Looking at some Universal Bitters

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Looking at some Universal Bitters

15 March 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAIf you play word association with me and you say Universal, I think of Universal Pictures first, especially their older logos which were fantastic. One is pictured at the top of the post. Of course I know what the word means. When I was working on the Dr. Marcus’ Universal Bitters post yesterday, I came across some additional Universal Bitters. I thought we would take a moment to look at a few of the brands dating from 1860 all the way to 1931. First the Dr. Marcus’ Universal Bitters advertisement below from the The Philadelphia Inquirer, in 1861. The classic Universe Bitters lady’s leg has not been included in the post.

DR. MARCUS’ UNIVERSAL BITTERS

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA

John H. Holmes was the proprietor in 1861, addressing at 539 S.W. Corner of Front and Thompson Streets in Philadelphia. The advertisement below states that the “preparation has been in use for eight years, having first been prescribed by the eminent Physician of Philadelphia for the present Proprietor”. Unfortunately I can not find a Dr. Marcus in Philadelphia directories in the 1850s or 1860s. Holmes was selling the bitters out of his Tavern at the same address. Read: Dr. Marcus’ Universal Bitters – Philadelphia. The Ring & Ham number is M 35.

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Dr. Marcus’s Improved Universal Bitters advertisement – The Philadelphia Inquirer, Saturday, May 11, 1861


H. G. GARR’S UNIVERSAL BITTERS

GETTYSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA

H.G. Garr must have operated a general store in Gettysburg according to the advertisement below in the Gettysburg Compiler in 1860. Along with H. G. Garr’s Universal Bitters, he was selling Gum Shoes for 25 cents for wet feet and all kinds of cures for people suffering with corns, chilblains and frozen feet. This cure was probably his Universal Bitters. He also sold hosiery, fresh cheese and all kinds of choice fruits like figs, prunes, dates, raisins, currants and lemons. This brand appears unlisted in Ring & Ham. Gettysburg would play an important role in United States history in just a few short years.

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Reference to a H. G. Garr’s Universal BittersGettysburg Compiler, Monday, February 20, 1860


UNIVERSAL BITTERS

WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA

George Myers at 11 and 13 South Front Street in Wilmington, South Carolina was the agent for Universal Bitters in the The Daily Journal in 1875. This was probably a reference to the Universal Bitters put out by Nicholas Kieffer in New Orleans (see further below). The bitters was a positive cure for nervous debility.

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Universal Bitters mentioned in advertisement – The Daily Journal, Thursday, December 2, 1875


BRUNETT’S UNIVERSAL BITTERS

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA

Dr. Brunett was born in France around 1805 and came to New York with his new wife in 1827. He lived in New York ten years until his wife died. He came to Philadelphia with his two daughters and opened a small drug store at 534 South Fourth Street. He manufactured Brunett’s Universal Pills and Brunett’s Universal Bitters. Brunett’s Universal Bitters is unlisted but there is a listing in Ring & Ham for a B 238, DR. BRUNET’S TONIC BITTERS from Philadelphia. The bottle is 7 5/8 tall, round, aqua and has a rough and metallic pontil mark. Probably the same guy though the last name is missing a “T’.

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A Dr. Brunett making a Universal BittersThe Times, Monday, May 16, 1887


UNIVERSAL BITTERS

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA & SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS

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When you say Universal Bitters, this is the one, the creme of the crop. We have talked previously about Nicholas Kieffer who made his Universal Bitters in New Orleans. Later H. Grenet, F. Krisch & Brother and Jacob Weber & Company made and sold it in San Antonio, Texas as you can see in these newspaper advertisement below from The San Antonio Light in 1882 and 1884. Read: The missing link Universal Bitters by Nicholas Kieffer. This would be Ring & Ham number U 11.2. Notice that Krisch is also selling Kieffer’s Malakoff Bitters.

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F. Krisch & Bro., Under the direct management of N. Kieffer selling Universal BittersThe San Antonio Light, Thursday, June 22, 1882

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Jacob Weber & Co., Manufacturers of The Universal Bitters, San Antonio – The San Antonio Light, March 18, 1884


DR. WARREN’S UNIVERSAL TONIC BITTERS

FOND DU LAC, WISCONSIN

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The story here revolves around Silas Burrell Stiles and Frank M. Givens who were born in New York and ended up in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin and opened a drug store in 1873. I suspect they were life-long friends as their wives, Caroline and Isabel, appear together on social listings during the same time period. Silas was the main driving force in the initial drug business. They put out the Dr. Warren’s Universal Tonic Bitters around 1885. Read: Dr. Warren’s Universal Tonic Bitters – Fond du Lac. This bitters is extremely rare and cataloged as W 50 in Ring & Ham.


GOLDMANN’S UNIVERSAL BITTERS

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS

Goldmann’s famous Universal Bitters was selling and looking for Agents for his medicinal preparation that “was not subject to license, therefore salable in prohibition as well as other States”, I like his phrase “Big money in it for live people”. He was addressed at 403 Blue Island Avenue in 1886 and 122 Wells Street the next year. See the next listing for Albert Goldman in New York below. This brand appears unlisted in Ring & Ham.

“Big money in it for live people”

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Goldmann’s Universal Bitters advertisement – Chicago Daily Tribune, Sunday, February 14, 1886

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Goldmann’s Universal Bitters advertisement – Chicago Daily Tribune, Saturday, January 22, 1887


RAUER’S UNIVERSAL BITTERS

DECATUR, ILLINOIS

Union Bottling Works were manufacturers of soda water, ginger ale, champagne, cider and orange wine. They were also the agents for Rauer’s Universal Bitters according to this 1890 advertisement below in the The Daily Review in Decatur, Illinois. This brand appears unlisted in Ring & Ham. 

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Union Bottling Works agents for Rauer’s Universal Bitters – The Daily Review, Wednesday, December 24, 1890


UNIVERSAL BITTERS CHEMICAL WORKS

ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI

Henry Scheriff of St. Louis was the sole proprietor of the Universal Bitters Chemical Works as noted in this 1890 advertisement below from the Alton Evening Telegraph in Alton, Illinois. This bitters reference appears unlisted in Ring & Ham.

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Henry Scheriff of St. Louis was the sole proprietor of the Universal Bitters Chemical Works – Alton Evening Telegraph, Friday, December 19, 1890


UNIVERSAL BITTERS COMPANY

NEW YORK, NEW YORK

The Universal Bitters Company, a New York Corporation, posted notices and gave investors an opportunity to “Share in the Large Profits of one of the Most Promising Manufacturing Enterprises of the Twentieth Century” in the New York Tribune in 1908. Albert Goldman was the originator of Universal Bitters. He was addressed at 90 West Broadway in New York City. This bitters company reference appears unlisted in Ring & Ham.

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Universal Bitters Company stock offering notice – New York Tribune, Sunday, January 26, 1908


UNIVERSAL BITTERS

GREENVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA

Universal Bitters, in this 10 Day Special Sale is still being sold at a Cut-Rate Drug store in 1931. Amazing. It was originally listed at $1.25 a bottle and was marked down to 79c. I’m sure some screw-cap concoction.

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Universal Bitters marked down in price at two Cut-Rate Drug Stores in Greenville, Pennsylvania – The Record Argus, Wednesday, March 4, 1931


Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. Marcus’ Universal Bitters – Philadelphia

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Dr. Marcus’ Universal Bitters – Philadelphia

13 March 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAJim Hagenbuch with Glass Works Auctions has a nice example of an extremely rare Dr. Marcus’ Universal Bitters from Philadelphia in their “Winter Classic” Auction #106 that closes on March 23rd. Initially, I was kind of excited because I thought I did not have an example, but it looks like I have a super example that I have also pictured in this post.

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

M 35  DR. MARCUS’ UNIVERSAL BITTERS
sp // DR. MARCUS’ // UNIVERSAL / BITTERS // PHILADA //
7 7/8 x 3 1/8 x 1 3/4 (6)
Rectangular, Aqua, LTC, Applied mouth, 4 sp, Rough pontil mark,
Extremely rare

What is really interesting in this post is that there are two examples of the bottle and three styles of photography. You have the Glass Works Auctions photography, the Ed Gray photography and one of my styles for photographing aqua bottles. Each has it merits and each gets the job done in sporting fashion. Believe me, its tough to photograph aqua bottles.

