Aromatic Bitters – Hannibal, Missouri

I had hunted this property for over a year for the privy vault. The home dated to the late 1850s and was a mansion then as now. The yard is large by Hannibal standards. On the earliest Sanborn map from 1885, as well as the 1890 map, showed a barn in the farthest corner of the yard butting up against the two property lines, leaving no extra room for a privy.

To add to this unlikely area, there was a massive tree trunk about 5-6 feet in diameter that had been toppled over from a 100 mph wind storm a couple of years ago, very near where the barn stood. I checked the tree roots for clues first. Some newer 1940s junk and a few odd bricks were stuck in the tangle of roots in the base and it was obvious the tree literally fell over from its original spot. Next I checked above, from the tree, a ground hogs diggings for clues but found nothing. I used the maps to gauge about where the barn stood and flagged out the four corners and proceeded to probe a tight grid near the borders. Nothing! I discovered well enough away from the barn at the end of an old walkway an overgrown swampy fish pond made from an old large steel barrel. I later drained this out to discover there was nothing it was hiding underneath. I next continued my probing along the back property wall over the months. I couldn’t help but feel I was walking right over it but it continued to elude me.

I pretty well had Swiss cheesed the back part of the yard and after winter set in, mild as it was, I was in no big hurry to return for another bout of frustration. By February, I had decided the unusual warm spell was reason enough to re-probe the property. I decided to make my way closer to the house, as many of these older homes had privies nearly in the middle of the yard. When I got to a certain area, I hit what felt like a wall. I angle probed and it was HUGE! Nearly 10 feet long by 5 feet wide! I was pretty excited. Finally, after long last! But it was not to be. Turned out it was a strange floor of sorts, going down at least 3-4 feet of solid limestone! Not rubble tossed into a pit but well placed like for a floor. But why 4 feet deep? I thought after digging out huge lumps of stone for a couple of feet with no end in sight that it would take a backhoe to remove this! Clearly not the privy but what the heck was it? The homeowners had made mention of the home rumored to have been a prison of sorts during the civil war. Only thing I could come up with was a stockade. They didn’t want them tunneling out! I’m sure it would have worked! So that put me back to square one.

By now, I was beginning to think they just hung their rumps over a fallen log and called it good! “Privy? Privy? We don’ need no stinkin’ privy!” Well, that’s where my mind takes me when this frustrated….

So this most recent attempt started middle of April, of THIS year! Seemed like I been here off and on for years! I stood for a while looking at the yard and kept thinking, “Where is the most logical place for the privy?” It took me back to that corner where the map showed the barn in 1885. I really had no expectations to find anything back there but I had no other viable options. I checked the ground hog’s motel again but nothing. There had always been a large pile of bricks strewn over the edge of the yard that I ignored until now. Mainly because they had remnants of mortar and so far no privy lined with bricks has been mortared in my experience. But they could have been from the privy ABOVE ground. So I began scratching around to the side of the bricks and discovered what looked like a brick wall. then it expanded into two, three, four bricks thick. I’ve seen this on some early rectangular brick cisterns and thought with the barn on top of it, this might make some sense. Soon after, I discovered a stone wall under the bricks! As I uncovered this, I realized I was into a stone liner with a brick outhouse! The four bricks thick part was the foundation for stability for the bricks to be set on top of the stone liner. I had only seen this configuration a handful of times in the past, so now I was getting excited. My privy gauge was at 80%, but I had my doubts still. Why was there a barn on an obviously old stone liner, and what about that tree that looked to be 150 years old sitting right on top of it? Only getting to the bottom of the pit would get me to the bottom of the mystery. After six grueling hours of hacking my way down to the 5 foot level did I quit that first day. I had found one soup bone and that was it! Otherwise it was filled with ash, coal clinkers from furnaces, clay rocks and bricks. Plenty of bricks!

The next day I got there bright and early and got into slingin’ dirt. Soon I was pulling up two, 5 gallon buckets of dirt at a time as there was little room for the dirt to go. By the end of day two, I had only reached the eight foot level with one chicken bone to add to my collection. I gently probed down another four feet without hitting bottom, so I clung to some hope, but it was weak at best.

I ran into my digging friend Sean (Bryan) later that evening by chance and mentioned I found the privy to the elusive yard. He said, “And you weren’t gonna tell me?” I told him he could thank me later as I had found not a shard, a scrap or piece of glass or porcelain in eight feet of hard digging. I did realize if I were to get to the bottom in a reasonable period, I could use some help with the bucket, so I invited him to join the next day if he wanted.

Day three started solo, Sean arrived a couple hours after I did. I had just finished pulling up about 25 buckets from a moderate collapse of the far wall that was going to get knocked down anyway for safety sake. About an hour later I hit the first use layer with any glass in it and pulled out a clear glass un-embossed French square pharmacy type bottle typical of the 1860s. That was promising! Shortly after, Sean arrived and after setting the conditions, he started hauling buckets. In short order, I broke through an 1880s-1890s use layer. Brought up a Warner’s Wine and Tar Syrup, yummy! A couple pumpkinseed flasks with unusually thick glass came out along with a number of one local doctors pharmacy bottles that are only seen in the small 1 ounce sizes. A couple cone inks, including a cobalt Carters popped up. Near the bottom of this layer was a Stafford’s master ink that allowed a photo op.

Up to this point, everything kinda rolled out of the hole. At this point the pit still had at least 4 feet left so I kept digging. Under a layer of bricks was an older 1860s layer. I dug some old pieces here and there, and suddenly I flipped up a bottle that landed in my lap. “Oh! A Warner’s Safe Cure?”, I thought to myself. I turned over the un-embossed side to reveal the embossed side. With one swipe of my glove to remove the clinging dirt, I quickly realized this was no Warner’s! As I read in disbelief, “Brown’s Aromatic Bitters Hannibal Mo” I fell into a mild, warm shock! Sean was watching from above and knew I had found something good, but I had curled up and was cradling it like it was my newborn baby! I kept rocking back and forth and laughing quietly. Sean was concerned about me, I am sure. I had him drop my camera down for as close to an in situation picture as I could make of the bottle fresh out of the hole.

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The rest of the day was a blur with me wearing a huge smile. It is amazing what a mood elevator finding a great bottle can be! After I got my hard-earned prize home safely, next was to clean and inspect for any flaws or damage and there were none! The only drawback was managing to tweak my back while on the ladder, and now it was really aggravated. I took all the remedies available with the hopes of finishing out the pit the next day but could barely manage finishing getting out of bed! Rain was forecast for the next three or four days so I needed to return to cover and tarp the pit if nothing else. I managed to hobble over and climb down for a short digging spell before realizing it wasn’t the best of ideas. After covering it up for the bad weather, I, along with my bad back waited for about four days before we simultaneously were ready for my return.

Sitting next to the bitters had been a cathedral pepper sauce in pieces. I was surprised it didn’t survive and break my cherished bitters bottle. That’s how it usually turns out. I dug a number of un-embossed French squares as well as some aqua bluing type bottles. I couldn’t help but wonder where the pontil era stuff was hiding. Just under the 60s stuff was a gooey glue-like clay that held my answer. I dug a couple pontil puff bases, and a broken Ayers Pectoral pontiled, then a second one. This clay layer was the final gasp of the pit, bottoming out at about a foot and a half to the stone floor. Sadly, nothing survived whole at this level, but there were no tears this time around.

I think the mystery of the barn and tree hiding the pit was from an inaccurate map, since there was clearly some 1890s stuff and the tree was likely not as old as I had figured. I am no tree expert so I guess it could have grown that large in 125 years. I just know if not for that storm that knocked the tree over, I would never had found it. There truly was a silver lining in that storm, or perhaps more correctly, a “Brown” lining! I think if I dig nothing else for the rest of the year, all I have to do is remember that bitters in my lap getting its face cleaned by my glove to lift me above any future letdowns. This year……

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Posted in Bitters, Digging and Finding, News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Daily Dose | May & June 2016

May & June  |  2 0 1 6

Monday – 23 May 2016

Leaving for Louisville here shortly. Massive restorations aqnd renovations at Peach Ridge. Deep into inconvenience.

Duncans_eBay

Here is that unlisted Dr. Duncan’s Stomach Bitters that closed on eBay last night. Bill Ham has provided the following listing and drawing. I cropped image background out in PhotoShop.

D 116.7 A Duncan's

D 116.7  DR. C. P. DUNCAN’S / STOMACH BITTERS // sp // f // sp //
7 3/4
Rectangular, Amber, NSC, Tooled lip, 3 sp, Extremely rare
The company was located in Jackson, Tenn. and later moved to Nashville, Tenn. Also manufacturer of DR C P DUNCAN’S LIVER MEDICINE, JACKSON, TENN.

Wednesday – 04 May 2016

Working from Greenville today. Beautiful weather. Cool Red Cross Laxative Bitters on eBay. Bill Ham has updated the listing.

R 18 L . . . Red Cross Laxative Bitters, Manuatured by and
Distributed for C. C. Koska, East St. Louis, Ill. 
10 3/4 x 2 1/2 (8 1/2)
Square, Amber, LTC, Tooled lip
Bottled by the East St. Louis Bitters Co., 1514 State Street, East St. Louis Ill.
BAR p94
Newspaper advertisement
Correction of information in BITTERS BOTTLES

RedCrossLaxativeBitters

01 May 2016

BrownsAromatic_Klotz_Dug2

Hi Ferdinand, Jack Klotz in Hannibal (Missouri) here. I have read several times with interest the article about your Brown’s Aromatic Bitters from Hannibal. I just recently dug an undamaged example this past week here in Hannibal and have been trying to find out just how many are known. Other than yours, I find no other examples. I find it hard to believe it could be that rare and am curious if you know of any other amber ones? I am also curious on the number of aqua ones and assume they are more numerous than the amber ones? (Just in case I get lucky enough to dig an aqua one!) Also, I notice some slight differences. I am guessing the C in the description is a basal embossing? Mine has only an early key mold, which brings me to the auction date of 1875-85. I dug mine in context with strictly mid 1860’s use layer and believe this to be a more accurate time starting point for these. I am also wondering if these were meant to be more widely distributed, as his other products I am aware of seem more local than of the “patent medicine” design. Thanks in advance for any info. READ POST: Brown’s Aromatic Bitters – Hannibal, Missouri

Posted in Advice, Bitters, Daily Dose, News | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters

CSWSB_2x

California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters

10 April 2016 (R•041216) (R•041316) (R•090319)

Apple-Touch-IconAIt looks like we may have an unlisted, labeled bitters here as I find no reference to the California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters in the Ring & Ham Bitters Bottles or the supplements, both existing and planned. This email and pictures came in from Henry Hartley:

“Hello Ferdinand, having read about you and your connection with bitters, I figured you were the right fellow to ask about a labeled bitters I have. I hope you can read what is left of the label. Unfortunately the maker’s name is missing. Only an “E” and a “W” are discernible. This is sort of puzzle bottle. Thanks for any help in identification.”

I sent Henry a quick email back and asked: “Henry: Interesting. See if there are any remaining words on the label the might be: Speer’s Port, Grape, Leavenworth, Marshall & Pinkston and New York?”

Henry replied: “I could not find any of your terms in the text on the label. However, in the last picture you may make out  “GE W.”. There is label room for George. Do you recall a bitters with George W. (blank) as maker? How ironic the most important information is missing.”

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The labeled California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters – Henry Hartley

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Label detail: California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters – Henry Hartley

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Label detail: California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters – Henry Hartley

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Label detail: California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters – Henry Hartley

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Label detail: California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters – Henry Hartley

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Label detail: California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters – Henry Hartley

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Label detail: California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters – Henry Hartley

A search in the PRG data base does show a George W. Holloway who was a Manufacturing Pharmacist at 807-809 N. Salina Street in Syracuse, New York. He put out the labeled Holloway’s Aromatic Bitters (see picture below). Read: Holloway’s Bitters from Syracuse. His label said, “As fine as silk” to all dyspeptics this bitters is recommended. It relieves at once that “all gone” feeling, wind on the stomach, liver complaint, and all forms of indigestion, fever and ague, biliousness, general debility, faintness, female weakness, also an agreeable stimulant for persons recovering from sickness.” This could be our guy but no solid evidence.

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A labeled Holloway’s Bitters

Another place to look might be on the other side of United States on the west coast. Here the California Wine Bitters was made by M. Keller in Los Angeles (see picture below). Doubt there is a relationship here either. Read: M. Keller Label over at Western Bitters News

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Label from a California Wine Bitters by M. Keller, Los Angeles

OK… What about the California Wine Bitters ladies leg from the vineyard of Kohler & Frohling? Rennert, Prosch & Company in San Francisco was also related to the brand. Could there be a relationship here? Read: California Wine Bitters – From the vineyard of Kohler & Frohling. Nah, I doubt it.

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Label for a California Wine Bitters by Rennert, Prosch & Co.

Another clue might be to look at the Mercado & Seully’s California Wine Bitters. Look at their label below and you would not think there was a relationship.

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Circa 1866 label for a Mercado & Seully’s California Wine Bitters

Really not getting anywhere with these more ornate western “vineyard brands”. There is even another western variant of the California Wine Bitters by the Sainsevain brothers. Read: El Aliso, Jean Louis and Pierre Sainsevain and their California Wine Bitters.

I don’t think we are really looking at the west coast here. Here is a listing below in a Leavenworth, Kansas newspaper in 1868 for Speer’s Port, Grape, California, Sherry and Wine Bitters sold locally by Marshall & Pinkston’s. This is probably in reference to Alfred Speers in New Jersey and New York. This is the first time “Sherry” appears in the brand name. Read: Alfred Speer and his Raised Sidewalk & Standard Wine Bitters

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The Leavenworth Times, Saturday, October 3, 1868

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Speer’s Port Grape Wine trade card

So where does this leave us? I can not tell you. Maybe one of you can provide some help. Maybe a fully labeled example is out there?

Update: Bill Ham has provided the following number for the new listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

C 22.5  L .  . California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters
Gin shape, Amber

St. George Bitters

Ferd, Read your California Sherry Wine Appetizer or Stomach Bitters post on Facebook this morning. Here is some information that may contribute to solving this puzzler. While I can’t be certain, this bitters may have come from the ST. GEORGE VINYARDS of Fresno, California established in 1879. Now, if you were to substitute WINERY for VINYARDS, you would then have St. GeorGE Winery and you might have the missing name of the maker.

This information came from an advertising brochure in an eBay auction saved to my “wanted” list. In it is listed a California Sherry Bitters along with a number of other Sherries. These bitters is also unmentioned in any bitters reference book that I know of.

Regards…………….Joe (Gourd)

Update: Bill Ham has provided the following number for the new listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

Advertisement
S 11.5 ST. GEORGE SHERRY BITTERS, St. George Vineyard, Maltermoro., Fresno County. Office, 123 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. St. George Sherry Bitters, $6 per doz. bottles., Pacific Medical Journal, 1897
S 154.5 Speer’s Port, Grape, California, Sherry and Wine Bitters, Marshall & Pinkston’s, Leavenworth Times, October 3, 1868

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Happy Easter and a New Bitters for you

CHB2

Happy Easter and a New Bitters for You!

27 March 2016

EasterGreetings16

Apple-Touch-IconAAlways nice to hear from the digging crews, especially Jeff Milhalik as he has a special knack for finding easter eggs and digging up incredible bottles. Some of you may have been fortunate enough to attend Jeff’s digging seminar, “Ohio River Valley Privy Digging” at the FOHBC 2014 Lexington National. Read: FOHBC 2014 Lexington National | Saturday Morning Seminars

Well, here is my Easter email from Jeff:

Happy Easter Ferd! Hope you and your family are doing well and enjoying your time with each other.

Thought you might be very interested in this bottle. We (Mike Yancosky, Ed Kuskie and me) were digging yesterday outside of the city (we love those small early towns). I was in the hole about four feet down and was carefully removing a nice yellow ware chamber pot with brown bands then found a couple smooth base slicks. We figured this privy was at least 1870s. I hit a clay plug that went for 1 1/2 feet then hit some glass right under the plug.

Carefully I exposed a Mellin type baby food then noticed an amber corner of another bottle right under that. Working slowly I could see what looked like a bevel corner. Mike looking down the hole says he sees embossing, I couldn’t really tell, guess I had sweat in my eyes. After getting the Mellin out I could see that it was most likely a bitters and could now see that it was embossed.

Cleaning it off some before I removed it, I could now see it was a California Herb Bitters!!!! I plucked it out of the dirt and looked it over and there was no damage. Whew that was a relief. Mike went to get his camera and as I inspected the bottle I noticed the name on one of the panels wasn’t familiar. It was from Pittsburgh but said Speck and Morrow (not Frazier!!). Then when we held it to the light it was a nice yellow Amber!!!! Just a killer. We also found several historical flasks, an open pontil pickle, several pontil meds, a really nice emerald green pontiled master ink and loads of other more common stuff. Beautiful day, great friends, and most excellent dig!!

I’ll send some pictures in separate emails, and feel free to post to Peachridge if you would like.

Jeff Mihalik

Read: The California Herb Bitters from Pittsburgh

CHB3

CHB1

Read: S. S. Smith just Dug

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Farrell’s Magnolia Bitters – O. H. Peckham & Co. – St. Louis

FarrellsLabelFarrell’s Magnolia Bitters – O. H. Peckham & Co. – St. Louis

26 March 2016

Apple-Touch-IconAEllen Hass Faulkenberry snagged this killer labeled Farrell’s Magnolia Bitters at the recent antique bottle show in St. Louis, Missouri. She posts on Facebook, “Thank you Tom, for selling us this fantastic, extremely rare St. Louis Magnolia Bitters bottle!!” The pictures were pulled from the Antique Bitters Bottles page on Facebook.

Farrells Magnolioa Bitters_S

I’ve cleaned up the pictures a bit and cut away the background. Looks like a fantastic bottle. I’ll see if I can get some complete pictures. What’s interesting here is that the product was sold by a candy manufacturer named Osgood Hazard Peckham. He was from New York and worked in the grocery business in Chicago before coming to St. Louis in 1873.

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

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M 9.5  Farrell’s Magnolia Bitters
MAGNOLIA BITTERS // O. K. (should be H instead of K) PECKHAM. CO. / PROPRIETORS. // ST LOUIS //  //
// b // N motif – 5 pointed star
L … Farrell’s Magnolia Bitters
9 1/4 x 2 5/8
Square, Amber, LTCR, Extremely rare
Label: One wine glassful taken two or three times a day before meals, will be a cure for dyspepsia, and will remove all flatulency or heaviness from the stomach, keep your system in good order, assist digestion, give a good appetite, and be a sure preventative of the fever and ague, and all other fever, Farrell’s Magnolia Bitters (delete)

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Osgood Hazard Peckham

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Osgood H. Peckham, president of the National Candy Company, and a well known figure in St. Louis, Mo., business circles, is a native of the State of New York, where he was reared and educated. In 1873 he came to St. Louis and engaged in the candy business, under the corporate name of the O. H. Peckham Company. The business thus founded was carried on under various firm names until it was merged into the National Candy Company, October 15, 1892. This larger company was incorporated under the laws of New Jersey and is one of the greatest business concerns in the United States, having the control of candy and confectionery manufacturing plants in nearly all the large western cities of the country. Of these factories, that of the original O. H. Peckham Candy Manufacturing Company, at St. Louis, is one of the largest and best appointed; and a tribute was paid to Mr. Peckham, by the directors of the National Company, by electing him to the presidency, an office he has held ever since the National Company was organized. Further recommendation of his business ability and qualifications is unnecessary. In the larger volume of business, brought about by the consolidation of interests, he has shown himself to be an executive of rare skill and judgment, which has resulted in his retention in that important position. Besides his interests in the candy companv Mr. Peckham is a director in the Merchants-Laclede National Bank, one of the leading financial institutions of St. Louis. – The Province and the States Biography – Weston Arthur Goodspeed, 1904

PECKHAM, Osgood H., president National Candy Co.; born in New York State, Sept. 9, 1844; son of George T. and Cynthia M. (Osgood) Peckham; educated at Pulaski Academy, Pulaski, N. Y.; married, 1st, Utica, N. Y., Oct. 12, 1876, Fannie Sherwood; children, Frank E., Mrs. S. Graham Wilson; married, 2d, Syracuse, N. Y., March 3, 1891, Susie H. Clark. Was traveling salesman in grocery line out of Chicago for seven years before coming to St. Louis in 1873 and establishing in candy business as O. H. Peckham Co., later becoming successively Dunham, Peckham & Co., O. H. Peckham & Co., and O. H. Peckham Candy Manufacturing Co., which, with seventeen other candy manufacturing concerns, formed in 1902 the National Candy Co., of which has been president since 1903. Also director Merchants-Laclede National Bank. Republican. Presbyterian. Clubs: St. Louis, Noonday, St. Louis Country, Commercial, Office: Granite Block, 406 Market St. Residence: 4382 Westminster Pl. – The Book of St. Louisans: A Biographical Dictionary of Leading Living Men of the City of St. Louis and Vicinity – John W. Leonard, St. Louis republic, 1906

Select Listings:

1844: Osgood H. Peckham born in New York State on 09 September 1844. Son of George T. and Cynthia M. (Osgood) Peckham.
1866: O.H. Peckham was a traveling salesman in grocery line out of Chicago before coming to St. Louis in 1873
1868: O.H. Peckham, traveling agent, 29 E. 2nd. – Davenport Iowa City Directory
1873: Osgood H. Peckham came to St. Louis and engaged in the candy business, under the corporate name of the O. H. Peckham Company
1874: O. H. Peckham & Co., 422 N. 2nd, Saint Louis – St. Louis City Directory
1976: Osgood H. Peckham married, 1st, Utica, N. Y., Oct. 12, 1876, Fannie Sherwood; children, Frank E., Mrs. S. Graham Wilson; married, 2d, Syracuse, N. Y., March 3, 1891, Susie H. Clark.
1878: O. H. Peckham & Co., (Osgood H. and George C. Peckham), candy mnfrs. 206 N. 2nd. – St. Louis City Directory
1881: Fire destroys the large candy factory of O. H. Peckham & Co. (see clipping below) – The Atchison Daily Champion, Sun, February 6, 1881

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1888: A few boys (preferably German) to work at O. H. Peckham & Co. – St.Louis Post Dispatch, Thursday, May 24, 1888

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1892: The business thus founded, O. H. Peckham Company was carried on under various firm names until it was merged into the National Candy Company, October 15, 1892.
1903: O. H. Peckham president of National Candy Company.
1920: O. H. Peckham death on 21 December 1920 in St. Louis, Missouri.
Posted in Bitters, History, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Story of a Bottle

BarkhouseSmallPaul

Story of a Bottle – Barkhouse Bros. & Co. Gold Dust Kentucky Bourbon

49er Bottle Jamboree

20 March 2016 (R•032416)

Apple-Touch-IconAIn preparation for the Holabird Americana “49er Bottle Jamboree” Auction at the FOHBC 2016 Sacramento National Antique Bottle Convention & Expo, we will be featuring some of the bottles and other pieces in the auction. According to Fred Holabird, the auction will be live with four (4) different live auction/internet bidding platforms. Here is an interesting email I received recently.

Natl Bottle Auction web ad

Dear Mr. Ferdinand,

I found your article when I was looking for information on an old bottle I purchased yesterday. I hope that you might be able to point me in the right direction. The bottle is embossed with the following words: Trade Mark Barkhouse Bros. & Co. Gold Dust Kentucky Bourbon, John Vanbergen & Co Sole Agents. I read an article that said a bottle like this sold for $28,000 in 2011. Do you know who I should speak to in regard to my bottle? Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you,

Paul

Read: Rare Barkhouse bourbon bottle – one of ‘finest’ – brings $28,000 at auction

I contacted Richard Siri (Show Chair) and Eric McGuire (FOHBC Western Region Director) for an appraisal based on the images. Here is their response:

Ferd, I ran this bottle by Richard Siri and we are in complete agreement that it should bring between five to eight thousand. If it goes runaway it might go to ten thousand, but that should be absolute max. The selling point that must be made to the owner is that anyone who would be willing to pay top dollar will be in attendance at the Sacramento show. There is no better venue for selling it. Then, of course, there will be the ability to market it through the FOHBC website. [Editor Note: Eric also was curious about the mouth appearance which will be reviewed upon bottle receipt at the auction house]

Eric M. (McGuire)

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I also asked Paul for some information on the bottle find during a telephone call.

It was the weekend of our 29th wedding anniversary and on Saturday we decided to do one of the things we love doing most which was antiquing and flea market shopping, but that day the flea market we like so much wasn’t open. As we made a U-turn to get back on the freeway we saw a sign that said “Estate Sale”. We decided to stop and take a look. They had some nice furniture, a lot of old silver and dishes, but of course we were just window shopping unless we found that perfect item then of course we were ready to purchase it.

My wife and I had basically looked at all that we wanted and we got to talking to the owner about her little dog since ours had passed away just a couple of months before. The owner asked if we’d found anything we liked and I told her that actually there was, so I left my wife at the counter speaking to the owner while I walked back and got this old bottle that I really liked. Since I like to make my own wine I thought it’d be a good bottle for wine. As I was walking back to the counter I saw the look on my wife’s face as if she was saying, “Oh no, not another bottle”. Although I am not an avid bottle collector I had purchased a few here and there that I was planning on using for my wine.

I told the owner that it was on the 50% off rack so we ended up paying $12 for the bottle. We left with the bottle then had a nice dinner and drove home. The next day we decided to go and visit my wife’s brother since the rest of her family was already there. We had such a great time that I wanted to do something nice for my brother-in-law so I thought about the bottle and decided that I would adorn it with postage stamps as I had done in the past on other wine bottles and give it to him as a gift, but before I started I decided to do a little Internet research to find out if the horse on the bottle or the words “Gold Dust” meant anything.

I came across this article from acquired had been sold for $28,000. I was beside myself and turned to my wife and said, “Look at what this bottle sold for that’s just like the one we have”. Her mouth dropped open and we both sat there in disbelief staring at the bottle. It was absolutely crazy! We could not believe it. We had no idea what to do with it, we even thought, “let’s sell it on ebay”, but decided to go a different route.

Soon we started finding websites that are just for bottle collectors and decided to send them an email. We wrote to about four websites and within a couple of days we were getting responses. One from a gentlemen that offered to sell it for us or buy it from us himself for a good sum of money, but by then we had already been contacted by the president of the FOHBC who encouraged us to auction it at the FOHBC 2016 National Antique Bottle Convention & Expo in August in Sacramento, California.

We later visited the “Estate Sale” establishment to try to get more information on the bottle, but all the owner of the place was able to tell us was that they had acquired it and other items from someone who had passed away as in most cases that sell estate sale items. We are happy to say that this has been one of the most surprising anniversaries we’ve had yet!

GoldDustRun

Color run of Barkhouse Brothers Gold Dust Kentucky Bourbon bottles from an anonymous western collector.

Posted in Advice, Auction News, Bottle Shows, Bourbon, Club News, Color Runs, Digging and Finding, FOHBC News, News, Questions, Spirits, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment