The Mike Dickman Collection

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The Mike Dickman Collection

I stumbled into a “bottle and barbed wire show” in Albuquerque

14 July 2015

Apple-Touch-IconANice to hear from Mike Dickman here from Santa Fe, New Mexico which may be my favorite place to visit in the United States. I met Mike a number of years ago at a FOHBC national show and usually think of him as a “poison bottle” collector. Look at these great pictures of his collection. Thanks for sharing Mike!

Hi Ferd,

I had a friend snap photographs of some of my bottles (I don’t own a camera), and I thought I’d share. Feel free to post the photos on your Peachridge Glass site if you think they might be of interest. It’s certainly not the most spectacular collection in any way, shape or form, but each one of my bottles holds special, unique memories of the person from whom I got it, and where and when. We love our glass bottles, but it’s the people who truly make the hobby what it is. Hope to see you in Chattanooga!

Best regards,
Mike Dickman

[PRG] Mike is a great guy and kindly sent the following when I asked him a little about himself and his collection.

I started collecting bottles in the mid 1990s, after I stumbled into a “bottle and barbed wire show” in Albuquerque. I didn’t think much of the barbed wire but I was immediately fascinated by the multitude of colorful, interesting old bottles, and I ended up purchasing a California mineral water bottle from the late Bill Tanner. Bill invited me to attend the next meeting of the New Mexico Historical Bottle Collectors Club, and I did so and got hooked. Bill and I became good friends, until his sad and untimely passing a few years ago. He was a dedicated digger throughout New Mexico but my bad back never really allowed me to go that route, although I diligently tried several times. The New Mexico soil is alkaline and the bottles (primarily drug stores and hutches) often come out of the ground severely stained and etched.

As a “condition fanatic” I started buying my bottles rather than digging them. I like every type of bottle if it is colorful, and I have accumulated a collection of poisons, blob top sodas, mineral waters, figural bitters, colored pontiled medicines, inks, and more. Every bottle I own engenders its own cherished memory of where I obtained it, when, and from whom. I love the hobby and the people who collect bottles, and there is no better fun, in my view, than being at a bottle show. I’ve attended most of the FOHBC shows since the 1990s, and hope, God willing, to attend many more.

Sincerely,
Mike Dickman

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Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Display, Figural Bottles, Mineral Water, Photography, Poison Bottles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

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

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

13 July 2015

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Apple-Touch-IconAAs I sit here around dinner time in Greenville, South Carolina, on this fine Sunday evening, I am reflecting on the great time I had at the 2015 Houston Antique Bottle Show yesterday. I had just come home on Friday to Houston and feared I would never have enough time to get ready to set up at the show. I did miss set-up and early admission on Friday night though.

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I guess the coolest thing, and there were many, was sitting across from our good friend Alicia Booth who is pictured above. Alicia recently lost her husband Tom, so it was tough. I first met Alicia at the Houston show maybe ten years or so ago. She and Tom gave my granddaughter Adriana (now 19) a bottle, which pretty much started her collecting poison bottles. Alicia will be traveling with Elizabeth and myself to the Chattanooga National, which is only two and a half weeks away!

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My other granddaughter Isabella (1o years old going on 16), was my table helper. She sold two bottles herself, received a number of gifts from dealers and won the big raffle. This being a Houston Texans football helmet signed by Arian Foster. She was so happy as you can see from the picture above! She also knocked over her portion of our two tables spilling bottles and making a major statement within the ballroom TWICE. Glad it wasn’t my queens! Had them grouped. Four different brands which was pretty cool too. Can you pick-em out?

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Also had five Bunker Hill colognes in different colors. I usually set up to sell FOHBC memberships, shoot the bull, and see my Houston bottle friends. The purdy bottles make a nice calling card. I met some wonderful people and had some great bitters talk.

Read: Meyer Table at the 2011 Houston Bottle Show

Read: 2013 Houston Bottle Show Sightings

Read: Corn n’ Fish at the 2014 Houston Antique Bottle Show

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And there were other bitters, primarily on the table of Dan Cowman and Brad Francis. Dan is having some serious health issues so is was super to see him at the show. That is Dan below. The next four bitters pictures are from his table.

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Another cool thing was this great wood cover scrap-book that Alton Neatherlin had from the early 1970s that documented the Gulf Coast Bottle & Jar Club formation. I will be scanning the pages and archiving online.

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And of course, there were the great people who make our hobby so cool too. Here are few of many people shots I took.

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Since Elizabeth wasn’t with me, I cruised the floor to check out a few things that caught my eye.

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Of course some other items caught my eye too. All-in-all, a nice little show. Really glad I went. See many of you in Chattanooga.

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Posted in Bitters, Club News, Cologne, Figural Bottles, History, News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Daily Dose | July 2015

July  |  2 0 1 5

Wednesday, 29 July 2015

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Leaving 1:30 this AM for Chattanooga. This show will be really big. Tons of Southern glass. Sorry for not keeping this area of the site up to date. Traveling just about every day for business and totally swamped with getting ready for Chattanooga. See many of you tomorrow or Friday. Travel safe.

Monday, 13 July 2015

Anybody see this oddball variant of a Crescent Bitters on eBay? Read: Crescent Bitters from Crescent City

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Sunday, 12 July 2015

On my way to the east coast this morning for business. Never stops. Had fun at the Houston Antique Bottle Show yesterday. Look for a post later day or tomorrow. In the meantime, here is a cool Fisch Bitters advertisement submitted by Tod von Mechow. From the Alton (Illinois) Telegraph, August 1871.

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My granddaughter (and table helper) Isabella (Izzy Bell) wins the top raffle prize, which included Texas bottles. She picked up a Texans helmet signed by Arian Foster. Made her really happy. Anybody catch that E-Longs Indian Herb Bitters queen in the background?

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Sunday, o5 July 2015

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Excellent example of a Kagy’s Superior Stomach Bitters in Glass Works Auctions | Auction 107 from the Jim Lyle collection.

Friday, 03 July 2015

A nice piece from the Ken Previtali collection as many of us take a day off today to celebrate the 4th of July.

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Interesting comment (at bottom of post) for the Dr. McTaggart’s Liver Bitters – Bridgeton, NJ.

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Thursday, 02 July 2015

Good to be home. Took the early bird at 5:15 this AM in from DC. Super busy with work and the Chattanooga National. Flight in to DC the other night was 6 hours late due to bad storms in Houston. Many planes diverted. Got to my hotel room at 2:30 am! Yipes.

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Here is the Rolling Thunder Auction catalog cover. Will post auction very soon.

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

Dr. McTaggart’s Liver Bitters – Bridgeton, NJ

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Dr. McTaggart’s Liver Bitters – Bridgeton, NJ

Only known example was found in a home of a New Jersey glass blower

24 June 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAHere is a really cool monogramed bottle sitting long on one of my bitters shelves that hardly gets a notice though it probably should. There is only one known example of the Dr. McTaggart’s Liver Bitters from Bridgeton, New Jersey. The Ring and Ham Bitters Bottles listing states, “Only known example was found in a home of a New Jersey glass blower who worked at the Wheaton Glass Works around 1900. Possibly a unique test piece.” Now that is interesting.

Bob Strickhart, from New Jersey, recently wrote an article called “Down Home Bitters” in the April 2015 issue of Antique Bottle & Glass Collector where he mentions this bottle briefly. That article inspired me to pull my bottle out and look at it again. So who was Dr. McTaggart and could the glass blower story be true?

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

M 63.5  DR. McTAGGART’S LIVER BITTERS
DR. McTAGGART’S / TRADE monogram MARK / LIVER BITTERS /
BRIDGETON N.J. // f // f // f //
9 x 3 1/4 x 1 1/8 (7 1/8) 1/4
Rectangular, Amber, NSC, Tooled lip, 1 sp, Extremely rare
Only known example was found in a home of a New Jersey glass blower who
worked at the Wheaton Glass Works around 1900. Possibly a unique test piece.

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Miles Franklin McTaggart

Using the powerful search engines of Ancestry.com I can locate only one possible McTaggart in the New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania area during the late 1800s, this being Dr. M. F. McTaggart. Further research reveals his name to be Miles Franklin McTaggart.

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Miles McTaggart was born in March 1844 in Scotland, and immigrated to United States in 1849. His father and mother were also born in Scotland according to 1900 and 1910 Federal Census reports. Apparently McTaggart obtained his medical degree at the Electro Medical College of Pennsylvania, on 25 April, 1865, but I cannot confirm, as he listed this in court documents. Dr. McTaggart challenges the character,”Scotty” in the television and film series Star Trek for ‘miles traveled’ as a doctor. That is Montgomery “Scotty” Scott above, drinking some Scotch or bitters I suppose. Of course I am exaggerating, but Miles F. McTaggart was not one of those doctors that practiced in the same town, on the same street, in the same house for sixty years. He would continually move from place to place, in many cases, hotel to hotel with rather speedy departures from each town. I can almost picture him pushing his horse and medicine wagon hard as he looked over his shoulder and headed out of Dodge.

As the only known example of the Dr. McTaggart’s Liver Bitters was found in a home of a New Jersey glass blower who worked at the Wheaton Glass Works, we can place a M. F. McTaggart, who was a physician, at 31 East Commerce Street in the Bridegton, New Jersey area as he is listed in a Cumberland New Jersey city directory in 1881. In 1882, M. F. McTaggart is now a physician practicing at Washington Avenue in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. In 1882 he is in Scranton, Pennsylvania. In 1889 he is in Pottsville, Pennsylvania listed as a physician specializing in chronic and female diseases according to a Reading, Pennsylvania city directory. He shows up in York in 1893 and by 1896 he is practicing in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. In 1900 he is in Altoona, Pennsylvania and then he shows up in Akron, Ohio in 1910 according to a United States Federal Census.

Why did he travel so much? It might have been his legal problems. There are numerous reports of him being charged with practicing medicine without a license or using some dubious medical concept like using an electric battery on a female patient to further his enterprise. He also liked to not pay his rent and steal things from people. Say what?

A few examples of his notices and legal issues are listed below.

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McTaggart, A Good Physician – Evening Gazette, Thursday, June 15, 1882

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McTaggart Arrested for Stealing – The York Daily, Friday, May 12 1882

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Dr. McTaggart – The Columbian, Friday, January 1, 1886

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Damages Against a Doctor – Altoona Tribune, Thursday, December 7, 1893

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Makes a Statement – The Daily Courier, Wednesday, August 23, 1905

Samuel G. and Anna M. Drumm vs. Dr. Miles F. MacTaggart

physician who was arrested on a capias on a judgment for damages for the negligent use of an electric battery on a patient, may be discharged under the insolvent law without undergoing sixty days’ imprisonment.

October Term, 1891. Nos. 31 and 40. Trespass.

Dr. Miles F. MacTaggart, the defendant, a practicing physician, was arrested on a capias ad respondendum, and held to bail in $500 on each of above suits. The actions were in trespass for negligence in professional treatment.

On trial judgment went against the defendant for $300 and $200. Fi. fa. was issued, and returned nulla bona.

Ca. sa. was issued, and the defendant was arrested and taken into custody by the sheriff, and released upon giving bond in $1,000 that he would apply for relief under the insolvent laws at next term by presenting his petition under the Act of 1836.

His petition was filed at the next term. It was accompanied by a statement of his effects, his debts, and of the causes of his insolvency, and was regular in form.

Petitioner has resided in Pennsylvania over six months.

There is nothing tending to show any fraud as to the defendant not delivering up his estate.

It has not been shown that the insolvency arose from (1) Losses by gambling; (2) That he had embezzled any money with which he was entrusted ; or (3) That he has concealed his effects or colluded with any one for such concealment, with intent to defraud his creditors.

Sec. 131, Act of 31 March, 1860.

The defendant need not undergo imprisonment. The judgment upon which process was issued in this case and the defendant arrested was not in an “action founded upon actual force, or actual fraud or deceit, or in an action for a libel or slander, malicious prosecution or conspiracy, or in an action for seduction or criminal conversation,” but upon a judgment in an action founded on negligence; and hence, the petitioner is entitled to an immediate discharge, without sixty days confinement.Sec. 17, Act 16 June, 1836.

Every case cited, where the petitioner in insolvency was obliged to undergo sixty days imprisonment, comes exactly within the proviso of Sec. 17, supra.

The petitioner here was in actual custody when discharged upon giving bond to present this petition.

The treatment having been undertaken with the consent and at the request of the plaintiff, was not such force as would justify the imprisonment of the petitioner for sixty days.

Cited the law of insolvents. Purdon, p. 897, pi. 25, section 17, Act of June 16, 1836: “Provided, If the petitioner shall be in custody or confinement at the time of such order, by virtue of process issued upon any judgment obtained against him in an action founded upon actual force,” * * * he shall have to undergo sixty days imprisonment. The sworn statements in the case and the facts in the trial show that an electrical battery was applied to the womb of the plaintiff, and in consequence of this reckless and negligent act, force in the meaning of the law being actually used, a miscarriage was produced and the life of the plaintiff endangered. This would bring the case within the exceptions of the law, and would prevent discharge of the defendant until imprisoned for sixty days.

The exception to the law abolishing imprisonment in civil process, is for misconduct, or neglect in office, or in any professional employment, in which cases the remedies shall remain as heretofore.

The misconduct of Dr. MacTaggart was gross neglect in professional employment as an alleged physician, and under the above decision he should not be discharged until imprisonment for sixty days.

The Lancaster Law Review, Volume 11, 1894

LEGAL ACTION AGAINST AN ITINERANT PRACTITIONER IN CLEARPIELD COUNTY.

“Clearfield, Pa., October 9th, 1901. Dr. J. S. Kelso,

Sec’y Clearfield Medical Society, Woodland, Penn’a.

Dear Sir:—

In response to your request that I make out a statement in the case of Dr. Miles F. MacTaggart, I herewith submit the following:

On the 26th day of April, last, past, I was requested to appear before the Clearfield Medical Society in session at Clearfield, Pa., and was informed by the President that the Society desired to employ me as counsel for the year 1901. They informed me that one Miles F. MacTaggart had opened a transient office at the Hotel Windsor in the Borough of Clearfield, and by use of hand bills and other forms of written or printed advertisements, had assigned this office to persons seeking medical or surgical advice and treatment, without having complied with the act of Assembly requiring transient practitioners to take out a license for each day and pay the County Treasurer, for the use of said County, the sum of ten dollars therefor; that they desired me to take charge of the case and institute proceedings against MacTaggart. From an examination of the records in the office of the Prothonotary of Clearfield, Pa., I found that on the first day of February, 1901, Miles Franklin MacTaggart had registered under the act of 1881, stating that he had received his degree of M. D. at the Electro Medical College of Pennsylvaniaon the 25th day of April, 1865, but I found that he had not complied with the act of Assembly of March 24, 1877, as amended by the. act of July 12, 1897, regulating itinerant practice. An information was then made before Daniel Connelly, Esq., a Justice of the Peace, and on the 26th day of April, Miles F. MacTaggart was arrested and brought before said Justice to answer the charge made in the information. Dr. MacTaggart waived a hearing and gave bail in the sum of four hundred dollars for his appearance before court. The case was returned on the 3d day of May, which did not give the defendant an opportunity to prepare for trial at May sessions, and I agreed that the case be continued to September sessions. An indictment against Miles F. MacTaggart, for practicing medicine without a license, was prepared for the grand jury at September sessions, but on the 3d day of September, the defendant waived the finding of a true bill and plead guilty. The court then suspended sentence on the defendant, Miles F. MacTaggart, on the payment of the costs, and the case now appears of record in this form. The defendant, Miles F. MacTaggart, can be brought before the court at any time and sentenced, on the application of the District Attorney of Clearfield County, Pa.”

The above report was submitted to the Clearfield County Medical Society by the attorney employed to prosecute the case.

The Pennsylvania Medical Journal, Volume 5, 1902

Some Questions

So we still have questions here. Is this the right McTaggart? Probably yes. Was the bottle made as a prototype for his Liver Bitters? I bet so. He probably had skipped town before he could use the bottles with his Bridgeton address. Maybe he couldn’t pay the bill?

As an interesting side note, there is another Dr. Miles F. McTaggart who practiced on the west coast. Very curious. A parallel universe as Scotty would say.

Miles F. McTaggartM.D. Philadelphia, 1865; College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, Toronto, 1880, a member of the Medical Society of the State of California, died at his home in Reno, Nev., May 22, from heart disease, after an illness of six months, aged 55 – JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, Volume 44; Volume 44, 1905

Dr. Miles F. McTaggart – From the Reno Evening Gazette 22 and 23 May 1905

Dr. McTaggart came to the United States from his native Belleville, Ontario, Canada when he was a young boy, first arriving in California, then migrating from there to Reno in 1903.

Several months ago Dr. McTaggart gave up practicing medicine due to his deteriorating health from heart disease, which he had been afflicted with for some 6 months. He went to a California sanatorium in hopes that the warmer weather and treatment would regain his health.
Saturday he passed into a deep slumber of which he never awoke from.

He leaves his wife and 4 children, all but one, Mrs. Jerome Clark were at his bedside when his last breath was taken, she arrived to late.

The funeral was from the residence, 813 Center Street, Reno.

Note: The funeral and interment were on 24 May 1905.

Select Listings:

1881: M. F. McTaggart, Physician, 31 e. Commerce, h same – Cumberland New Jersey City Directory
1882: M. F. McTaggart, Physician, Washington av c Lackawanna av – Wilkes-Barre  Pennsylvania City Directory
1882: Miles F. McTaggart, Physician, 104 N. Wash ave cor Lack Ave, Scranton, Pennsylvania – Scranton Pennsylvania City Directory
1882: Dr. McTaggart, A Good Physician, from Scranton, Pennsylvania will visit Pittston clipping (see above) – Evening Gazette, Thursday, June 15, 1882
1883: Miles F. McTaggart, M.D., Physician, specialist in chronic and female diseases, 104 N. Wash ave, bds forest house – Scranton Pennsylvania City Directory
1884-1885: Miles F. McTaggart, Physician, 104 N. Wash ave, Scranton, Pennsylvania – Scranton Pennsylvania City Directory
1887: Miles F. McTaggart, Physician, 45 N. Third, Reading Pennsylvania – Reading, Pennsylvania City Directory
1889: Miles F. McTaggart, M.D., Physician, specialist in chronic and female diseases, 10 S Main, Pottsville, Pennsylvania – Reading Pennsylvania City Directory
1893: Damages Against a Doctor, Dr. McTaggart from York (see clipping above) – Altoona Tribune, Thursday, December 7, 1893
1896:M. F. McTaggart, Physician, 227 Herr – Harrisburg Pennsylvania City Directory
1897: M. F. McTaggart, Physician, 800 N. 2nd – Harrisburg Pennsylvania City Directory
1900: Miles McTaggart, Physician, age 56, birth March 1844 in Scotland, immigrated in 1849, widowed, married in 1884, living Altoona Ward 3, Blair, Pennsylvania, father and mother born in Scotland United States Federal Census
1910: Miles McTaggart, Physician, age 66, birth abt 1844 in Scotland, immigrated in 1849, living in Akron, Ohio, father and mother born in Scotland – United States Federal Census
Posted in Bitters, History, Legal, Medicines & Cures, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

What is Boonekamp?

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What is Boonekamp?

14 June 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAAs a bitters collector, I often wondered what Boonekamp meant? In the early years of collecting, I thought is was a brand but later realized that many brands of bitters used Boonekamp in their name. Boonekamp is actually a generic name for a bitter spirit or style of stomach bitters.

In Bitters Bottles by Carlyn Ring and W. C. Ham, there are at least twenty Boonekamp listings including a few with proprietors as noted below:

B 141  Boonekamp Bitters, J. Pfixmer, Springfield, Illinois, round lady’s leg
B 142  Boonekamp of Maagen Bitter, J. Pfixmer, Springfield, Illinois, round lady’s leg
B 147  Boonekamp Bitters, Feinster Magen Bitter, labeled
B 148.1  Boonekamp Bitters, Herman Wolfgang, Manufacturer, West Cost Agent, San Francisco
B 151  Boonekamp of Maag-Bitter, Fink & H. Boelter, Chicago

Around 1780, there was a resident pharmacist in Leidschendam, Holland whose name was according to tradition, Boonekamp or Kamp. He made a bitter liqueur ​​from gin and a herb mixture and sold his recipe to AM Freres in Antwerp. This type of liqueur production soon spread to Belgium, Germany and United States.

Boonekamp is prepared by maceration or percolation of selected herbs, fruits, roots and bark in a pre-selected spirit. The different herbal blends contain 36-52 components. Among the herbs are anise, coriander, cinnamon and star anise. The Boonekamp smell is aromatic and spicy, slightly licorice-like, and in the finish, warm-burning. It also has a medicinal taste due to the herb mixture. The alcohol content is 40 to 49 percent by volume and the sugar content is a maximum of three grams per 100 millilitres. The duration of storage causes further differentiation of taste between the various producers. The formulations of herbal formulas varied, so “Boonekamp” is now a generic term.

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The “Boonekamp of Maagbitter” is Hubert Underberg-Albrecht from Rheinberg who in 1846 and 1851 deposited as a product recipe sample with the Commercial Register. In 1894, the Law on the Protection of trade names could not be established so he used  Underburg Boonekamp Bitters for his brand. You can see an advertising trade card from the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial Exposition above which is currently on eBay. His brand is probably the most widely recognized Boonekamp Bitters.

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Boonekamp today belongs to the range of many manufacturers of herb liqueurs. Typical is the distribution in small bottles of dark glass as serving size of “stomach therapeutic” in fatty foods. I like the glass of Underberg with typical portion-sized bottle and packaging above.

While I was at the 2015 San Luis Obispo Antique Bottle Show in Morro Bay, I spotted three killer labeled examples on the sales table of Bill Ham. The images are below and represent Boonekamp Style Magen-Stomach Bitters by Victor Gautier & Co. in New York, Boonekamp Style Stomach Bitters by Charles Jacquin, New York and Julius Marcus Boonekamp Stomach Bitters. These examples seem to be unlisted.

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Bitters ephemera collector Joe Gourd has the following two Boonekamp examples in his collection. One is a post card puzzle for Lloyd Boonekamp Bitters from Detroit Michigan and the second is matches advertising Van de Wart Bitters. His brands include Van de Wart Boonekamp Bitters, Cossack Brand Stomachic Bitters, Van de Wart Mint Bitters, Van de Wart Kimmel Bitters, Van de Wart Coffee Bitters, Van de Wart Blackberry Bitters and Vandeco Aromatic Bitters. The Lloyd Boonekamp and all of the Van de Wart bitters are unlisted in Ring and Ham.

LLoyd Boonecamp PC_Gourd

Van de Wart matchbook

Here are some more fabulous trade cards from the Joe Gourd collection representing the H. Underberg-Albrecht’s Boonekamp of Maag-Bitter. The Luyties Brothers were United States and Canada sole agents of this award winning brand..

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U6 Underberg 2 back

U6 Underberg 2 front

U6 Underberg 3 back

U6 Underberg 3 front

U6 Underberg 4 back

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, History, Liqueurs, Liquor Merchant, Medicines & Cures, Spirits, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine

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Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters Portland, Maine

With a Lot of Character & Critters

12 June 2015 (R•062015) (R•081418) (R•092018) (R•062719)
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Portland, Maine: Free and Congress Streets in 1857

Apple-Touch-IconAGary Beatty, as he sometimes does, called to ask me about a bitters bottle he was considering adding to his collection. When he mentioned it was a Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters from Portland, Maine, I immediately knew he had a good one in his net. Fortunately I have an example too. Let’s look at Gary’s wonderful pictures, my example and one that recently sold at Norman C. Heckler Auctions.

First of all, the Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

H 213drawing

H 213  Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters
DR. HUNTINGTON’S / GOLDEN TONIC / BITTERS. // f // PORTLAND /
MAINE // f //
9 1/2 x 3 5/8 (6 7/8) 1/4
Square, LTC, Applied mouth, Amber, Rare; Aqua and Clear, Rare
Maine Business Directory, 1876

Here are Gary’s pictures and his e-mail after the transaction.

Hi Ferd, here is my latest addition to “Beatty’s Bitters Ranch”  I sure think it is a beauty. Norm Heckler is confident it was blown at a Stoddard Glass House. Thought you might like to put it in the “Daily Dose” along with a picture of yours. To me a bitters that has Dr. embossed on it along with the town and state is as good as it gets. I think it’s a killer what do you think. Best Regards.  Gary Beatty

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Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine – Beatty Collection

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Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine – Beatty Collection

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Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine – Beatty Collection

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Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine – Beatty Collection

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Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine – Beatty Collection

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Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine – Beatty Collection

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Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine – Beatty Collection

Here are my pictures:

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Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine – Meyer Collection

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Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine – Meyer Collection

Here is the Norman C. Heckler example. I suspect Gary’s bottle is this example.

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“Dr. Huntington’s / Golden Tonic / Bitters.” – “Portland / Maine” Bitters Bottle, probably a Stoddard glasshouse, Stoddard, New Hampshire, 1860-1872. Square with beveled corners, golden amber with an olive tone, applied sloping collared mouth – smooth base, ht. 9 3/8 inches. R/H #H-213 Beautiful color, thousands of tiny bubbles in the glass, strong embossing, fine condition. Kris Kernozicky collection. – Norman C. Heckler & Company

HuntingtonHeckler2

“Dr. Huntington’s / Golden Tonic / Bitters.” – “Portland / Maine” Bitters Bottle, probably a Stoddard glasshouse, Stoddard, New Hampshire, 1860-1872. Square with beveled corners, golden amber with an olive tone, applied sloping collared mouth – smooth base, ht. 9 3/8 inches. R/H #H-213 Beautiful color, thousands of tiny bubbles in the glass, strong embossing, fine condition. Kris Kernozicky collection. – Norman C. Heckler & Company

HuntingtonHeckler3

“Dr. Huntington’s / Golden Tonic / Bitters.” – “Portland / Maine” Bitters Bottle, probably a Stoddard glasshouse, Stoddard, New Hampshire, 1860-1872. Square with beveled corners, golden amber with an olive tone, applied sloping collared mouth – smooth base, ht. 9 3/8 inches. R/H #H-213 Beautiful color, thousands of tiny bubbles in the glass, strong embossing, fine condition. Kris Kernozicky collection. – Norman C. Heckler & Company

“DR. HUNTINGTON’S / GOLDEN TONIC / BITTERS – PORTLAND / MAINE”, (Ring/Ham, H-213), Maine, ca. 1875 – 1885, aqua, 9 1/4”h, smooth base, applied tapered collar mouth. Good glass whittle, rarely seen aqua color! Larry Umbreit Collection. – Glass Works Auctions | Auction 124

Is Alpheus Huntington our man?

So, we know that we have “Dr. Huntington” and “Portland, Maine” as clues with an 1875 date, plus or minus some years, by the look of the bottle. I now head to Portland Maine city directories during this time period and pretty quickly ascertain that Alpheus Huntington is most likely our man. I find no advertising and can not track down a labeled example of the bottle for assistance. I send a request to bitters trade card guru Joe Gourd for assistance as I know trade cards exist for the brand.

Alpheus Huntington was born on 16 September 1820 in Litchfield, Kennebec, Maine. His parents were Timothy Huntington and Abigail Hall. In 1850 he is listed as a peddler so he is probably pushing medicines of some sort. I see no medical school references but I could have missed that. He marries Lucy Ann Jack at a young age and they have a son named Fred Wallington Huntington who would later be a veterinary surgeon and a horseshoer. Alpheus Huntington would die on 28 April 1905.

HuntingtonMarker

Alpheus Huntington and Lucy A. Jack grave marker

What is interesting about Alpheus was that he started out as a druggist and built a drug store around 1854 in Monmouth, Maine. Monmouth is a little southwest from Augusta, Maine and northeast of Portland. He eventually moves into the chewing gum and patent medicine business in Portland. Portland is important because it was the principal source in United States for chewing gum production at the time with the readily available spruce resin which was used in the making of gum.

Watch: History of Chewing Gum

 “Everyone Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters

Huntington jointly conducted his patent medicine business from about 1860 to 1880 or so and becomes “Dr.” Huntington. As mentioned before, he is now located in Portland. This is a pretty wide date range. Somewhere during this period is when he made his bitters which, according to Norm Heckler, was probably blown at a Stoddard glass house in Stoddard, New Hampshire. The billhead below actually dates the bottle to 1862. According to Eric McGuire, “I am pretty sure you have the right guy for the proprietor of this product. On April 6, 1868, A. HUNTINGTON, of Portland, Maine, received a copyright for DR. HUNTINGTON’S GOLDEN TONIC BITTERS. This is surely Alpheus. This does not necessarily mean that the product was begun on that date, although it could be. I suspect his copyright was for a label for the bottle.”

The bottle also comes in clear and amber though I have never seen an example. It is also possible that another Dr. Huntington preceded this Huntington but he is an enigma now. That is assuming Alpheus is our man. There are no other Huntington’s in the directories during this period. Gotta be him.

Later in 1878 Huntington files for Bankruptcy.

Date: Wednesday, January 30, 1878 Paper: Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME) Volume: 15 Page: 4

Huntington in Bankruptcy – Wednesday, January 30, 1878, Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME)

Advertising Trade Cards

Here below are a great series of advertising trade cards from Joe Gourd. They confirm that Alpheus Huntington is our man as the cards say. “Everyone Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters”. The first series pictures birds. The reverse sides of the cards are blank.

I like that name “Queen of the North Gum”. Could this have been the first and only “bitters” chewing gum? Nah.

Animals1

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Animals2

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Animals3

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Animals4

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Animals5

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Animals6

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

The second series pictures frogs. The reverse sides of the cards are blank.

Frogs1

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Frogs2

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Frogs3

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Joe calls this next grouping  of advertising cards the “Barnyard Series”. The reverse sides of the cards are blank.

Barnyard5

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Barnyard4

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Barnyard6

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Barnyard1

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Barnyard3

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Barnyard2

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

This next grouping  of advertising cards is called the “Winter Series” by Joe. The reverse sides of the cards are blank.

Winter2

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

Winter1

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card (reverse blank) – Gourd Collection

This last series pictures nature scenes. Joe call these his “Sepia” cards. The reverse of the cards caries the standard message from the previous cards. The front of the cards have an area for a merchant to stamp their name and address.

Sepia1

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card – Gourd Collection

Sepia5

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card – Gourd Collection

Sepia4

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card – Gourd Collection

Sepia3

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card – Gourd Collection

Sepia2

Everybody Chews the Queen of the North Gum, and use Huntington’s Liniment and Golden Tonic Bitters trade card – Gourd Collection

Labeled Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters

Labeled Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters. It confirms that Alpheus was the proprietor of the medicine. The back label also has a 4 cent Proprietary tax stamp dated March 13, 1870. – Sam Fuller

Pontiled medicine embossed A. Huntington and Monmouth, ME. embossed. Another bottle I have is smooth based and embossed Portland, ME. – Sam Fuller

Alpheus moved from Monmouth to Portland (Deering) sometime between 1863 and 1867. He was still located in Deering selling meds as late as 1885. The Horse and Ox liniment ad is from 1860 and the ad for his spruce gum and Golden Tonic Bitters is from 1869. – Sam Fuller, Stockton Springs, Maine

Read More: Globe Tonic Bitters – Portland, Maine

Read More: U.S. Gold Bitters – Augusta, Maine

Select Listings:

1820: Alpheus Huntington, Born 16 September 1820 in Litchfield, Kennebec, Maine – Huntington Family Association
1850: Alpheus Huntington, age 26, Pedlar (peddler), born abt 1824 Maine, wife Lucy A., 21, Monmouth, Kennebec, Maine – United States Federal Census
1854: The first trader at South Monmouth was John Meader, who opened a store in 1834. He was succeeded by Staple Chick, A. Huntington, Mr. Smith, W. & B. Witherell, Levi Day in 1854, W. Potter, B. Walker, J. W. Jordan in 1877, Buker Brothers 1884, C. A. Buker 1885, A. F. Tinkham 1887. At “Hall’s Mill,” the corner where the residence of Joshua Stover now stands, was a store occupied by Robert Randall and others. The first postmaster at South Monmouth was Lafayette W. Witherell, whose commission bears date December 22,1856; Barzillai Walker succeeded him April 22, 1858. The office was discontinued January 5, 1871, and reestablished May 8, 1871, with L. W. Witherell again postmaster. His successors were: Levi Day, April 15, 1872; John W. Jordan, February 7, 1878: Clarence A. Buker, January 16, 1884; L. W. Witherell, June 22, 1887; Algene F. Tinkham, December 6, 1887. – Illustrated History of Kennebec County, Maine; 1625-1799-1892, Part 2
Another old building was the Blossom & Judkins store, which stood a little south of Dr. M. O. Edward’s new drug store. Like nearly every other building in the village, it was remodeled and put to another use years ago. With one or two exceptions these buildings, with the Goodwin & Andrews store, which stood about where E. A. Dudley’s new store now stands, and was long occupied by William Arnold, and more recently by Ambrose Beal and Dudley & Blake; the store that stood where the meat market now stands, used by Henry S. Blue as a harness shop, and by C. L. Owen and others as a boot and shoe store; the drug stores erected by Alpheus Huntington and Watts & Andrews, all were consumed in the terrible conflagration of April 19, 1888, and the less extensive one of September 18, 1885. – Illustrated History of Kennebec County, Maine; 1625-1799-1892, Part 2
1856: Alpheus Huntington, Monmouth, Maine – The Maine Register and Business Directory, for the year 1856
1860: Alpheus Huntington, age 39, Druggist, born abt 1821 Maine, wife Lucy A., 33, son Fred W., 4, Monmouth, Kennebec, Maine – United States Federal Census
1862: Huntington’s Tonic Bitters noted on Pinchot & Bruen billhead (see above)
1863-1866: Alpheus Huntington, Maine – U.S. IRS Tax Assessment List
1868: On April 6, 1868, A. HUNTINGTON, of Portland, Maine, received a copyright for DR. HUNTINGTON’S GOLDEN TONIC BITTERS. This was probably for the label.
1869: Alpheus Huntington, manufacturer of spruce gum &c., 11 and 13 Plum, h. 59 Winter – Portland Maine City Directory
1870: Alpheus Huntington, age 48, born abt 1822 Maine, wife Lucy A., 43, Manufacturer of Gum, Portland Ward 6, CumberlandMaine – United States Federal Census
1871: Alpheus Huntington, manufacturer of spruce gun &c. also chewing gums, 13 Plum, h. 59 Winter – Portland Maine City Directory
1873: Alpheus Huntington, patent medicines, chewing gums, 13 Plum, h. 59 Winter – Portland Maine City Directory
1875: Alpheus Huntington, Patent Medicines, 178 Fore, h. Woodford’s Corner – Portland Maine City Directory
1876-1877: Alpheus HuntingtonPatent Medicine Manufacturer, chewing gum manufacturer, 121 Middle, h. Woodford’s Corner – Portland Maine City Directory
1880: Alpheus Huntington, age 58, born abt 1822 Maine, wife Lucy A., 53, Patent Medicine Man, Deering, Cumberland, Maine – United States Federal Census
1884: Alpheus Huntington, chewing gum manufacturer, Forest av. W., h. Grove, Fred W. Huntington (son), veterinary surgeon – Portland Maine City Directory
1885: Alpheus Huntington, chewing gum manufacturer, Deering N. Spring, h. Deering, Fred W. Huntington (son), veterinary surgeon – Portland Maine City Directory
1896-1898: Alpheus Huntington, h. 198 Deering, Fred W. Huntington (son), veterinary surgeon and horseshoer – Portland Maine City Directory
1900-1905: Alpheus Huntington, h. 490 Deering, Fred W. Huntington (son), veterinary surgeon and horseshoer, 1905 inspector  – Portland Maine City Directory
1905: Death Alpheus Huntington, Find a Grave Index, 28 Apr 1905
Posted in Advertising, Advice, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, Ephemera, History, Medicines & Cures, Tonics, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Oliver O. Woodman’s Sarsaparilla – Vicksburg, Mississippi

WoodmansSarsaparilla

Oliver O. Woodman’s Sarsaparilla – Vicksburg, Mississippi

06 June 2015 (R•062017)

Apple-Touch-IconAYesterday we were in Mississippi posting on the Dr. Emanuel’s Sarsaparilla which is a great pontiled bottle from Vicksburg, probably dating to the 1840s. It is pictured below. That post prompted an e-mail which is represented below from Chris Brumitt and the accompanying image at the top of the post which is from the Mississippi Antique Bottles and Jugs book. Notice the similar shape of the two bottles.

EmanuelsSars_3x3

Dr. Emanuel’s Sarsaparilla, Vicksburg

Mr. Meyer, Thank you for doing a post on the Dr. Emanuel’s Sarsaparilla, and providing more information on the life of Morris Emanuel. Vicksburg has some great bottles. In general, Mississippi has some very early bottles, along with several rare bitters, that are near impossible to obtain for a collection. Vicksburg is my hometown, I primarily collect Vicksburg bottles, mainly because I feel I have a connection with their history.

I am including several pictures of a Emanuel’s Southern Antidote that I was fortunate enough to add to my collection, along with a couple of pictures of the O. O. Woodman’s Sarsaparilla from Vicksburg, that were taken from the Mississippi Antique Bottles and Jugs reference book. Both the Emanuel’s and Woodman’s Sarsaparilla bottles are very close in form and rarity.

Again thank you for the post on the Emanuel’s. I have always felt that Mississippi does not receive any credit for our history of bottles, with the cities of Memphis, New Orleans, and Mobile surrounding our great state. Bottles from those cities seem to carry the spotlight in the South, and we seem to stay in the shadows.

Thank you and your wife for your website, and for all the work done to carry on the history of bottles and the fascinating hobby of bottle collecting. Regards, Chris

Read: An Unlisted German Bitters dug in Vicksburg, Mississippi

Read: Some Extremely Rare Mississippi Bitters

Oliver Otis Woodman

Oliver Otis Woodman must have been some character. He was described as a “sharp dealer” by some accounts and seemed as comfortable in New York, Washington D.C. and Paris circles as he did in Vicksburg, Mississippi and New Orleans, Louisiana. Woodman was a ‘Easterner’ who was born on 4 October 1818 in Wilton, Franklin, Maine. His father was Captain Ephraim Woodman (1787-1859) and his mother was Sally (Sarah) B. Otis (1797-1822).

Caroline Thomas (1824-1907), his wife, was from Washington, D.C. She would play a major role here. A note I found said that “the year they were married, Woodman buys at least two more slaves, an aging couple named George and Vinny Kitteral”. I think that they all were soon to go on a scary house ride slide.

Woodman_HouseSlide__The_Times_Picayune_Wed__Dec_11__1844_

House Slide: I would assume this was Woodman’s house containing his family and slaves as it was in back of his drug store – The Times Picayune, Wednesday, December, 11 1844

Oliver O. Woodman started out in business in Vicksburg as Warren County tax records show him as a druggist in 1843. He loses his house in a mud slide in 1844 (see above) but his drug store seems to have survived. Advertisements for his business suggest a combination bookstore, newsstand, drugstore and music establishment. The (Dr.) Billings Syrup (pictured below) was one of his big sellers from this time period.

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O.O. Woodman, Billing’s Syrup, Vicksburg – Glass Works Auctions

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Dr. Billing’s Carminative and Astringent Syrup sold by O. O. Woodman, Vicksburg. – The Times Picayune Friday, May 14, 1847

We see movement with Oliver O. Woodman in 1852 as he forms a copartnership with Stephen Jarvis in New Orleans at the corner of Common and Magazine streets. Woodman still maintains his drug store in Vicksburg. From 1856 to 1860, most of his advertising is coming out of New Orleans from the same address. Jarvis seems to have dropped off. Possibly Woodman has moved entirely from Vicksburg.

Jarvis&Woodman_The_Times_Picayune_Sat__Jul_3__1852_

Jarvis & Woodman Copartnership formed. – The Times Picayune, Saturday, July 3, 1852

Jarvis&Woodman

Oliver O. Woodman & Company in Vicksburg and Jarvis & Woodman in New Orleans listing – Southern Rural Almanac, and Plantation and Garden Calendar, for 1851-1853

Woodman_Billings_The_Times_Picayune_Tue__May_13__1856_

Billing’s Carminative and Astringrent Syrup sold by O. O. Woodman, sole proprietor, New Orleans. – The Times Picayune Tuesday, May 13, 1856

The exceptional Woodman’s Sarsaparilla (W 140) is classified by pontiled medicine collectors as one of the ’25 Most Desirable Pontiled Medicines’. It appears in the #23 position. The bottle is 8 1/4″ tall x 3 1/4″ diameter and cylindrical. It comes in black olive-green and deep olive amber and has 4 indentations with a double tapered collar with an iron pontil. They are extremely valuable as you can see from past sales which are but a few.

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Three O. O. Woodman advertisements, New Orleans, on a single page from the 1860 Texas Almanac

Here is gets a bit juicy. Apparently his wife Caroline or Carrie had some health problems, or so Oliver O. Woodman thought or said, so he basically takes her on a trip to Europe and leaves her in Paris. That was a mistake as her heart and purse seem to have been taken by a Frenchman she met named Gardner. Here Woodman comments about the episode, “A Mr. Gardner Furniss of this City has been engaged in an intrigue with my wife and by means of drugged wine has obtained chriminal [sic] intercourse with her. And by threatening to take my life and to expose her obtained a large amount of money from her.” 

Woodman then commits her to a private Lunatic Asylum and it ends up in court as she wants her release. He fears that the couple is scheming to get her a divorce from him and get at his money. You can read about it below in “Close of the Woodman Case in New York – A Tale of Romance” in 1857.  Actually Woodman would spend a lot of time in court in his last years.

He dies on 30 August 1859 in Conyer Springs, Botetourt, Virginia. He was only 42 years old. Caroline goes on and lives another 50 years. I guess she was in good health after all. Bet she got his money too, and Gardner.

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Woodman puts his wife in an Insane Asylum – Richmond Dispatch Monday, November 9, 1857

Bottles

BILLINGS SYRUP  O. O. WOODMAN  VICKSBURG (B 89) Dr. Billing’s Carminative Syrup Listed in the 1856 New Orleans Directory (Baldwin 343) 7 1/4 H x 2 1/4 W Rectangular, Aqua, Beveled Edges, 4 Sunken Panels, Double Collar, Open Pontil, Exceptional
BILLINGS SYRUP O. O. WOODMAN  VICKSBURG (B 90) Front Panel Embossing with Serifs, 6 5/8 H x 2 1/8 W x 1 3/8 D 4 7/8 Shoulder, 5/16 Bevel, Rectangular, Aqua, Beveled Edges, 4 Sunken Panels, Tapered Collar, Open Pontil, Exceptional
WOODMAN’S SARSAPARILLA (W 140) One of the 25 Most Desirable Pontiled Medicines, 8 1/4 H x 3 1/4 Dia. Cylindrical, Green / Amber, 4 Indentations, Double Tapered Collar, Iron Pontil, Exceptional * DeGrafft 226, Greer 1326, $5500 (4500 / 8500) (Black Olive-Green) (Haze), 7/92 HR $5000 (Deep Olive- Amber) (Stain), 9/94 HR $6500 (3250/7500) (Dark Olive-Amber)
WOODMAN CHERRY EXPECTORANT (W 1236), 7 H x 2 3/4 W, Rectangular, Aqua, Tapered Collar, Open Pontil, Rare
O. O. WOODMAN NEW ORLEANS (W 137) Related Product… Oliver O. Woodman’s Extract of Jamaica Ginger – Advertised in the 1856 New Orleans Business Directory (Baldwin 4323) 4 5/8 H x 1 5/8 W x 1 D, Rectangular, Aqua, Beveled Edges, 3 Sunken Panels, Rolled Lip, Open Pontil, Rare
O. O. WOODMAN VICKSBURG SYRUP OF LIVERWORT (W 138), 4 7/8 H x 1 1/2 W, Oval, Deep Aqua, Rolled Lip, Open Pontil, Exceptional
FEVER CURE O. O. WOODMAN’S N. O. (W 139) 4 1/4 H x 1 3/4 W x 3/4 D, Rectangular, Aqua, Rolled Lip, Open Pontil, Exceptional
TONIC WINE BITTERS, No example presently known, Sold by O. O. Woodman, druggist, The Constitutionalist, Saturday, July 13, 1844

Tonic Wine Bitters advertisement, Sold by O. O. Woodman, druggist, The Constitutionalist, Saturday, July 13, 1844

Select Listings:

1817: Oliver O. Woodman born on 4 October 1818 in Wilton, Franklin, Maine,
1844: Woodman’s Vicksburg house, in back of his drug store, containing his family and slaves in House Slide (see clipping above)  – The Times Picayune, Wednesday, December, 11 1844
1844: The Vicksburg almanac, for the year 1844. Calculated for the meridian of Vicksburg, lat. 32, 20 north, long. 91 west of Greenwich. Containing a complete and accurate court calendar for the states of Mississippi and Louisiana. – Published by O.O. Woodman, bookseller and druggist, Washington Street., [1843]
1847: Advertisement (see above) for Dr. Billing’s Carminative and Astringent Syrup sold by O. O. Woodman, Vicksburg. – The Times Picayune Friday, May 14, 1847
1849: Book: The great Southern remedy, recommended by the most eminent physicians: Dr. Billings Carminative and Astringent… by Oliver O. Woodman, 1849
185o: O. O. Woodman, age, born abt 1817, Maine, wife Caroline, VicksburgWarrenMississippi – United States Federal Census
1851: Oliver O. Woodman & Company in Vicksburg and Jarvis & Woodman in New Orleans listing – Southern Rural Almanac, and Plantation and Garden Calendar, for 1851-1853
1852: Jarvis & Woodman Copartnership formed (see clipping above) – The Times Picayune, Saturday, July 3, 1852
1852-1858: Book: Woodman’s Cherry ExpectorantFor the Certain Cure of Coughs, Colds, Influenza, Croup, Bronchial Affections, Consumption and All Diseases of the Lungs in the Incipient State : Also for the Relief of Consumption in Advanced Stages : Prepared by O.O. Woodman … New Orleans, La
1857: On 21 August 1857, O. O. Woodman a druggist from Vicksburg, Mississippi, wrote, from the city of New York, to Jacob Thompson [Secretary of the Interior 1857-1861, Congressman from Mississippi, 1839-51] in Washington, DC, about the behavior of Gardner Furniss. Mr. Woodman wrote “A Mr. Gardner Furniss of this City has been engaged in an intrigue with my wife and by means of drugged wine has obtained chriminal [sic] intercourse with her. And by threatening to take my life and to expose her obtained a large amount of money from her. In one letter to my wife he asserts that he had obtained an appointment from the Secretary of State to go to Europe …”
1857: On the first day of November, 1857, Oliver O. Woodman made his four promissory notes, payable to his own order, at the office of Brown, Johnson, & Co., New Orleans, and indorsed them in blank, and delivered them to said Brown, Johnson, & Co. Three of the notes were for $3,000 each, and one for $2,761.15; and they fell due at various periods within five months. They were given for a pre-existing indebtedness of Woodman to Brown, Johnson, & Co.; and were secured by a mortgage on the cotton farm of Woodman, in Louisiana. None of these notes were paid at maturity. On the twenty-sixth day of May, 1869, William A.Stone, the appellant in this case, brought a suit in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Mississippi against Ivory Woodman, as administrator with the will annexed of Oliver O. Woodman, on these notes: and the administrator thereupon confessed a judgment in his favor for the amount of the notes with interest; to wit, $21,868.35. – APPEAL from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Mississippi.
1858: The Woodman Divorce Case.; SUIT OF O. WOODMAN, IN NEW-ORLEANS, FOR A DIVORCE FROM HIS WIFE–THE SCENES AT THE NEW-YORK HOTEL–“BABIE” FURNESS. SECOND DISTRICT COURT–JUDGE MORGAN.—This suit for divorce was brought in this court last Autumn, by O. O. Woodman, against his wife, nes Caroline Thomas. The answer of defendant was subsequently filled on the 1st of December, in which the allegations of plaintiff are denied, We were refused a copy of the answer by the Clerk of the Court, and were, and are still, unable to give it to our readers on that account… – New York Times, July 1, 1858
1859: O.O. Woodman death on 30 August 1859 in Conyer Springs, Botetourt, Virginia

Woodmandeath

1860: Three O. O. Woodman advertisements, New Orleans, on a single page from the 1860 Texas Almanac (see above)
Posted in Advertising, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Medicines & Cures, Sarsaparilla, Syrup | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. Emanuel’s Sarsaparilla – Vicksburg

EmanuelsSars_3x3

Dr. Emanuel’s Sarsaparilla – Vicksburg, Mississippi

05 June 2015 (R•060615)
View_of_Vicksburg,_Mississippi

View of Vicksburg in 1855

“and none got too excited about it, but they wanted to buy it.”

Apple-Touch-IconAIncoming e-mail about an interesting sarsaparilla bottle from an old Mississippi collection. See low res pictures at the top of this post. Let’s take a moment to check out Dr. Emanuel’s Sarsaparilla from Vicksburg, Mississippi. Never seen or heard of this one before. Here is the e-mail:

Hi, I have this bottle that I bought with an old collection. It is embossed, “Dr. Emanuel’s Sarsaparilla, Vicksburg”. It is shaped like a “Swaim’s Panacea”, and it is open pontil. Can you give me any information on it? I showed it to some Mississippi guys at the Jacksonville show, and none got too excited about it, but they wanted to buy it. A friend of mine who knows bottles well said he has never seen the bottle. Thanks

Gene from Louisiana

SwainsPanacea_Heckler

Swaims Panacea – Norman C. Heckler

Yes indeed, the bottle does look like a Swaim’s Panacea which is pictured above. Though I could find no direct advertising for the bottle, I did get the following advertisement clipping from Eric McGuire and advertising envelope from Marianne Dow.

The Register (Monroe, Louisiana) June 21, 1860

Morris Emanuel, Wholesale & Retail Druggist advertisement – The Register (Monroe, Louisiana) June 21, 1860

EmanuelBooksellerEnvelope

Morris Emanuel Druggist & Bookseller, Vicksburg, Mississippi envelope – 15 July 1854

Dr. Morris Emanuel was a long-time druggist, bookseller, physician and railroad man in Vicksburg, Mississippi. Most Federal Census reports put his birth about 1804 in Virginia though his obituary (see bottom of post) clarifies his birth as being in Stafford County, Virginia on 15 October 1803. The notice below is from the History of Mississippi and it mentions his name as an early physician of Vicksburg. He was raised, educated and married in Virginia. In 1836, Morris moved to Vicksburg, Mississippi and commenced the practice of medicine. In 1840 he entered the drug business and  continued in this area until the break-out of the Civil War.

Among the early physicians were Dr. Thomas Anderson, Dr. Robert J. Harper, Dr. Hagaman, Dr. Hugh I. Bodley, Dr. James Crump, followed later by his brother, Dr. George P. Crump; Dr. Thomas M. Jackson, Dr. R. H. Broadnax, Dr. John G. Parham, Dr. Wm. T. Balfour, Dr. Walter Puckett, Dr. B. J. Hicks, Dr. Morgan, Dr. Alex. Hensley, Dr. Allen, Dr. Albert Chewning, Dr. M. M. Pallen, Dr. Morris Emanuel, subsequently for a number of years president of the Vicksburg and Meridian Railroad Company; Dr. George K. Birchett, Dr. James C. Newman, Dr. Church, Dr. Robert J. Turnbull, Dr. Daniel B. Nailor and Dr. Willis M. Green, the brother of General Duff Green, the distinguished journalist. – A History of Mississippi: From the Discovery of the Great River by Hernando DeSoto, Including the Earliest Settlement Made by the French Under Iberville, to the Death of Jefferson Davis, 1891

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“Emanuel’s Southern Antidote Vicksburg” – Chris Brumitt collection

As noted above, Dr. Morris Emanuel was also a railroad man. How he could be a physician, druggist and railroad president at the same time escapes me but he was.

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Early Mississippi train – History of Alabama and Vicksburg R.R.

Not only was he instrumental in the development of Vicksburg area railroads, he also had to endure railroading during the Civil War and all of the damage inflicted on his stations, depots, stock, bridges and rails. There were also huge debts left by the defeated Confederate army. Here is a page from Mississippi Railroad Heritage:

After the War Between the States, especially in the years 1865 – 1866, managers and executives of the railroads of the South were hard pressed to find money to rebuild the tracks and depots that were destroyed during the conflict. The message shown below was written by the President of the Southern Railroad, the old Vicksburg to Meridian route, first opened with mule power in 1836 and operated with steam locomotives to Clinton and Jackson in 1840. The Southern completed the line to Meridian in 1861.

SOUTHERN RAILROAD COMPANY, Morris Emanuel, President

SEPTEMBER 11, 1865 CIRCULAR, Philadelphia, Pa., to Bondholders and Creditors of the Co.

“The Southern Railroad Company has suffered seriously in its interests, by the four years of bloody civil war that has just closed, and as President of the Company, I have been instructed by the Board of Managers to see our creditors, and lay before them a full and frank exhibit of the condition of the road, and the financial affairs of the company.”

“We met our obligations with satisfactory punctuality up to the first of January, 1861, and until the ever memorable civil war became inevitable our prospects were growing brighter and brighter.”

“The entire construction of the Southern Railroad, for 140 miles, was not completed until June, 1861, and for nine months previous to that date, the trains ran no farther east than Newton Station, 109 miles from Vicksburg. Notwithstanding the hindrances to business and the difficulties incident to the active work of construction then going on, and for three-fourths of the year the trains not approaching within 30 mile of the eastern terminus, yet the earnings for the year ending August 31, 1861, were $301,611.77; the gross earnings for the year ending 1862, $653,418.38; and for 186, $1,637,300.51.”

“These earnings were, of course, in Confederate Currency, except those of 1860, ad only serviceable in enabling the Company to keep the road and rolling stock in the best condition which such means would permit, and the statement is made not to show how much money we made, but the heavy amount of transportation the road could perform.”

“The indebtedness of the Company exclusive of interest, has not been materially lessened since first Sept., 1861. Mr. Smedes (previous president) stated the debt at that date to be $2,443.357.19.”

“We held nearly a million of dollars of claims against the Confederate Government for railroad services at the close of the war.”

“The disasters to the road and the rolling stock of the Company by the rough heel of war have been very damaging and numerous. On the 24th of April, 1863, General Grierson’s raid destroyed Newton Station, burning the depot building containing the books and papers of that office, with some freight, also destroying the cars of two trains ad injuring the engines; the troops tore up half mile of track, and destroyed the trestles; it took nine days to repair the road. In May,1863, the U.S. troops under General Grant, while at Jackson, burned Pearl River Bridge and several hundred feet of high and expensive trestle work, partially destroying several miles of track east of Pearl River, and about seven miles of track between Jackson and Big Black River, including the valuable bridge over that river, together with upwards of 8,000 feet of high trestle work connected with; also, Baker’s Creek Bridge and a number of smaller ones. On the march of General Grant’s army to Vicksburg, 5 engines and 50 cars were captured, ad 22 freight cars were destroyed at Jackson, that were in bad order, and could not be moved away in time to save them. The cash value of the damage done to the road between Jackson and Big Black, including Pearl River and Big Black bridges, was estimated at the time at $204,000.”

In the following July (1863) after the surrender of Vicksburg, the U.S. army again marched to Jackson in pursuit of General Joseph E. Johnston, and pursued him to Brandon and Morton, tearing up the track and destroying bridges and trestles in their march. In February, 1864, General Sherman made his great march through the State on a parallel line with the Southern Railroad, and near enough to it for the cavalry to make sudden dashes on any station he thought proper to destroy.”

“His troops burned the Station Houses at Brandon, Morton, Lake, Newton, and Meridian. The machine shop and other company buildings at Lake were also destroyed on that occasion. Fortunately all the shop machinery, the engines and such cars that were movable, were successfully moved o a place of safety. While the army of Gen. Sherman remained at Meridian, 7 miles of our track was as effectually destroyed as labor combined with skill and energy could do it; also, 7,000 feet of ridges and trestles, including two expensive bridges crossing the Chunkey River, together with 83 other trestles along the line of the road. Superadded to these heavy losses, the valuable brick depot and warehouse at Jackson were destroyed by fire in Nov., 1862, and a commodious depot building at Morton was burned in Feb., 1863. These two depot buildings, on account of their supposed security, were made the repositories f all the valuable records and papers belonging to the company. It was deemed prudent to send the archives of the company out of Vicksburg during the bombardment, and they were sent to those two depots, and were consequently all destroyed. All the furniture, with the valuable library, fine paintings and costly plate, etc., of the late Wm. C. Smedes, the then President of the Company, were entirely destroyed by the burning of the Morton depot.”

“The undersigned proposes to the bondholders and creditors to fund all arrears of interest now due, and also to fund all accruing interest up to the 1st of January, 1867, and make it a part of the debt, and pay six per cent interest upon the entire debt as it will then stand, in semiannual installments, the first one o be paid on the 1st of July, 1867, and thereafter at intervals of six months. He proposes that the 1st of July, 1890 shall be fixed as the period of the maturity of the entire debt….”

“If this property is now wrested from their hands, many of the stockholders and their families will be left penniless. Several of the stockholders have died and left widows and orphans, who look alone to their interests in this company to shield them from penury; and the undersigned feels assured, when the debt is made so secure, and when the condition of the company has not resulted from bad faith or mismanagement, or incompetency on their part, that he will not appeal in vain for such relief, and extension, as will protect and save the company from ruin, and at the same time secure to the creditors the full payment of their entire debt, within a reasonable period of time, with regular semiannual payments of interest from and after 1st January, 1867.”

Morris Emanuel thus brought to a close his eloquent appeal to the railroad creditors.

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1854 Vicksburg Map

Read: Oliver O. Woodman’s Sarsaparilla – Vicksburg, Mississippi

Read: An Unlisted German Bitters dug in Vicksburg, Mississippi

Read: Some Extremely Rare Mississippi Bitters

Select Dates:

1803: Morris Emanuel born in Stafford County, Virginia on 15 October 1803.

1837: Republic 0f Texas – Dr. Morris Emanuel, Vicksburg, Miss. mentioned (see below) – The Daily National Intelligencer, (Washington), 1837

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Republic 0f Texas – Dr. Morris Emanuel, Vicksburg, Miss. mentioned – The Daily National Intelligencer, (Washington), 1837

1840: Morris Emanuel – United States Federal Census

1841: Advertisement for Dr. Stillman’s Cards mentions Dr. Morris Emanuel (see below) – The Times Picayune, Saturday, July 17, 1841

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Advertisement for Dr. Stillman’s Cards mentions Dr. Morris Emanuel – The Times Picayune, Saturday, July 17, 1841

1844: Morris Emanuel, Delta Kappa Epsilon

1846: “On February 23, 1846, the Southern Railroad Company was chartered in Mississippi to construct a railroad from Brandon eastward through Meridian to the Mississippi-Alabama state line, there to connect with a railroad of the same name in Alabama, but the charter was allowed to lapse without any actual construction being done. The Southern Railroad Company (which should not be confused with the present Southern Railway System), was reincorporated March 9, 1850, as a Mississippi corporation. The controlling spirits of the enterprise were Thomas Bigby, Morris Emanuel, and William C. Smedes of Vicksburg. Mr. Bigby, the principal stockholder, was a prominent merchant and landowner. He served as vice-president of the railroad for a number of years and as president of the road for a time until it was sold to London interests in 1881, when he retired at the age of 80 years. William C. Smedes, the first president of the company, was a distinguished member of the Vicksburg bar and is sometimes referred to as the father of the Southern railroad. Other directors of the Southern Railroad Company were Colonel Nicholas D. Coleman, Ezekiel Pickens, James M. Calhoun, Bartholomew Smith, Alexander H. Arthur, and William H. Siddell.” – – History of Alabama and Vicksburg R.R.

1850: Morris Emanuel, age 46, born about 1804 in Virginia, druggistVicksburgWarrenMississippi, Agatha A M Emanuel, 38, Mary Emanuel, 9, Lelia Emanuel, 8, Virginia Emanuel 5, William E Emanuel, 2, John M Emanuel 1, Isabella Emanuel, 37 – United States Federal Census

1850: “The road was operated by the trustees until March 8, 1848, when it was sold at sheriff’s sale. A quaint advertisement appearing in a Jackson newspaper in April, 1842, quoted the round-trip fare over the 45-mile line between Jackson and Vicksburg at $5, which amounts to more than 8 cents a mile. The name of the railroad was changed March 9, 1850, to the Vicksburg & Jackson Railroad Company. Morris Emanuel, an enterprising Vicksburg merchant and land owner, was president of the company.” – History of Alabama and Vicksburg R.R.

1860: EMANUEL MORRIS, druggist, Washington st, West side – Vicksburg City Directory

1860: Morris Emanuel, age 56, born about 1804 in Virginia, druggistVicksburgWarrenMississippi, Agatha Emanuel, 46, Mary Emanuel, 19, Lelia Emanuel, 17, Virginia Emanuel 14, Edward Emanuel, 12, John M Emanuel 10, Morris Emanuel, 8, Isabella Emanuel, 45 – United States Federal Census

1865: “During the next few years the railroad experienced all the vicissitudes of war. The territory through which it passed was drenched with the blood of contending armies, and the railroad and its rolling stock were torn up, burned and laid waste by defenders and invaders alike. The route between Jackson and Vicksburg was almost a solid battleground. The broken uplands in Hinds and Warren counties were scenes of numerous skirmishes and several important battles. Desperate battles were fought near Raymond, at Champion Hill, Bakers Creek, and Big Black Creek. Jackson was sacked and burned and Vicksburg was the scene of one of the greatest military sieges ever witnessed on this continent. The following graphic account of the damage done to the railroad during the war is contained in a report which Morris Emanuel, president of the Southern Railroad, made in the fall of 1865:

At the close of the war we were left to contemplate its blighting effect on our road and property, as evidenced by our tracks torn up, crossties burned, rails bent, twisted and broken, bridges and culverts destroyed, depots burned, cars destroyed, and locomotives and all other machinery in a damaged condition without a dollar in the treasury, with nearly $1,5000,000 of unpaid debts that had matured during the war, besides upwards of $500,000 of unpaid interest coupons, making a total of more than $2,000,000 of indebtedness past due.” – History of Alabama and Vicksburg R.R.

1870: Morris Emanuel, age 66, born about 1804 in Virginia, Railroad PresidentVicksburg, Ward 7, WarrenMississippi – United States Federal Census

1879: Death of Dr. Morris Emanuel notice – Wednesday, May 21, 1879, Daily Commercial (Vicksburg, MS)

Date: Wednesday, May 21, 1879  Paper: Daily Commercial (Vicksburg, MS)

Death of Dr. Morris Emanuel – Wednesday, May 21, 1879, Daily Commercial (Vicksburg, MS)

Posted in Civil War, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Medicines & Cures, Postage, Sarsaparilla | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Dr. Owen’s European Life Bitters – Detroit

OwensO98BackSide

Dr. Owen’s European Life Bitters – Detroit

Which Dr. Owen’s are we talking about?

05 June 2015

Apple-Touch-IconALet’s take a moment and look at the Dr. Owen’s European Life Bitters from Detroit, Michigan. This is a pretty old bitters bottle with a rough pontil. We may be talking about John Owen here who was also one of the supporting characters in a recent post for the Diamond B Stomach Bitters from Detroit. We could also be talking about John G. Owen. Both options are explored below without conclusion.

With the word “Life” in the brand title, it also reminds me of the recent “Long-Life” word usage in the Dr. L. G. Bertram’s Long-Life Aromatic Stomach Bitters post.

As I said above, we “might” be talking about John Owen as many indications point to him as the proprietor in Detroit as you will see further below. What does bother me, is that John Owens was not a “Dr.” though that did not stop many bitters makers and sellers from claiming that they were one. Let’s look at his information first and a key clue that we might be talking about someone else, that being John G. Owen.

Carlyn Ring and Bill Ham note that approximately 35 of these bottles were dug on the Owen farm north of Detroit. That would be John G. Owen. To date, this has been the primary source for this bottle. They also note that the label says Ox Blood Bitters (see listing below). What’s up with that? Additionally there is a note, “See: Ochsen Blut Bitters” (Ox Blood Bitters). I have no clue when I look that up as I see no link to this bottle. Obviously a labeled example needs to be observed.

Read: Metropolitan Detroit Antique Bottle Club which mentions the Dr. Owen’s European Life Bitters.

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

O 98drawing

O 98  DR. OWEN’S EUROPEAN LIFE BITTERS
DR OWEN’S / EUROPEAN // f // LIFE BITTERS / DETROIT // f //
7 x 2 5/8 x 1 7/8 (5) 5/8
Rectangular, Aqua, LTC, Applied mouth, Rough pontil mark,
Very Scarce
L…Ox Blood Bitters (See: Ochsen Blut Bitters)
Note: Approximately 35 of these bottles were dug on the Owen’s farm north of Detroit. To date, this has been the primary source for this bottle.
O 6 L … Ochsen Blut Bitters
Ox Blood Bitters Co., Cincinnati, Ohio
10 1/8 x 3 (7)
Square, clear, LTC
Label: The builder of the system

John Pastor had a nice example of a Dr. Owen’s bottle that closed on 27 May 2015 in his American Glass Gallery Auction 14 last week. Here are the pictures. and his caption noting that the bottle was made by another Owen (Owen #2).

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“DR OWEN’S / EUROPEAN – LIFE BITTERS / DETROIT”, America, 1850 – 1855. Aquamarine, rectangular with beveled corners, applied sloping collar – blowpipe pontil scar, ht. 7″; (a pinhead bit of roughness on the edge of the lip and some very light interior milkiness and residue in the upper half of the bottle, otherwise perfect). R/H #O98. Believed to be the nicest example from the original cache of bottles found under a barn in 1971, in Clarkston, Mich, the property formerly owned by Dr. Owen! A scarce pontiled bitters, and fairly rare in this condition as most of the known examples have some form of damage. It is interesting to note that majority of these bottles also have pontil chips. This example does not! Dr. Owens biography indicates that he worked as an apprentice in a drug store in England from the age of fourteen until leaving for the US (New York) in 1842. He was in Detroit from August, 1844 through some time in June 1846, where he worked as a clerk at Goodell’s drug store. It is believed that he relocated to Clarkston around June, 1846. – American Glass Gallery Auction 14

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“DR OWEN’S / EUROPEAN – LIFE BITTERS / DETROIT” – American Glass Gallery Auction 14

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Blowpipe pontil scar on a “DR OWEN’S / EUROPEAN – LIFE BITTERS / DETROIT” – American Glass Gallery Auction 14

I am also fortunate to have an example on my shelves from the great Bryan Grapentine collection that was auctioned off by Jeff Wichmann some years back. Here are some of my pictures.

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DR. OWEN’S EUROPEAN LIFE BITTERS DETROIT – Meyer Collection

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DR. OWEN’S EUROPEAN LIFE BITTERS DETROIT – Meyer Collection

John Owen [#1]

John Owen was a big man. I mean you have to be big to be a bitters man, but Mr. Owen parlayed his experiences and rose from a simple errand boy to bank president. Only in America. I love these stories.

John Owen was born on March 20, 1809 near Toronto, Ontario, Canada. His father died in 1818 which left the family in poor financial shape so John Owens education was in consequence, acquired under difficulties. He next moved with his mother to Detroit, Michigan. For three years he attended a private academy, paying for his tuition by doing chores about the premises, but in 1821 his preceptor died and he was compelled to seek the means of a livelihood. He became an errand boy at 12 years old and eventually a clerk in the drug store of the late Dr. Chapin in Detroit. This business was started in that city in 1819 by Dr. Marshall Chapin, presumably as a branch of the firm of Chapin & Pratt, of Buffalo. John Owen performed his duties with such faithfulness that in the course of a few years he was admitted to partnership in the business under the firm name of Chapin & Owen. From 1831 to 1837, Detroit directory listings list Chapin & Owen as Wholesale and Retail Druggists and Grocers on 82 Jefferson Avenue. Subsequently Dr. Chapin withdrew and until 1853 Mr. Owen carried on the business under the name of J. Owen & Co.

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John Owen & Co., Detroit – The Hillsdale Standard, Tuesday, October 9, 1849

John Owen eventually retired from this line of work, selling his stock and good will to T. H. Hinchman & Son. Bigger things were in the works.

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J. Owen & Co. receipt with his name crossed out and Hinchman name added.

Mr. Owen then gave his attention to regional politics, lake marine navigation and banking interests, judiciously investing large sums of money and soon became prominent as a vessel owner and the possessor of an extensive estate in Detroit. He was also one of the earliest and heaviest stockholders and eventually president of the Detroit & Cleveland Steam Navigation Co., and also one of the principal stockholders of the Detroit Dry Dock Company and became its first president too.

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John Owen running as a Whig for governor of Wayne County, Detroit – The Hillsdale Standard, Tuesday, June 26, 1849

He held the presidency of the Michigan Insurance Bank during the financial panic of 1857, in which connection it was said: “The fact that the bank weathered the storms of that period was very largely due to the unbounded confidence which the business public had in his ability and integrity.”  On the same subject another appreciative article contains the following equally pertinent words: “His integrity and good name constituted the wall that prevented the financial breakers from overwhelming not only the bank but scores of individuals as well.”

That popular confidence and esteem were not restricted to local limitations as touching Mr. Owen is further evidenced in the fact that in 1860, at the climacteric period just prior to the outbreak of the Civil war and when financial disquietude was in evidence throughout the nation, he was elected to the office of state treasurer, of which he remained the incumbent from 1861 to 1865, covering the period of the war, and with utmost fidelity and discrimination did he administer the fiscal affairs of the state, protecting its interests and loyally upholding the hands of the general state administration in providing for the needs of the Michigan troops at home and in the field.

Next he was president of the National Insurance Bank of Detroit; from 1861 to 1867; in 1836, alderman-at-large from the First ward of Detroit, filling that office the second time from 1844 to 1845; a director of the Detroit public schools, 1839 to 1840; commissioner of grades, 1859 to 1870; water commissioner of Detroit, 1865 to 1879; from 1841 to 1848 a member of the Board of Regents of the University of Michigan; president of the Soldiers’ Relief Association, 1864; and a trustee and treasurer of Elmwood Cemetery at Detroit from its organization to the time of his death in 1892. He was also one of the principal trustees of Albion College and always prominently identified with the work of the Central Methodist Episcopal church at Detroit.

Owen married Jane Cook and their children were: Edmund J. and Lafayette, John, Jr.; and Fannie. John Owen died in 1892. Jane Owen died on March 22, 1908.

Reference: Landmarks of Wayne county and Detroit The City of Detroit, Michigan, 1701-1922, Volume 4

Dr. Owen’s [2]

As you might have noticed in John Pastor’s description of his bottle, he notes that “Dr. Owens biography indicates that he worked as an apprentice in a drug store in England from the age of fourteen until leaving for the US (New York) in 1842. He was in Detroit from August, 1844 through some time in June 1846, where he worked as a clerk at Goodell’s drug store. It is believed that he relocated to Clarkston around June, 1846.”

Obviously this is in direct opposition to the John Owen noted above. Further searching can support John’s words as there is an aqua bottle embossed “Dr. Owens London Horse Liniment, Clarkson, Michigan”. There is a John G. Owen that was born in 1824 who did reside in Clarkston for a while but he was a well-known business man dealing in lumber. He is most likely our man.

Maria Sabine, born 1824, married John G. Owen in Detroit. They afterward removed to Clarkston, and subsequently to East Saginaw. In the latter city Mr. Owen was a lumber dealer and was mayor in the ’70s. She died in 1867, leaving nine children. (1) Maria E. Dunk, widow of Alfred Dunk, Saginaw. (2) John S. Owen, of Eau Claire, Wis. (2) Joseph D. Owen, Owendale, Mich. (4) Sophia S. Owen, who lives with her father in Saginaw. (5) Ella W. Owen, wife of W. B. Moore, Saginaw. (6) Wm C. Owen, Pontiac. (7) Edward A. Owen, New York City. (8) James Owen, Minneapolis, Minn. (9) Samuel F. Owen, Saginaw.

OWEN, HON. JOHN G., of East Saginaw, Michigan, was born March 28, 1824, at Woodchurch, Kent County, England. His father, Dive Owen, followed the occupation of a farmer, and lived to be seventy-six years of age. His mother, Elizabeth (Woodland) Owen, was born near Ruckinge, Kent County; and had ten children, – five sons and five daughters. She survived her husband ten years, dying at the age of eighty-six. At fourteen years of age, Mr. Owen left school, and engaged as an apprentice in the drug store of Mr. Thomas Barry, at Rye, county of Sussex. He remained there until his eighteenth year when, owing to failing health, he was compelled to give up business. Believing that an ocean voyage and change of climate were the only hope of regaining his health, he, with a brother and sister, embarked in the packet ship “Quebec,” April 8, 1842, for the United States. After forty-five days, he reached New York, much benefited by his voyage. He went to Pittsford, New York, where he remained for some time, his health constantly improving. He alternated, as to the selection of his future home, between Rochester, Pembroke, and Darien. In October, 1843, Mr. Owen, in company with his sister, went to Armada, Macomb County, Michigan. While here, he devoted a portion of his time to farming; and, having quite recovered his health, removed, in the following August, to Detroit, in order to accept a clerkship in a wholesale grocery house. In April, 1846, he married Miss Maria A. Sabine, daughter of John Sabine, then of the city of Detroit, but formerly of Canterbury, England. In June, 1846, Mr. Owen removed to Clarkston, Oakland County, Michigan, where he engaged in a general mercantile business. In 1854, in connection with his other business, he turned his attention to farming, in which he has since been engaged, although he has removed from Clarkston. In 1860 Mr. Owen purchased the Waterford flour-mills, which he rebuilt and operated. He also established a store in connection with the mills; and, in the spring of 1863, removed to Waterford, which is situated two and one-half miles from Clarkston. Mr. Owen had, for several years, traded in grain, wool, and all the productions of the northern counties; and this place was, for a long time, the natural outlet. In 1865, in connection with his business at Waterford, he opened a house in East Saginaw, dealing in wholesale groceries and lumbermen’s supplies. This business increased beyond his expectations; and, in the following year, he was obliged to remove to Saginaw. Here he established a business which exceeded half a million dollars annually. In 1872 he retired, and has since been engaged, in Saginaw, in the manufacture of lumber.

In 1854 Mr. Owen made a visit to his parents, brothers, and sisters in England. In 1860 he was chosen to represent his district in the State Senate. He took his seat, January 1, 1861, and served through that session and two special sessions, made necessary by the breaking out of the civil war. He took an active part in the business and deliberations, and filled positions on two special committees, one of which was on the salt interests of the State. An act had been passed, at a former session, giving a bounty of ten cents a bushel on all salt made within the State, which led to rapid developments of the salt deposits, and threatened the people with heavy taxation in order to meet the probable production. The majority of the committee having reported on a modified and continuous tax, the law was practically repealed, except as to the company then in operation. A strong effort was |made for its continuance, however, and Mr. Owen received many flattering comments for the stand he took in the interests of the people. He was appointed chairman of the special committee, appointed by the Senate, to investigate the department of the Quartermaster General, to which base frauds had been charged by a part of the press of the State. Three months’ faithful labor in investigating the business, resulted in a complete refutation of the charges. In September, 1866, Mr. Owen was deeply affected by the death of his wife, who left a family of nine children,—six sons and three daughters. He afterwards married Miss Lucia A. Greenleaf, who was born in Saratoga, New York, in 1832, and was the daughter of Flavel and Eunice (Smith) Greenleaf. They have one daughter. Mr. Owen has been identified, not only with the business interests of Saginaw, but with its growth and public improvement. In 1870 he was elected Mayor of the city; and has served in other prominent positions. He served as President of the Water Commissioners during the construction of what is known as the Holly system of water supply, covering an expenditure of upwards of three hundred thousand dollars. Upon the completion of the works, Mr. Owen resigned his position, and retired to private life. lie was never an office-seeker, and only accepted the positions he has filled from a sense of duty, and at the urgent solicitations of his friends. In politics, he was first a Whig, and afterwards a Republican. In his religious views, he is a Baptist. [American Biographical History, 1878]

John Owen* Select Listings:

Does not include John G. Owen listings.

1809: John Owen was a native of Canada, born near Toronto, Ont., in 1809 (March 20, 1809). – Landmarks of Wayne county and Detroit The City of Detroit, Michigan, 1701-1922, Volume 4
1818: After his father’s death, John Owen moves with his mother to Detroit, Mich. – The City of Detroit, Michigan, 1701-1922, Volume 4
1821: When only twelve years of age John Owen began providing for his own support as an errand boy in the drug store of Dr. Chapin.
1829: John Owen, drug clerk, admitted to partnership and firm name changed to Chapin & Owen. – Odditorium Detroit
1831: September 7th, 1831. The office of the Detroit Journal was removed from Griswold street to the new building on Jefferson avenue, opposite to the Druggist Store of Messrs. Chapin & Owennear the corner. – Historical Collections, 1900
1833: Probably the oldest drug house in the West is that of T. H. Hinchman & Sons, of Detroit, Mich. The business was started in that city in 1819 by Dr. Marshall Chapin, presumably as a branch of the firm of Chapin & Pratt, of Buffalo. In 1833 Dr. Chapin took as a. partner John Owen, of Detroit, the firm thus becoming Chapin & Owen. Theodore H. Hinchman went to Detroit to enter the employ of that firm in 1836, was admitted as a partner in 1846, and in 1848 succeeded to the business. His brother, James A. Hinchman, was admitted as a partner in 1852, and continued in business with him until 1860. In 1868, 1869, and 1871 the three sons of Theodore H. Hinchman were admitted to partnership, since which latter date the style has been T. H. Hinchman & Sons. Mr. Theodore H. Hinchman died May 12, 1895 – 1795-1895. One Hundred Years of American Commerce
1837: CHAPIN and OWEN – Wholesale and Retail Druggists and Grocers, 82 Jefferson Ave, CHAPIN, Dr. (C & OWENS – r, Fort abt Cass Street, OWEN, John – (Chapin & O) r Michigan Exchange – Directory of the City of Detroit, by Julius P. Bolivar Mac Cabe, Printed by William Marshall, 1837
1838: Dr. Chapin died on December 28. Hinchman admitted as partner, and firm became John Owen & Co. – Odditorium Detroit
1845: John Owen & Co., wholesale and retail grocers and druggists, 82 and 84 Jefferson av – Detroit City Directory
1852-1853: John Owen & Co., wholesale drugs, paints and groceries, 120 Jefferson ave – Detroit City Directory
1853: Subsequently Dr. Chapin withdrew and until 1853 Mr. Owen carried on the business under the style of J. Owen & Co. In the latter year he too retired from active work, selling his stock and good will to T. H. Hinchman & Son. – Landmarks of Wayne county and Detroit
1875: John Owen, president, Detroit Dry Dock Company – Detroit City Directory
1892: John Owen death
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By George, I Think I’ve Got It

George1

By George, I Think I’ve Got It

02 June 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAIncoming e-mail and pictures from bitters collector Lou Holis. This bottle is one of the classic figural bitters and a must-have for any bitters or figural collector. I must say, I have never seen one with paint before. My thinking usually follows the course of adding the paint at a later date. I just have a hard time picturing a paint booth in one of the old, dirt floor, bottle blowing plants. Who knows, maybe young lasses followed up with paint on specific showroom samples. Pretty cool, no less.

KovelsExample

Hi Ferd

A while back, you where talking about painted bottles of a different kind. I found this example through my usual sources. Just wondering if this could be the original paint on this Simon’s Centennial Bitters with a smooth base trademark. Patina on the blue paint is there and it looks almost black until held to the light, then it appears royal blue.

Went on your site to find some info but to no avail, not much to that page. Could it have been originally painted like one of the indian maiden bitters out there aka Brown’s Celebrated Indian Herb Bitters. Also talked to a few collectors. Most say they have never seen a painted one, others say it is maybe folk art. Either way, it is  still a great piece. Kovels has a picture online (see above) with remnants of paint on the epaulettes. Just wondering what your take is on this most unusual piece on Americana.

Thanks

Lou Holis (Florida)

PS: bottle will be at Chattanooga for viewing.

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