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Dr. Marcus’s Improved Universal Bitters advertisement – The Philadelphia Inquirer, Saturday, May 11, 1861

It looks like John H. Holmes was the proprietor in 1861, addressing at 539 S.W. Corner of Front and Thompson Streets in Philadelphia. The advertisement above states that the “preparation has been in use for eight years, having first been prescribed by the eminent Physician of Philadelphia for the present Proprietor”. Unfortunately I can not find a Dr. Marcus in Philadelphia directories in the 1850s or 1860s. Holmes was selling the bitters out of his Tavern.

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John Holmes operating a Tavern at S W Front and Thompson Streets – 1862 Philadelphia City Directory

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“DR. MARCUS’ – UNIVERSAL / BITTERS – PHILADA.”, (Ring/Ham, M-35), (Odell, pg. 237), Pennsylvania, ca. 1840 – 1860, bluish aqua, 8 1/4”h, open pontil, applied tapered collar mouth. Near perfect condition. Bright, clean glass, quite a rarity in pontiled bitters! – Glass Work Auctions | Auction 106

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“DR. MARCUS’ – UNIVERSAL / BITTERS – PHILADA.” – Sold by Ed and Kathy Gray at GreatAntiqueBottles.com – Meyer Collection

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“DR. MARCUS’ – UNIVERSAL / BITTERS – PHILADA.” – Meyer Collection

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“DR. MARCUS’ – UNIVERSAL / BITTERS – PHILADA.” – Meyer Collection

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“DR. MARCUS’ – UNIVERSAL / BITTERS – PHILADA.” – Meyer Collection

 

Posted in Auction News, Bitters, Medicines & Cures, Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

2015 Baltimore Bottle Experience

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2015 Baltimore Bottle Experience

Snow, Cold Weather and a Warm Time

11 March 2015

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Apple-Touch-IconATowards the middle of last week, Elizabeth and I started getting alerts from the airlines that our scheduled flight from Houston to Baltimore might be delayed. Well, I guess so, as there was a projected 100% chance of snow in Baltimore this past Thursday. Trying to outsmart the weatherman, we changed our flight to Friday morning, which was after the front. My bottle bud, Jerry Forbes elected to keep his Thursday flight from California and actually was on time during the storm. Go figure. He did say the pilot said, “OK, we are going to give it a try” when they were making an approach into Baltimore. Gee, that must have been comforting.

The other Legg Mason BuildingUsually we stay up in Towson, Maryland which isn’t but 15 minutes or so from the Baltimore Antique Bottle Show which is held at the Community College of Baltimore County – Essex. I like Towson, as this is where I spent my school years as a youth. As many of you know, I am a true Baltimorian in that I love crab cakes, the eastern shore, the Birds and the Colts Ravens. This year we elected to stay at the Marriott Waterfront in downtown Baltimore, within walking distance of the pier areas and Little Italy. It seemed like a good idea….almost.

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With $45 dollar valet parking a night, 15 degree temperatures, and a brisk wind off the harbor, it made for some interesting combinations of clothes to keep warm as we shuffled, like penguins, around. I did hear that San Francisco has $65 a night parking so I feel minutely better. Parking downtown is an issue and one that confronted us when we were looking at Baltimore for a future FOHBC National Convention. Anyway, Friday night was dining at Aldo’s in little Italy with Jim Bender, Linda Shepherd, Jim and Val Berry, my wife Elizabeth and Jerry Forbes. Great dinner including crab cakes and Pinot Noir with an Italian flair.

Lit ItBecause we arrived on Friday, we missed our typical tours of the B&O Train Museum, Geppi’s Toy Museum, Bromo Seltzer Tower (see image below) and the Washington Monument. You can read about these places from a previous post.

Balto 2013 – Crab Cakes, Bottles and my Mother – Part 1

Balto 2013 – Crab Cakes, Bottles and my Mother – Part 2

BromoTowerSaturday morning was the semi-annual FOHBC Board Meeting at La Quinta Hotel in Rosedale. It was tough for all present without Dick Watson there. I thought I would share with the readers a communication from this past Monday to the Board members which pretty much sums up my initial thoughts of our meeting.

FOHBCFaceBookArtDear Board Members:
Thank you for a very productive meeting. We should be very pleased that we covered the entire agenda and even finished early! That’s a first, at least for me.
I am especially pleased that we voted to approve the Tiered Membership including Life Membership and Digital Membership. With a membership vote in Chattanooga, we can finally put this to bed and move forward. A special shout-out to Jim Bender and Jim Berry for heading up this effort.
We also are very close to filling BOTH vacant board member positions. We may have this wrapped up next conference call where we can vote for approval.
The HALL OF FAME vote will be a silent vote and occur this week as approved by the Board. Elizabeth Meyer will be conducting the silent bid process. Look for an e-mail on each of the three candidates by Thursday or so with and option to vote YES, NO, Abstain and COMMENT. The results will be confidential.
We walked into the meeting with questions about the Northeast National Antique Bottle Convention in 2017. We left the room with a plan. Jim Bender and Bob Strickhart are acting Co-Chairs. We will vote to confirm this next board conference call. There was quite a buzz and excitement at Baltimore with this news.
Val Berry and Elizabeth, who staffed our great looking Federation Table, signed up 9 new members, 7 renewals and sold 23 magazines, two t-shirts and received one donation to the Virtual Museum. Thank you!!!!
This is just off the top of my head. Still in Baltimore at the hotel. Off to Greenville SC tomorrow morn. Complete meeting notes will be issued by Jim Berry.
Ferdinand
FOHBC President

oThe Board meeting lasted about 3 1/2 hours, so afterwards, Elizabeth and I headed up the hill to Dellis for crab cakes and good times with bottle friends. Saw tons of people like Jim Bender, Jim and Val Berry, Rick Ciralli, Louis Fifer, Michael George, Jim and Jodi Hall, Eddie and Diane Kuskie, Matt Lacy, Larry Marshall, Jeff and Holly Noordsy, David Olson, Linda Shepherd, Jack Sullivan, Mark and Andrew Vuono and John Wolff. I’m sure there were others but we really bombed this place with a hungry and thirsty bottle crowd.

Balto15_JimsDrakesSet-up at the Baltimore Antique Bottle Show typically starts on Saturday afternoon around 3:00 pm and from 5:00 to 8:00 pm you can put out your bottles on the table. This is also when we set up the Federation table. This used to be the wildest three hours in the bottle world but unfortunately, too many folks from afar are not coming as they can not get in. You see, there is no early admission. This has lead to a number of tables being vacant on Saturday and it has become just a typical set-up period. Don’t get me wrong, it’s fun to see friends and walk around but the excitement has been gone for the past three or so years. No fear though, because all that excitement does arrive in full force the next morning. All table were full to capacity by then!

D107_PregDrake_My take-away bottle memory from Saturday was seeing the last of Jim Hagenbuch’s great bitters that he laid out for sale (see case above). There were Drakes Plantation Bitters in moss green, blue-green, olive green and yellow-green and believe me, they were jaw droppers, and so were the prices. Makes sense to me as these were the best of the best. Jim even had the bulbous, expanded Drakes for sale which is pictured above. This bottle is nicer than I thought and could be viewed as a work of art rather than a freak. I believe the price was $85k. Quite something. This made my evening. There was also a Plantation Bitters, Carey’s Grecian Bend and a National Tonic Bitters. Wow o’ wow.

VintCoughLater Saturday evening, Jerry, Elizabeth and I headed back downtown for steaks at Flemings. This was good as it was next to our hotel. I didn’t mention this before, but Elizabeth and I had been carrying around this nagging cough and head cold all week and we had been taking care of each other. It felt like we were pulling an anchor half the time. Oh well. At least we kept moving albeit a bit slower and we were off to bed a bit earlier.

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With the sleep we needed, we awoke early on Sunday morning and were promptly at the show by 6:30 am or so. We again set up the Federation table and headed out on the floor. This is when all the tables are decked out and you can see some really great bottles before the public comes in at 8:00 am.

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I am sometimes asked what bottle was the star of the show? The Scroll Flask above was recently obtained by John Pastor for his next American Glass Gallery auction. Embossed “J R & Son” for John Robinson & Son, Pittsburgh, 1830 – 1834. This flask, hands down, was the best of the show, best of the year and maybe more. Look at the coloration. Usually darker at the bottlem, this flask is darker at the top with striations. It came from an estate in Nebraska if you can believe that! The color is off-the-chart great!

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So what were the great bitters besides the Hagenbuch grouping mentioned above? Look at this cool Wheeler’s Berlin Bitters stoneware bar jug above and this Uncle Sams Wild Cherry Bitters from Bob Watson that walked in the door. Heh! I thought I owned the ONLY example!

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G A L L E R Y

Here are some pictures I took at the show. I have tried to caption them the best I can. Another great year in Baltimore, my home town. The cold air didn’t bother me at all!

Read: 2015 Baltimore Antique Bottle Show Report by Jim Bender

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E. W. Moffat bottles in the Baltimore Pre-Prohibition Liquor Dealers display.

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Three gorgeous cathedral pickles.

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Neat bottles and advertising ephemera make for a great looking table.

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Line-up of late beer trays.

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Two super embalming bottles from the Embalming Bottles display. They are sitting on an antique embalming table.

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The famous blue-green shard of an unlisted mould for a Jared Spencer flask presented at Mark and Andrew Vuono’s table. Read article in Antique Bottle & Glass Collector.

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Two nice Langley’s Root & Herb Bitters bottles. Note the rather odd example on the right with the double collar mouth. Ex Ciralli, now Meyer.

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Beautiful Victorian fan in display case.

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Detail of J. H. Friedenwald Family Wine & Liquor Emporium (Baltimore) bottle on Larry Marshall’s table.

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Always quality bottles at Ed and Kathy Gray’s table.

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Early American glass at Ian Simmonds table.

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Receipt for Dr. D. Jayne & Son.

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Jerry Forbe’s partial booty.

 

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Look at this stoneware pig that Jim Hagenbuch had made to advertise his desire to buy antique stoneware pigs.

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Filly labeled, all sides, Laird’s bottle in a sapphire blue. Truly spectacular.

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Best of Show ribbon went to the Embalming Bottle display.

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Rows of blob top soda bottles.

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Dynomite display of cone inks in a rainbow of colors.

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Neat bottle travel case.

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Super bottom-lit bottles on display. Tagged for purchase.

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Here is the DeGurley’s Bitters that someone contacted me about at Peachridge. Sent it to American Glass Gallery.

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Cobalt blue poison.

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Atwood’s Vegetable Jaundice Bitters advertisement.

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

2015 Baltimore Antique Bottle Show Report

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2015 Baltimore Antique Bottle Show Report

by Jim Bender

09 March 2015 (R•031015)

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The 2015 Baltimore Bottle Show by the Baltimore Antique Bottle Club has come and gone over the weekend of March 8-9. As always the show was a huge success.

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My weekend started off on Friday night with Linda and I having dinner with friends Ferdinand and Elizabeth Meyer, Jim and Val Berry and my newest friend Jerry Forbes from Carmel, California. Ferdinand led the way, taking us to Aldo’s in Little Italy.

Ferdinand was raised in Baltimore and knows the city. This is a good thing because other than Val Berry who also was raised in Baltimore, none of us had a clue where to go. The meal was a great place to visit and talk a bit about the FOHBC.

Saturday night the show was already packed with dealers and helpers setting up and carrying in their bottles. I have just as much fun on Saturday night as I do Sunday. I stop and talked to everyone I know. I have never stopped and really thought about all the great people this hobby has brought me to know. Linda tells me all the time, “You know everybody.” I really don’t, of course, but I am trying.

It was a bit bittersweet for me this year as our sales table moved over to Dick Watson’s spot. We had asked for that spot after Dick’s passing. Dick was a dear friend and I just wanted that spot. Many people spoke to me about Dick and I had a feeling he was glad I was sitting there. Dick loved the Baltimore show and never missed one, as far as I know.

If you have never gone to a Baltimore show, you are missing out on a yearly event second to none as far as a one-day show goes. There are people from all over the country as well as people from other countries. One would ask why people from another country would travel to Baltimore for a bottle show? The answer is because it is that good a show!

Sometime around noon, they made the announcement that the 1,000th admission ticket had been sold. Now that in itself is something. As I walked the floor, even at 2 p.m. they were still selling admission tickets. The club pulls this off every year with volunteers.

Shows are and always will be the backbone of our hobby. Clubs put on shows, members make clubs. Join your local club today. Or better yet join the FOHBC and make our hobby stronger.

Enclosed are photos of the show. Pictures can speak louder than
words.

Jim Bender, FOHBC Historian

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Dave Maryo (left) talks with Michael George and Rick Ciralli.

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John Pastor with American Glass Gallery talks with Charles Moore.

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Some nice Harrison inks.

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Three sizes of skull figural poisons at the Glass Works Auctions table.

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Wheeler’s Berlin Bitters stoneware jug

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Gary Katzen (Milk Glass King)

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Gate Keepers were kept busy all day.

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Jeff Burkhardt and Chattanooga Co-Chair Jack Hewitt (standing)

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Heckler Auctions table. Norm Sr. and Jr. Heckler

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2015 Hall of Fame nominee Adam Koch

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Elizabeth Meyer and Val Berry at the FOHBC table.

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Cone Ink display

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Pre-Prohibition Baltimore display

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Linda Sheppard and Jim Berry (seated)

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Jim Hall (left)

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Jim Hall table of goods

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Scroll Flasks

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Waiting for customers

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Nice advertising pieces.

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Jack Pelletier at his table (seated with hat)

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Vintage soda bottles

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Jim Hagenbuch talking with Jamie Houdeshell

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Gorgeous Sarsaparilla bottle

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Milk Bottles at the Manfredi table

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(left to right) Michael George, Rick Ciralli and Jeff Noordsy

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“Best of Show” ribbon for display on Embalming Bottles

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

Everything’s better with bitterquelle. . .

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Everything’s better with bitterquelle…

by Ken Previtali

04 March 2015 (R•071415)

Reading the recent post on Hunyadi Janos reminded me of how the details of what we might consider commonplace can be intriguing. What could be more commonplace than water?

Translated from German, bitterquelle means “bitter spring.” Water containing sulfates of magnesium and sodium tastes slightly bitter, and thus Andreas Saxlehner named his Budapest water aptly.

In 1882, a New York City importer, P. Scherer & Co, published “A Complete List of Mineral Waters, Foreign and Domestic with Their Analysis, Uses, and Sources.

It begins with:

“In presenting this list on mineral waters and products of mineral springs mentioned in this pamphlet, all of which are continually kept on hand by us, we beg leave to especially caution the profession that unless mineral waters are obtained fresh, no dependence is to be placed on their efficacy. We therefore have arranged with our correspondents to receive continual supplies by every steamer, and as it is a specialty of our house, and has been so for the last twenty years . . .”

If you can believe them, the Scherer company kept on hand over 50 different “fresh” mineral waters from America and Europe, including the Hunyadi Janos Bitterquelle which they considered to be “one of the best and cheapest natural aperients.” They stated mineral analysis for Bitterquelle as:

Analysis_1

Bitterquelle Analysis – P. Scherer & Co. 1882

According to current medical research water containing these minerals certainly makes digestion and the normal outcome of digestion much better for those with sluggish constitutions. So, at least one of the curative claims mineral water made by mineral water purveyors over the last 500 years or more was a good one.

But was everything better with “bitter” water? Mineral and spring water bottlers believed it, and so did their hundreds of thousands of customers. And why wouldn’t ginger ale be better if made with mineral or spring water? They believed that too, but let’s back up a bit.

What is mineral water and what is spring water? The US Food and Drug Administration sees it this way:

“Water containing not less than 250 parts per million (ppm) total dissolved solids, coming from a source tapped at one or more bore holes or springs, originating from a geologically and physically protected underground water source, may be “mineral water.” Mineral water shall be distinguished from other types of water by its constant level and relative proportions of minerals and trace elements at the point of emergence from the source. . . No minerals may be added to this water.”

And for spring water:

“Water derived from an underground formation from which water flows naturally to the surface of the earth may be “spring water.” Spring water shall be collected only at the spring or through a bore hole tapping the underground formation feeding the spring. There shall be a natural force causing the water to flow to the surface through a natural orifice.”

BitterquelleAnalysis_1

Ross’s Well – In the 1880s cholera and other water-borne diseases were rampant and the general public was correctly concerned with the purity of any water they drank. Bottlers went to great lengths (and depths) to assure their customers that their water was safe.

By today’s FDA definitions, it appears that the difference is what is in the water. However, what exactly was in mineral water was disputed mightily by chemists and physicians alike for at least three centuries. But let’s back up a bit again. The healing properties of waters have been touted and promoted since the ancient era. In his book, On Baths and Mineral Waters published in 1831, John Bell, M.D., writes:

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Bell Quote

Bell goes on to say “The Greeks, whose knowledge of medicine was greater than that of the nations who had been their precursors, paid honours to warm or thermal springs, as a benefaction by the Deity, and dedicated them to Hercules, the god of strength. They made use of them for drink, for bathing, and as topical remedies. Hippocrates tells us of warm springs impregnated with copper, silver, gold, sulphur, bitumen, and nitre; and forbids their use for common purposes.”

The dispute about the efficacy of mineral water as a healing agent began in earnest when in 1756 noted Irish physician Dr. Charles Lucas took issue with the prevailing beliefs on mineral water. Christopher Hamilin, professor of history at University of Notre Dame wrote that Dr. Lucas “had railed at the pretension and corruption of mineral water physicians and chemists in similar treatises on mineral waters. The ‘most pompous’ of the numerous tracts on mineral waters were written, Lucas noted, by men ‘living and practicing upon the spot, not always competent judges of the subject, but always interested in the fame of the particular water, which was their idol.’ “

West Virginia's White Sulphur Springs was one of the oldest and most famous in America. Established in 1778, it too had its "resident physician" treating the "invalids" who flocked to the spa during the "mineral water season.

White Sulphur Springs cover – West Virginia’s White Sulphur Springs was one of the oldest and most famous in America. Established in 1778, it too had its “resident physician” treating the “invalids” who flocked to the spa during the “mineral water season.

Professor Hamlin continues that “while Lucas was willing to accept in principle the claim that mineral waters had medicinal potency, he felt that their use was completely devoid of legitimate medical rationale: physicians were viciously attacking one another all the while being ignorant of the properties of waters. At Bath [England] and elsewhere wealthy invalids were fleeced by mercenary physicians, yet they ignored the advice they paid for, insisting on taking the waters without regard to season or constitution. . . Ultimately the spas were nothing but gathering grounds for sycophants, Lucas concluded, and it was futile to wish otherwise. ‘Forms, fashions, and flattery rule the world,’ Lucas wrote, ‘and a man may as well refuse to eat modish stinking wild fowl or venison at a great man’s feast, be insensible to the beauty of his mistress, hound or horse, or disrelish any other prevailing vice or folly, as [rather than] decline drinking of his favourite spring, or deny having received benefit of it.’ “

WhiteSulphurSpringsMap

White Sulphur Springs Map – Mineral water spas were immensely popular in America from the late 1700s through the mid 1930s. In 1869 White Sulphur Springs included a bowling alley and garden mazes for residents to wander the time away between “treatment” sessions imbibing the prescribed amount of water for their condition.

That was pretty strong criticism by Dr. Lucas, but the many hundreds of books, articles and dissertations published on mineral water reveal that he was correct. But it didn’t matter, because mineral water was big, big business. Even if you couldn’t get to or afford one of the many spas that had “sprung” up around mineral water localities, by the 1870s you could get the bottled item from a local spring or nearly anywhere it could arrive by boat or rail.

WhiteSulphurSpringsPromotion

White Sulphur Springs promotion – The Chesapeake and Ohio railroad finally came to White Sulphur Springs in 1873. Eventually, the famous Greenbrier Hotel was added by the R.R. company in 1913.

Before chemical analysis of mineral water was documented by Swedish chemist Torbern Olof Bergman (1735 -1784) there was no scientific consensus on a valid methodology. Chemists and physicians welcomed a “documented” way to analyze water content to support curative claims. In 1809, Valentine Seaman, M. D., “One of the Surgeons of the New York Hospital” wrote a 138-page book on Saratoga and Ballston Spa waters. His first words acknowledged Bergman:

SeamonQuote

Valentine Seaman intro – From “A Dissertation On The Mineral Waters of Saratoga, Including An Account Of The Waters of Ballston” V. Seaman, 1809. Regarding these waters, Seaman also notes: “I am told that during the Revolutionary War, while the troops lay at Saratoga, many of them were affected with the itch and were sent off in companies to these Springs, by which they were all cured.”

Dr. Bell in his 1831 mineral water treatise continued to support the validity of Bergman’s analytic methods: “To the celebrated chemist of Upsala, more than to any other, are we indebted for introducing system and clearness in the analysis . . .” Even with an accepted analytic method, Dr. Bell was a cautious administrator of the waters, and clearly knew that many imbibers were victims of their habits as he quoted this telling ditty:

“The stomach crammed with every dish, A tomb of roast and boiled, and flesh and fish, Where bile and wind, and phlegm, and acid jar, And all the man is one intestine war.”

It’s no wonder that the aperient (laxative) effects of magnesium and sodium sulphate-laden “bitter” water made many believers.

145 years after Dr. Lucas raised issues of medical quackery, criticisms of the miracles of mineral water were still being published. In his 1899 book “Mineral Waters of the United States, James K. Crook, M.D. says:

CrookCriticisms

Crook criticisms – Dr. Crook’s book contains descriptions and accounts of no less than 350 mineral springs from Mt. Shasta and Pikes Peak to the West Virginian high hills.

However, no amount of science could overcome the will to believe the medical claims, nor keep throngs of “invalids” flocking to spas around the US for another 35 years. The great depression and resulting loss of wealth led to many spas’ demise. The panacea so many mineral waters offered could not cure bankruptcy.

But let’s get back to the commonplace again: Ginger Ale. Ginger was long known for its healthful properties and beneficial effects on digestion and circulation. That knowledge was perhaps concurrent with the very early beliefs in mineral water cures; in fact, during Roman times ginger was as good as gold.

The long-standing aura around ginger’s medicinal value was transferred to ginger ale when it was introduced from Ireland in 1852. By the 1860s the mineral water business was booming and bottlers quickly discovered adding the vastly popular ginger ale into their bottling line would provide a new stream of sales. After all, what could be better than healthful ginger ale made with their version of “bitterquelle”?

Many mineral and spring water bottlers produced ginger ale. Here’s a gallery of just a few from 1880 to 1959:

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Belfast 12 -sided aqua blob – Belfast Champagne Ginger Ale & Mineral Water Co., Edinburgh, London, Paris & New York. 12 sided,; ca: 1880.

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Shasta springs & postcard – “Shasta Springs, California Located on the Southern Pacific Railroad’s Shasta Scenic Route at the base of Mt. Shasta, the upper spring is at 2,363 feet. The surrounding country is wild and picturesque, and a public resort has been established for the comfort of travelers from Mt. Shasta.” Mineral Springs Health Resorts of California, Winslow Anderson, M.D., 1890.”

ManitouBottles

Manitou bottles – Left ca. 1880; right ca. 1920. “Manitou is situated six miles west of Colorado Springs, immediately at the foot of Pike’s Peak. Here are located the celebrated effervescent soda and iron springs which in early days gave the name of springs to the town of Colorado Springs, An electric railroad, with cars at frequent intervals, unites the two places. The town of Manitou Springs contains a permanent population of more than 2,000 souls, which number is augmented during the summer months by about 125,000 visitors from all parts of the United States and from foreign countries.” James Crook, M.D.,1899. Manitou is known to many indigenous people in North America as the Great Spirit or Creator. The springs are said to have been known to many generations of native people.

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Manitou Mineral Water Co. Office and Bottling Plant ca. 1890

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Manitou Springs trade card ca. 1890.

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Stockton Springs – Note that this Maine bottler even went as far as to call their water source “medicinal springs.”

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Deep Rock inside thread – Birmingham, England. Later inside thread ca.1900?

Saegertown bottle & label

Saegertown bottle & label – ca 1890, European turn mold type, applied top. Many of the spa bottlers imported these olive-green turn molds, perhaps to lend a more “sophisticated air.”

ca. 1890. CAPTION BEGIN: Lithium carbonate was often found in mineral water, but in most localities it was in relatively small amounts. Current studies have been done to determine if naturally occurring lithium in water is beneficial to mental health.

East Mountain Lithia – Lithium carbonate was often found in mineral water, but in most localities it was in relatively small amounts. Current studies have been done to determine if naturally occurring lithium in water is beneficial to mental health.

1892- 1905, BIMAL crown top. Given the name of the company, it is not surprising they listed the water analysis on the label.

Dietaide bottle & label – 1892-1905, BIMAL crown top. Given the name of the company, it is not surprising they listed the water analysis on the label.

Saratoga crown

Saratoga crown – 1892-1900. BIMAL crown top. Even after the crown top was in use for a number of years, round bottom bottles were still produced. They were seldom embossed.

Catonsville bottle & label

Catonsville bottle & label – ca: 1920. Catonsville was located on the Frederick Turnpike, (today MD Route 144) which was built in 1780s to connect a flour mill to Baltimore. The town quickly became an easy road stop for travelers. To escape the summer heat, wealthy Baltimore residents soon built up large estates in Catonsville. They were perfect customers for a spring water business.

Arrowhead

Arrowhead Ginger Ale – ca 1930 from Los Angeles. Springs were often associated with native Americans because the tribes readily showed the incomers where the good water was.

Maple Leaf Springs bottle

Maple Leaf Springs bottle – From the 1880s through the 1950s, Mt. Clemens Michigan featured no less than 13 mineral spring companies all at different locations within the town. Maple Leaf Springs (1904-1956) had a big pavilion that was both a spring house and dance floor. Mt. Clemens is also known for its early glasshouse (1836-1849?)

Salutaris Springs bottle, St Clair, MI

Salutaris Springs bottle, St Clair, MI – Bottle ca 1936. With daily boats and trains carrying customers back and forth from Detroit and points beyond, the Oakland House at Salutaris Springs boasted it was always open.

OldWhite@SulphurSpring

Top right: An 1842 painting of the Baltimore Row houses built at the spring in 1830. Courtesy of the Greenbrier Resort. Middle right: The original hotel at White Sulphur Springs was built in 1858. The railroad company added the Greenbrier Hotel in 1913. The original hotel, called “The Old White”, was torn down in 1922. This engraving dated 1860 was reproduced on a postcard ca. 1950. Bottom: a cut from a lithograph advertising piece, ca 1915. The bottle is ca. 1930. The earliest guests arrived at White Sulphur Springs in 1778. Between 1830-1861, five sitting presidents visited White Sulphur Springs. There is a lot more history to the Greenbrier. “

SplitRock_ACL

Split Rock ACL – Split Rock, Franklin Springs, NY, 1959. When Fred Suppe dug a well on his central New York state hop farm in 1888, he discovered a natural mineral water spring that was compared to the lithia springs in Europe. A number of entrepreneurs in the hamlet thought they were on to another Saratoga or Richfield Springs, but that never happened. The town originally was called Franklin Iron Works because of the blast furnace built in 1850 to process the iron ore from nearby Clinton. With the Franklin blast furnace winding down, the town was renamed to Franklin Springs in 1898 when Suppe’s new business was flowing. Between 1888 and 1970 eight different companies bottled the lithia water and made soda. Split Rock was one of those firms and Arthur Suppe took over in 1912 and bottled ginger ale and other flavors there until 1962.

Read More from Ken Previtali:

The Ginger Ale Page – Ken Previtali

Is there elegance and mystique in a milk glass soda bottle from Massachusetts?

From clear to purple or brown, that’s how irradiation runs

Don’t Bogart that Gin . . . ger Ale

The Diamond Ginger Ale Bottle House

Electric Bitters and Electrified Ginger Ale: Were they really “zapped” or was it just more quackery?

Could a mundane bottle of wine-flavored ginger ale be a descendent of a winery established in 1835?

Posted in Advertising, Article Publications, Bottling Works, Collectors & Collections, Ephemera, Ginger Ale, History, Medicines & Cures, Mineral Water, Painted Label, Soda Bottles, Soda Water, Soft Drinks, Water | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Daily Dose | March 2015

MARCH  |  2 0 1 5

Monday, 30 March 2015

DRAKE’S PLANTATION BITTERS good for Clergymen too! Ottawa Free Trader, 1868

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Was trying to find out more on the C. R. Smith Grape Bitters from Chicago and came across this advertisement for Aunt Rachael’s Malarial Bitters based on grape juice. From The Appeal (Saint Paul, Minnesota), April 27, 1889.

AuntRachelsMalarialBittersAd

The new listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

Newspaper Advertisement
A 137.7 AUNT RACHAEL’S BITTERS, The undeniable fact that these Bitters are composed in the main of Speer’s Wine. Also called Aunt Rachel’s Malarial Bitters and Grape Bitters for Malaria. The Humboldt Union (Humboldt, Kansas), January 9, 1897

Sunday, 29 March 2015

So Virtual Museum Director Alan DeMaison, sends me an e-mail this morning for the Chattanooga National Show,

“I see a table with the presentation being shown on a continuous loop. I see individuals behind the table giving a sales pitch to contribute to the Museum. I also see a few items “For Sale”. I also see a 50/50 raffle being held on both days. I see a few individuals walking the show selling the 50/50 raffle tickets.

So I respond,

“Hey, I think you are right! I SEE IT TOO! 

ISeeitToo

Saturday, 28 March 2015

Hello Ferd; Please find attached an earlier [1867] and somewhat different newspaper advertisement for Walkers Tonic Bitters. Best Regards; Corey Stock

WALKERNews

Friday, 27 March 2015

Smuggling Whiskey by pipeline from the Canada frontier to the United States. From The Pulaski Citizen, Friday, May 11, 1866.

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Thursday, 26 March 2015

Just getting back last night from California. Great time in Morro Bay, Big Sur, Monterey and Carmel. Working on a post for Grape Bitters.

GrapeBittersBroken

Friday, 20 March 2015

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Sun coming up in Morro Bay, Cal. Show starts at 1:00 pm.

Wednesday, 18 March 2015

BurgoynesBitters_eBay

Frank Wicker notes an unlisted labeled Burgoyne’s Vienna Bitters from Buffalo N.Y on eBay. Great looking bottle. Thanks Frank! The seller really provided some GREAT pictures. See listing

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

DansbysCottonPatchWhiskey

Hello Ferd; This past weekend I was going through old picture files and I found some photos of a “DANSBY’S COTTON PATCH WHISKEY”. I think I got them off of Ebay some years ago.  Sorry it’s not the “Bitters”. Best Regards; Corey (Stock)

Read: Where is that Dansby’s Cotton-Patch Bitters from Terrell, Texas?

Yaupon front

Yaupon Bitters post updated with new information.

Monday, 16 March 2015

W68WeisKnickerbockerMasthead

Knickerbocker Stomach Bitters post updated with a fine receipt from the Joe Gourd collection.

Sunday, 15 March 2015

OS Logo

Updated the Old Sachems Bitters and Wigwam Tonic post after finding this cool logo for the brand.

Friday, 13 March 2015

MansfieldsBitters

I wonder who snagged that Mansfield’s Highland Stomach Bitters on eBay yesterday. Tough one to get. I heard about it minutes too late. See Listing

Read: Barrel Series – Highland Bitters and Scotch Tonic

Thursday, 12 March 2015

152BakersBlack

Baker’s Orange Grove Bitters post updated with this wonderful black amethyst example currently at Glass Works AuctionsE. Dexter Loveridge Wahoo Bitters post updated with that wonder example also on GWA Auction 106.

172Loveridge1_GWA

Wednesday, 11 March 2015

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Finally back in Houston after a long bottle and business trip. Just finished clipping that wonderful scroll flask that John Pastor picked up in Nebraska. Embossed “J R & Son” for John Robinson & Son, Pittsburgh, 1830 – 1834. Was able to handle it at the Baltimore Antique Bottle Show. I understand that there are two darker examples that are in museums.

Monday, 09 March 2015

WheelersBarJug_10

Processing thoughts, pictures and memories from this years Baltimore Antique Bottle Show. Look for a post later. Look at this cool Wheeler’s Berlin Bitters stoneware bar jug that was on a Balto table.

Read: Wheeler’s Berlin Bitters – Baltimore

Saturday, 07 March 2015

151AmericanLife_GWA

Off to the Baltimore FOHBC Board Meeting. Agenda here. Updated the American Life Bitters post with this fine Omaha example in the Glass Works Auctions | Auction 106. Preview Here.

Read: Log Cabin Series – American Life Bitters

Friday, 06 March 2015

159_CaliWineBitters_GWA

Whew, finally made it to Baltimore this afternoon. Had that snow event yesterday that delayed us. FOHBC Board Meeting tomorrow morning at 8:00 am. Dinner tonight in Little Italy. Look at this cool California Wine Bitters in the current Glass Works Auction. Read: California Wine Bitters – From the vineyard of Kohler & Frohling

160_DrCopps_GWA

Added this nice example of a Dr. Copp’s White Mountain Bitters to the existing post. Bottle is also from the current Glass Work Auctions online listing.

Read: Dr. Copp’s White Mountain Bitters – Manchester, New Hampshire

Read: Dr. Copp’s White Mountain Bitters Advertising Trade Cards

Wednesday, 04 March 2015

MrsAllensTangerine

Odd color for a Mrs. Allen’s Worlds Hair Restorer. Could use some of this myself. Thanks to Abel Da Silva for notice. See on eBay. No bids. Crazy. The early UK ones are that colour, they get darker towards the later ones. Dug dozens of these I dont even take them home! – Andrew Foster

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Great Cover on the latest issue of Antique Bottle & Glass Collector. Believe that shard walked into the Lexington National last year.

BlahniksBittersEbay

Hi Ferdinand. Here on ebay is a extremly rare amber square which I have never seen Blahniks Celebrated Stomach Bitters. To bad it has a bad crack and chips. – Frank Wicker

Blahniks Celebrated Stomach Bitters. D.F. & Co. On the Base. Has a crack that goes half way around near the bottom. Also has some chips and bruises. 9-1/4″ tall & 2-11/16″ wide.

Sunday, 01 March 2015

Tylers_LewistonEveningJournal_1867

While researching the DeHaven’s Wild Cherry Bitters yesterday, I came across another unlisted bitters called Dr. Tyler’s Wild Cherry Bitters from Lewiston, Maine in 1867. Very little information other than what is in this Lewiston Evening Journal newspaper clipping. Not sure who Dr. Tyler was but Horace W. Barbour was a veteran druggist of Lewiston, Maine. He died on Octoner 18, 1903 at seventy-three years old. He had practiced in Lewiston for over 50 years.

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

Reference to an unlisted De Havens Wild Cherry Bitters – Chicago

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Reference to an unlisted De Havens Wild Cherry Bitters – Chicago

For the Convenience of Hotels and Saloon Keepers

28 February 2015 (R•040819 -R&H Listing)

Apple-Touch-IconAMany of the old-time druggists make up bitters by putting wild cherries, together with the inner bark of the wild-cherry tree, into whiskey. This is a fine spring tonic, and some prefer it to sassafras tea. It is good for almost any ailment, in a pinch, and even families who are notoriously dry keep a quart of bitters in case of sudden sickness. A mixture of whiskey and rock candy is popular too but is not so highly recommended as the famous wild-cherry bitters.

The source for the paragraph above is unknown as I had it tucked away with these clippings of an unlisted De Havens Wild Cherry Bitters from Chicago. All three advertisements are from 1870 and most likely are related  to a J. C. (or Z) De Haven who was born in 1816 or so in Pennsylvania and was a liquor merchant with his depot at 182 Washington Street. He called his Wild Cherry Bitters the “Best Tonic in the World” and said it was put up in cases of a dozen for the convenience of hotels and saloon keepers. I wonder what the alcohol content was?

Follow-up: J. Z. De Haven—lived for many years in Philadelphia —removed to Charlestown in 1866—and now lives in Chicago. One son, Rhodes De Haven, m. and also lives in Chicago.

De Haven’s Wild Cherry Bitters advertisement, Manufactured and for sale by J Z De Haven, 182 Washington Street, Chicago, Illinois – Sioux City Daily Times, June 29, 1870

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De Haven’s Wild Cherry Bitters advertisement, Depot 182 Washington Street, Chicago – Cedar Falls Gazette, Friday, August 5, 1870

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De Haven’s Wild Cherry Bitters advertisement, Depot 182 Washington Street, Chicago – Janesville Daily Gazette, Saturday, October 22, 1870

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2 is as follows:

Advertisement
D 39.5  De HAVEN’S WILD CHERRY BITTERS, Depot 182 Washington St. Chicago, Ill., For Sale by Druggists
Cedar Falls Gazette, Friday, August 5, 1870

It’s tempting to try to tie the DeHaven’s Wild Cherry Bitters to the DeHaven’s Dyspepsia Destroyer or “D. D. D.”. That is not the case.

DDDinBlue

DeHaven’s Dyspepsia Destroyer or D D D – eBay (jerseynotsobad)

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D.D.D. DeHaven Dyspepsia Destroyer trade card

Select Listings:

1869: J. C. DeHaven, Druggist, 390 Broadway – Council Bluffs Iowa City Directory

1870: J. C. DeHaven, Liquor Merchant, 54 years old, born in Pennsylvania about 1816, living Chicago Ward 12, Cook, Illinois – 1870 United States Federal Census

1870: Advertisment (above) De Haven’s Wild Cherry Bitters , Manufactured and for sale by J Z De Haven, 182 Washington Street, Chicago, Illinois – Sioux City Daily Times, June 29, 1870

Read about some more Wild Cherry Bitters:

Dandelion & Wild Cherry Bitters – Iowa

Dr. Mackenzie’s or Dr. McKinzie Wild Cherry Bitters

Dr. Rufus F. Hibbard’s Celebrated Wild Cherry Bitters

Dr. Wood’s Sarsaparilla & Wild Cherry Bitters

Hungarian Blackberry Juice and Wild Cherry Bitters – Tucumcari or Six-Shooter Siding

Dr. Harter’s Wild Cherry Bitters Cast Iron Advertising Lemon/Lime Juicer

Dr. Harter’s Wild Cherry Bitters and the Bottle Gods

H.P. Herb Wild Cherry Bitters – Another Roped Corner Fancy Gent

Dr. R. T. Hylton’s Wild Cherry Tonic Bitters – Pat’d 1867

Schnerr’s Wild Cherry Tonic Compound Bitters on eBay

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

What about this Tilton’s Dandelion Bitters?

TiltFull

What about this Tilton’s Dandelion Bitters?

27 February 2015 (R•022815) (R•112415-Ring Example)

Apple-Touch-IconASome of you may be aware of a series of Dandelion Bitters posts that have occurred on Peachridge Glass in the past. A complete listing is at the bottom of this post. This wonderful “label under glass” Tilton’s Dandelion Bitters is one that has stumped me as I initially could not find any information. I am going to try again today. This example is from GreatAntiqueBottles.com (Ed and Kathy Gray) super web site.

Their description of the bottle which previously sold privately was:

TILTON’S DANDELION BITTERS on multi-colored label under glass, cylindrical, amber, covered with wicker, 11 3/8″ high, applied top, original metal stopper. Near perfect condition, a great example of this extremely rare bottle. Ex-Gardner collection lot 2165, America circa 1870 to 1880.

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

T 30  L … Tilton’s Dandelion Bitters
// s // PATENT // b // DYOTTVILLE GLASWORKS PHILA 5 0
11 3/8 x 3 1/8 (6 3/8)
Round, Amber, LTCR, Body is covered in wicker carrier with handle.
Label is reverse painted on glass.
Drug Catalogs: 1876-7, 1880 and 1885 Goodwin
See: E. Mishler Wild Cherry Bitters (Very similar bottle)

TiltonsDandelionBitters_Gray TiltonsLadyDetail TiltonsGardnerSticker

TiltonsDandelionBitters_GWA

Label Under Glass, ‘Tilton’s’ / (multicolored picture of a woman) / ‘Dandelion / Bitters’, (Ring/Ham, T-31L), American, ca. 1870 – 1875, amber, 11 1/4″h, “DYOTTVILLE GLASS WORKS PHILA.” embossed on a smooth base, applied tapered collar mouth, encased in wicker. The bottle, and most importantly, the label, are in perfect condition. The wicker casing has some loss, as is to be expected. We suctioned this exact bottle in 1995, and have not seen one since! Ex. Carlyn Ring Collection. – Glass Works Auctions

I could not find any references to a Tilton’s Dandelion Bitters but there are references to a Dr. J. C. Tilton’s Indian Balm Pills and Indian Balm Medicated Toilet Soap from Pittsburg (Pittsburgh). Dr. Tilton was also selling a D. Karsner’s Catarrh Remedy. I wonder if J. C. is our man? Interesting to note that Ed Gray is from the Pittsburgh area. He is the one who sold the bottle and took these nice pictures.

Tilton_Harrisburg_Telegraph_Wed__Nov_26__1890_

J. C. Tilton selling Indian Balm Medicated Toilet Soap out of Pittsburgh – Harrisburg Telegraph, Wednesday, November 26, 1890.

It looks like J. C. Tilton was around longer than I thought. In the advertisement below, Tilton is looking for distributors for packages of “Wonder of the World” in 1869 in Pittsburgh.

TiltonLeisureHouresAd

Tilton’s “Wonder of the World” advertisement – Leisure Hours, 1869

As it turns out, Joseph C. Tilton, born in Ohio around 1825, was quite a salesman and placed hundreds if not thousands of small advertisements looking for people to make a few dollars and sell things for him. Throughout his career he was listed in a number of professions including, Dealer in Oil Lands (1865-1866), Real Estate Agent (1868-1877), Dealer in Patent Rights and Solicitation (1867-1878) and Making Whacks, (huh?) in 1879 (see listing below) and Carpet Cleaning (1884). Notice an O. C. Tilton selling Catarrh Remedies at the same address.

Tilton1879

Joseph C. Tilton MAKES WHACKS – 1879 Pittsburgh PA City Directory

Tilton’s big claim to fame was his “WOMEN’S FRIEND and STEAM WASHER”. Look at this monster advertisement below. Later in the 1880s he would be selling Glycerine Carpet Paste and was the owner of Ole, Dry Carpet Cleaning Company in Pittsburgh.

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Tilton selling his “Women’s Friend” – Raleigh Christian Advocate, Wednesday, May 13, 1874

Was this the same Tilton that made the Tilton’s Dandelion Bitters? Maybe or maybe not. More research is needed. Joseph C. Tilton must have been a very enterprising and ambitious individual. He was the predecessor to the present era Ronald M. “Ron” Popeil (born May 3, 1935) who was an American inventor and marketing personality, best known for his direct response marketing company Ronco. Some of us remember him. He was well-known for his appearances in infomercials for the Showtime Rotisserie (“Set it, and forget it!”) and for using the phrase, “But wait, there’s more!” on television as early as the mid-1950s. He is perhaps best known for pitching the iconic Pocket Fisherman collapsible fishing pole and smokeless ashtray.

RP_TDB

Ron Popeil

UPDATE: Joseph C. & William B. Tilton

Here is some new information provided by Marianne Dow and a follow-up listing I found. It looks like these are our missing links! William Beacket Tilton (1810-1895) made the bitters after James Aaron Tilton’s death in 1861. He was the brother of James.

Found the correct Tilton – this labeled example tells us: DR. TILTON’S DANDELION BITTERS. “prepared under the supervison of J. A. Tilton, MD, Newburyport, Mass.” and “entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by James A. Tilton, in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of Massachusetts”  – Marianne Dow

Dr. James Aaron Tilton was born in Canaan NH, December 1815; graduated at Dartmouth College; entered the Medical Department and graduated October 26, 1841, and soon came to Chichester and commenced the practice of medicine. While here he was married to Miss Sarah T. Stanyan, daughter of Abram Stanyan, who died at Newburyport Mass., April 1881. After practicing here for many years he removed to Pembroke, N.H. and thence to Amesbury, Mass; remained there twelve years and established a good reputation as a physician. From Amesbury he removed to Newburyport where he remained in successful practice until his death, which occurred in 1861.

[HISTORY OF CHICHESTER, MERRIMACK COUNTY, NEW HAMPSHIRE]

TiltonNewburyport1874

Dandelion Bitters (William B. Tilton & Co.) – The Massachusetts Register and Business Directory, 1874

LabeledTiltonsDandyBitters

DR. TILTON’S DANDELION BITTERS. This bitters is a label only using the standard, 9 1/4″ X 2 1/2, beveled cornors, amber utility bottle. The bottle is in excellent condition. The label, as you can see in the last 2 photos, has problems. However, all of the important information can be read – “prepared under the supervison of J.A Tilton, MD Newburyport , Mass.” and ” entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by James A. Tilton, in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of Massachusetts”.  – Worthpoint

Read more about other Dandelion Bitters

Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters – Bangor, Maine

Dandelion & Wild Cherry Bitters – Iowa

Dandelion Bitters – The Great Herb Blood Remedy

The Beggs’ and their Dandelion Bitters

Dr. J.R.B. McClintock’s Dandelion Bitters – Philadelphia

Dr Grant’s, Dandelion Bitters, New York.

Bond’s Dandelion Bitters – Fort Wayne, Indiana

Smith’s Gentian, Dandelion and Yellow Dock Bitters

Lucius W. Bissell and his Dandelion Bitters

Peters & Smith – Drugs & Medicines – The Dandelion Bitters Co., Allentown, Pennsylvania

Dr. Trowbridge’s Dandelion Bitters – Stamford, Connecticut

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, History, Medicines & Cures, Questions, Remedy | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Henry Ferris Porter Bottle

HenryFerisPorterC

Henry Ferris Porter Bottle

27 February 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAThe following e-mail was in my in-box from last month and I haven’t had a chance to pursue until now. It is represented below from a fellow in Florida. Pretty neat old ale bottle of some sort. So who is Henry Ferris? Was this a beer, cider, porter, ale or ginger beer? I was re-watching Django Unchained this past weekend. You can spot a few bottles like this in one of the scenes.

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Hello! I’m sorry to bother you. I live in Florida and would like some information on my Porter bottle. It reads; ‘HENRY FERRIS/ No 221 Tchapitoulas St/ NEW ORLEANS’. It stands at 9 1/2″ and is 3 3/4″ wide at the base. The manufacturer is inscribed POWELL / BRISTOL at the base. I Googled the name and found that an ad appeared in the Times Picayune on June 23, 1837 and reads; “PORTER STORE. FERRIS & BARDIN respectfully inform their friends and the public that they have commenced the business of bottling porter.” Any further information as to the date, rarity and value would be appreciated. Thanks for your time. Regards Vernon

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Here below is the advertisement that Vernon references in his e-mail. Pretty easy to find. Ferris & Bardin bottling Porter at 39 St. Joseph Street in New Orleans in 1837. Targeting ships, steamboats and coffee houses.

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PORTER STORE – FERRIS & BARDIN advertisement – The Times Picayune, Thursday, April 27, 1837

The next advertisement below pretty much confirms an 1845 date for the subject bottle as Henry Ferris just receives, from Bristol England, a quantity of stone bottles for his Porter, Ale and Cider business. He is addressed at 221 Tchoupitoulas in New Orleans. Remember the stamp on the bottom of the bottle references POWELL BRISTOL.

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Henry Ferris just receives, from Bristol, England a quantity of stone bottles for his Porter, Ale and Cider business notice – The Times Picayune, Sunday, November 30, 1845

Here below we can see that Henry Ferris was posting a $10 reward for a runaway slave named Julia in 1846. Wonder if he ever found Julia? I bet she headed north. Henry seems to disappear too. There is some evidence he went north too, possibly to Baltimore or New Jersey.

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Henry Ferris was posting a $10 reward for a runaway slave named Julia – The Times Picayune Thursday, April 30, 1846

The Porter bottle is stamped Powell Bristol as noted above. The Powell family had been brown stone potters at Thomas Street, Bristol from 1780 and were also manufacturers of glass bottles.

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Around 1816 William Powell established a pottery at Thomas Street Bristol and in 1829/30 the pottery moved to Red Lane, Temple Gate, Bristol. William Powell died in 1854 and he was succeeded by William and Septimus Powell and by the end of the nineteenth century they were the second largest maker of stoneware bottles in Britain. The company remained at Temple Gate until they were absorbed by Price in 1906 but they had also expanded to include premises in Redcliff Mead Lane. Powell was also instrumental in the discovery of the ‘Bristol Glaze’ which improved the appearance of glazed vessels and also enabled the achievement of the two-tone effect which many of the jugs and flagons display. Previously stoneware was salt glazed which produced a finely pitted glaze. The ‘Bristol Glaze’ form of glazing was first used at Powell’s pottery by Anthony Ammatt in 1835. Powell never patented the discovery but some of his adverts did include the wording ‘Inventor and sole manufacturer of the Improved Stone Ware, which is Glazed inside and out with a Glaze Warranted to resist Acids and will not Absorb’. [reference Winchester Museum]

Select Listings:

1837: PORTER STORE – FERRIS & BARDIN advertisement (see above) – The Times Picayune, Thursday, April 27, 1837

1840: Henry Ferris, Free White Person, New Orleans Ward 2, Orleans, Louisiana – United Stated Federal Census

1845: Henry Ferris just receives, from Bristol, England a quantity of stone bottles for his Porter, Ale and Cider business notice (see above) – The Times Picayune, Sunday, November 30, 1845

1846: Henry Ferris was posting a $10 reward for a runaway slave named Julia (see above). Addressed at 221 Tchoupitoulas Street, the same address debossed in the bottle – The Times Picayune Thursday, April 30, 1846

Posted in Advertising, Ales & Ciders, Bottling Works, Breweriana, Questions, Stoneware | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Looking at Boerhave’s Holland Bitters – Pittsburgh

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Looking at a Boerhave’s Holland Bitters – Pittsburgh

25 February 2015 (R•022715) (R•042619) (R•012123)

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Apple-Touch-IconAJeff Wichmann currently has a Boerhave’s Holland Bitters up on his American Bottle Auctions “For Sale” page that prompted me to pull my example out of a digital folder. The top two pictures represent my bottle. Another rather exciting aqua bitters that can rock your socks or at least mine. I am surprised it still available on Jeff’s site. This bitters collector suggests “Buy”. The price is right too.

10,000

NEGROES SAVED YEARLY!

Boerhave’s Holland Bitters advertising slogan

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BOERHAVES HOLLAND BITTERS B. PAGE Jr. & CO. PITTSBURGH Pa. – (B 134). 7 ¾” with applied top and smooth base. An early bottle, the Boerhave name is not unknown in bottle circles. This is a neat one with the huge top, long neck and loads of whittle and crudity in a bluish aqua. A lot going on in 7 ¾”. The base looks very early. A tiny bit of exterior stain but generally a grade 9.4 bottle. Check out the funky embossing. – American Bottle Auctions

The Bitters Bottles Supplement 3 draft by Ring, Ham & Meyer updated:

B 134 BOERHAVES / HOLLAND BITTERS // B. PAGE JR & CO // f // PITTSBURGH PA. // 
8 x 2 3/4 x 1 3/4 (5 1/2) 1/4
Rectangular, Aqua, CO, Applied mouth, 3 sp, Scarce; Pontil mark – Very rare
Some dug on the south side of Mobile, Alabama
Newspaper advertisement 1853: Holland Bitters – Boerhave’s Electro-Chemical Aroma, or Genuine Holland Bitters. From Louis D’Israels, Chemist and Pharmaceutist of Amsterdam, the only Manufacturer. A purely Vegetable Compound, prepared on strictly scientific principles, after the manner of the celebrated Holland professor Boerhave. Sold by the proprietor, Benjamin Page, Jr., Drug and Chemical House, Pittsburgh, Pa.

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BOERHAVES HOLLAND BITTERS – The excavation of the SS Republic yielded a paltry two bottles of Boerhave’s Holland Bitters. – Odyssey’s Virtual Museum

Read: Bottles on the Steamship SS Republic

Boerhave’s Holland Bitters

Boerhave’s Holland Bitters was made by Benjamin Page Jr. & Company in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. They were the sole proprietors and advertised themselves as Pharmacists and Chemists. They said their product was a purely vegetable compound and remedy for dyspepsia, kidney disease, liver complaint, weakness of any kind, fever and ague plus a whole group of other ailments. This is typical of most bitters. The product was advertised from 1856 to about 1860 heavily in newspapers with a few spot advertisements in 1871 in Davenport, Iowa. One has to wonder if they were selling excess eastern inventory at such a late date.

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Apparently the concoction was first developed by the celebrated Holland Professor Herman Boerhaave. Boerhaave (1668-1738) was a Dutch physician, botanist, professor and Rector Magnificus (Chancellor) at Leiden University. He is regarded as the founder of clinical teaching and of the modern academic hospital and is sometimes referred to as “the father of physiology.” In the 18th century, Boerhaave was renowned even in China for the way in which he practised and taught medicine. Not only did Herman Boerhaave discover many new things, he was also an inspiring teacher. He was an advocate of ‘teaching at the bed’ and autopsy and took his students on a journey through the world of medicine. Even Tsar Peter the Great attended one of his lectures.

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Boerhave’s Holland Bitters used The Greater Coat of Arms of the Realm which is the personal coat of arms of the monarch of the Kingdom of the Netherlands

Advertising further states that the product had great success in European States and that the introduction to the United States was intended for those of the fatherland that were “scattered here and there over the face of this mighty country”. The product sold for $1.00 a bottle or six bottles for $5.00. Big time agents like T.W. Dyott & Sons (Philadelphia), Barnes & Park (New York) and Laughlin & Bushfield (Wheeling, Va) were selling the product in those locales.

Benjamin Page Jr. was born in Missouri about 1830 and found himself in Pittsburgh at the young age of 21 practicing as a druggist in 1850. During the last half of the decade he would develop the Boerhaves Holland Bitters. When Mr. Page entered the United States Navy in 1862, he apparently sold his interest in the business, leaving no record of subsequent owners. He died very young in Philadelphia in 1874. However, it seems that this remedy continued to enjoy some appeal even after the turn of the century. Boerhave’s is counted among a laundry list of pharmaceutical products available in 1904.

Benjamin Page’s grandfather I believe, is the Benjamin Page of the well-known Pittsburgh glass house of Bakewell, Page and Bakewell. The firm was organized in August, 1808, by Benjamin Page, Benjamin Bakewell and Arthur Kinder, three shipping merchants of New York City, and was the first glass house within the then limits of Pittsburgh, and, what is infinitely more, the first successful flint glass works in the United States. The firm continued in existence for nearly three-quarters of a century.

The following advertisements represent a progression of notices in major United States newspapers of the period such as the Richmond (Virginia) Dispatch, Wilmington Journal (North Carolina), Daily Nashville Patriot (Tennessee), Belmont Chronicle (St. Clairsville, Ohio), The Times Picayune (New Orleans), Dawson’s Fort Wayne Weekly Times (Indiana), The Baltimore Sun (Maryland) and the The Davenport Daily Gazette (Davenport, Iowa) to name a few.

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Heres a copy of the 1854 Boerhave’s advertisement. You’ll notice at the top right below Holland Bitters, its advertised as the Electro-Chemical aroma and then Louis A. Disrael from Amsterdam. He changed it the next year to Boerhave’s Holland bitters, so this bottle was made for only one year. Probably one of the reasons its so hard to find. – Chip Cable

According to Pittsburgh collector Chip Cable, there is actually a bottle that precedes the Boerhaves Holland Bitters. As far as he knows, there are only two known examples. It is the same shape and size as the Boerhave’s, but it is open pontiled and embossed on the front: “Boerhave’s Electro Chemical Aroma”. On one side it says “Louis a Disrael/Amsterdam” and on the other side panel is is embossed: “Benj Page Jr. /Pittsburgh.” He apparently owned both of the known examples, but unfortunately sold them years ago and wishes he could have one back! He also notes that there is a pontiled Holland Bitters and as far as he knows, there is only one known example (see advertisement above provide by Chip).

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Boerhave’s Holland Bitters advertisement – Belmont Chronicle (St. Clairsville, Ohio), Thursday, July 31, 1856

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Boerhave’s Holland Bitters advertisement – The Sun (Baltimore), Thursday, November 27, 1856

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Boerhave’s Holland Bitters advertisement – Wilmington (North Carolina) Journal, Friday, May 22, 1857

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Boerhave’s Holland Bitters advertisement. References June 1854 order of Boerhave’s Bitters – Fayetteville (North Carolina) Semi Weekly Observer, Monday, May 24, 1858

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Boerhave’s Holland Bitters advertisement – Richmond (Virginia) Dispatch, Wednesday, November 10, 1858

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Boerhave’s Holland Bitters advertisement – Wilmington (North Carolina) Journal, Friday, January 7, 1859

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Boerhave’s Holland Bitters advertisement – The Times Picayune (New Orleans) Friday, September 23, 1859

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Boerhave’s Holland Bitters advertisement – Dawson’s Fort Wayne Weekly Times (Indiana), Wednesday January 11, 1860

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Boerhave’s Holland Bitters advertisement – The Davenport Daily Gazette (Davenport, Iowa) Thursday, June 15, 1871

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Remedy | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment