Comus Stomach Bitters – Crescent City

ComusStomachBittersR_ebay

Comus Stomach Bitters – Crescent City

01 December 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAThe four “C’s”. I guess I could have said NOLA or New Orleans but”Comus”, “Clerc” and “Crescent City” roll off the tongue a little easier. I suppose many of you bitters collectors have seen or heard of the Comus Stomach Bitters presently on eBay. The Sole Proprietor is Clerc Brothers & Company, Limited, New Orleans, Louisiana. The eBay seller, cockerell4141, calls out the following, “Up for auction from the collection of an advanced bottle collector is this fabulous condition Clerc Brothers & Co Limited Sole Proprietors New Orleans, LA–COMUS Stomach Bitters. This minty bottle looks absolutely wet and I see no chips, cracks, or stains. This bottle does have bubbles in the hand blown glass. The bottom features a two-inch indentation.” The top pictures have been modified in Photoshop to remove the background.

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New Orleans around 1900

This eBay example could be an unlisted variant according to Bill Ham, co-author, with Carlyn Ring, of Bitters Bottles and Bitters Bottles Supplement. Their listings in Bitters Bottles for two previous known examples is as follows:

C 212  COMUS STOMACH BITTERS
COMUS / STOMACH BITTERS // CLERC BROS.
9 x 2 3/4 (6 1/2) 1/4
Square, Amber, LTC, Tooled Lip, Scarce

C213Drawing

C 213  COMUS STOMACH BITTERS
COMUS / STOMACH BITTERS / // f // SCHMIDT & ZIEGLER LIMITED / SOLE PROPRIETORS / NEW ORLEANS, LA. // f //
9 x 2 3/4 (6 1/2) 1/4
Square, Amber, LTC, Extremely rare
Schmidt and Ziegler were grocers *1875-94 *actually 1845

It is entirely possible that the C 212 listing in Bitters Bottles may have been light in information and that this example on eBay is a C 212. We will wait for Bill Ham to decide.

Comus

ReignCostacomus

The Reign of Comus by Lorenzo Costa.

Wikipedia says that in Greek mythology, a Comus is the god of festivity, revels and nocturnal dalliances. He is a son and a cup-bearer of the god Bacchus. Comus represents anarchy and chaos. His mythology occurs in the later times of antiquity. During his festivals in Ancient Greece, men and women exchanged clothes. He was depicted as a young man on the point of unconsciousness from drink. He had a wreath of flowers on his head and carried a torch that was in the process of being dropped. Unlike the purely carnal Pan or purely intoxicated Dionysos, Comus was a god of excess. This makes perfect sense for the name of a New Orleans bitters.

Smith & Ziegler

Smith & Ziegler were prominent wholesale grocers, and importers of wines and liquors in New Orleans whose business spanned almost 50 years. The partnership was formed in 1845 by William B. Smith and Francis Michael Ziegler, both Germans. The business constantly grew until it was one of the largest wholesale grocery concerns in the South with trade occurring throughout most parts of the United States, Central and South America and Europe. Schmidt and Ziegler met in New Orleans in 1843 and put together an idea for a grocery store. Schmidt contributed $100 while Ziegler contributed $300. Their grocery store opened on November 5, 1845 on the levee (now Decatur Street), near the French Market. The business prospered, and by 1865, they opened a wholesale grocery in newer and larger quarters at the corner of South Peters and Gravier street. Four years later they built their own building with a sign that read, Schmidt & Ziegler, Ltd. The firm weathered all of the turmoil of the Mexican War and Civil War and had great credit to allow them to grow and prosper.

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Schmidt & Ziegler profile – New Orleans and the New South by Andrew Morrison, 1888

William B. Schmidt

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William B. Schmidt

William B. Schmidt was born in Schwierberdingen, which is a village of Wurtemburg, Germany in 1823. When he was 15 years old he came to New Orleans and stayed his entire life. In 1845, he formed a partnership with Francis Michael Ziegler who married his sister. They both entered the wholesale grocery business as Schmidt & Ziegler. Later in life, at the time of his death on 16 June 1901, Schmidt was vice-president of the Louisiana Planter and Sugary Manufacturing Company as well as holding many other positions of significant importance in business and civic roles.

Francis Michael Ziegler

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Francis Michael Ziegler

Francis Michael Ziegler was the partner of William B. Schmidt at Schmidt & Ziegler. Ziegler was born in Oberndorf-on-the-Neckar, Wurtemburg in 1818. In 1839, at the ripe young age of twenty-one years old, he came to United States arriving in New York City. Soon after his arrival he moved to Germantown, Pennsylvania where he was employed until 1841. He then headed south to New Orleans down the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers on steamboat. He first works at the wine and liquor house of Charles E. Alter. In 1843 he meets William B. Schmidt and the two men join in partnership.

The Clerc Brothers & Company, Limited

Brothers Albert Peter Clerc and Rene F. Clerc were both born in New Iberia, Louisiana in 1871 and 1874 respectively. Albert was in the hat business and was also a very successful traveling salesman for a grocer in the South. Rene F. Clerc was also a successful traveling salesman for Albert Mackie Grocery Company. Rene then moved on to work for Schmidt & Ziegler. With Smith & Ziegler finally shutting their doors after 50 years of grocery business, the two brothers and Andrew Gildaud form Clerc Bros. & Co. Limited on 01 May 1897. They are addressed at 400 Tchoupitoulas street in New Orleans and only last two or three years. This is when the Clerc Brothers Comus Stomach Bitters, the bottle on eBay, is put out. Rather late for a bitters bottle. It follows the exact form and embossing of the Schmidt & Ziegler Comus Stomach Bitters which was probably made in the late 1880s or early 1990s. Both are very rare to extremely rare bottles. I can not find any advertising for the brand.

AlbertClerc_The_Times_Picayune_Mon__May_10__1897_

Albert P.Clerc profile – The Times Picayune (New Orleans) Monday May 10, 1897

ReneClerc_The_Times_Picayune_Mon__May_10__1897_-2

Rene F. Clerc profile – The Times Picayune (New Orleans) Monday May 10, 1897

Select Listings:

1818: Francis Michael Ziegler born in Oberndorf-on-the-Neckar, Wurtemburg.

1823: William B. Schmidt born in Schwierberdingen a village of Wurtemburg.

1845: Schmidt and Ziegler, grocers established in 1845.

1871: Albert Peter Clerc born in New Iberia, Louisiana

1874: Rene F. Clerc born in New Iberia, Louisiana

1873: Residence of William Schmidt (see below), Coliseum Street, from Jewel’s Crescent City Illustrated, 1873

SchmidtResidenceNOLA1873

Residence of William Schmidt (see below), Coliseum Street, from Jewel’s Crescent City Illustrated, 1873

1890-1891: Albert P. Clerc, clerk, R. E. Lee Hat Store, H. & U. Laroussini, jr., 50 Louis street – New Orleans, Louisiana City Directory

1895: Albert P. Clerc, travel agent, Laudaner & Meyer, 422 Canal – New Orleans, Louisiana City Directory

1895: Rene F. Clerc, travel agent, Albert Mackie, 535 Magazine – New Orleans, Louisiana City Directory

1897: Clerc Bros. & Co. formed on 01 May 1897 by Albert P. Clerc, Rene F. Clerc and Andrew Gildaud

1900: Clerc Bros. & Co., 400 Tchoupitoulas street, New Orleans – The Commercial Year Book, 1900

1906-1912: Albert P. Clerc, clerk, Jaubert Bros., 200 Magazine – New Orleans, Louisiana City Directory

1906-1907: Rene F. Clerc, vice pres., Schmidt & Ziegler, Ltd., 432 S. Peters – New Orleans, Louisiana City Directory

1912: Rene F. Clerc, manfrs agt, 323 Board of Trade pl – New Orleans, Louisiana City Director

1915: Albert P. Clerc death on April 23, 1915 in New Orleans

Posted in Bitters, eBay, History, Liquor Merchant, Medicines & Cures, Wine & Champagne | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Daily Dose | December 2014

DECEMBER  |  2 0 1 4

Tuesday, 30 December 2014

DickWatson70s

So unfortunate to lose Dick Watson. Great man. Really feel privileged to have known him as a collector and a Federation board member. Was a good friend of my father too. Cool picture from the 187os. Dick in ochre tie. Read about Dick

Tough post with all of the Dr. Kaufmann Sulphur Bitters variations. Think I got most of it figured out. Here are a few more Joe Gourd trade cards that did not make the post.

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Birds_front_4_Gourd

Birds_front_3_Gourd

Birds_front_2Gourd

Monday, 29 December 2014

Been busy with family and the holiday. Back in the city today. Working on large post for Dr. Kaufmann’s Sulphur Bitters. Lots of cool images.

Another Indianapolis bitters.

BSB_The_Indianapolis_News_Tue__Aug_6__1878_

Tuesday, 23 December 2014

Dreary, blah, cold rainy day here. Snow in other parts of Texas. I really like this typography in this art for Dr. Roback. The Botany – Chemistry – Pharmacy – Experience triangle occurred in 1861 newspaper advertising and on a Roback’s 1861 Almanac. Read about the big Roback’s Stomach Bitters barrels and small Roback’s Stomach Bitters barrels.

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Dr. Roback’s Blood Pills and Blood Purifier art – The Plymouth Weekly Democrat, Thursday, September 26, 1861

Dr. J. Boveedod’s Imperial Stomach Bitters post updated.

Monday, 22 December 2014

FOHBCsmoking_santa_clausDuo_NL

Art for FOHBC Christmas piece above. Anybody ever seen a Dr. Wonser’s stoneware jug?

WonserJug

Sunday, 21 December 2014

AppleBrandyBitters_ABA

OK, Texan’s just beat the Raven’s. That’s cool. XR bitters keep showing up on Jeff Wichmann’s American Bottle Auctions, Bottle Sales page. Nice concept with shopping cart. Shipping charges need a little tweaking.

Statigers Stomach Bitters

Friday, 19 December 2014

HathawaysEbay1

An unlisted Hathaway’s Celebrated Stomachic Bitters from Wilkes-Barre, PA sold on eBay yesterday. Look for a post. I was in Reading, PA yesterday, home of the H.P. Herb Wild Cherry Bitters. Mark Warne reminded me of this. The XR Bloch’s German Bitters also just sold on eBay. In Dallas now for business. Headed home to Houston midday. Lots of rain.

Wednesday, 17 December 2014

LittleAdrianaPapa

Yesterday was my granddaughter Adriana’s 19th birthday. She’s in college now and collects poison bottles and horses. She is a member of the APBCA. Read: Granddaughter Adriana stirs up traffic at Balto Show – 2004

Off to Philly then Dallas for business. A bit backed-up with posts.

Sunday, 14 December 2014

BobFerraro_ThePontil_June1965.pdf-1

Who is that handsome gent at the left? Looks like he could be a politician. Hint, he is a major figural bitters collector. This may have been the FIRST image used in the ABCA newsletter The Pontil from June 1965. There was concern about the extra cost for b/w images.

Saturday, 13 December 2014

Would today be the 13th day of Christmas? Not part of the song but I sang “13 dogs a running” this morning during my jog.

PurpleBoydRowell

[Chris Rowell] Here is the Torpedo we dug last night. As you can see the color is an awesome shade of light pinkish amethyst. I was about blown away by this bottle when it came out of the privy. I have to thank my friends Bruce Adwell and Bruce Curtis for letting me add this one to the collection.

Friday, 12 December 2014

BurtonSpiller1966

Anybody ever heard of a Burton’s Bitters? New to me. Can any one guess who this legendary bitters collector is? This picture is from a 1966 Mardi Gras masquerade party. I am adding 1960s issues of the ABCA newsletters to the FOHBC web site. So fun looking at these great stories and pictures. The ABCA was the forerunner of the FOHBC.

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Thursday, 11 December 2014

c

Like this vintage picture of an old Coca Cola script letter C.

Wednesday, 10 December 2014

Thanks for the dog bite well wishes. Healing nicely I think. Not foaming at the mouth, except at that puce Dr. Townsends.

Stillmans_nolabitters

Above is a new picture that I came across showing what may be the elusive Dr. Stillman’s Temperance Bitters. It is not known what may or may not be embossed on the reverse of the bottle.

Friday, 05 December 2014

Took an ambulance today to the ER. Free Advice…”Do not stick arm in the middle of a dog fight”. Odd label from Heritage Auctions. I’ll check it out. Read More

“Confederate Stomach Bitters” Bottle Label. Printed on orange paper measuring 4.75″ x 3.75″, the label features a Confederate flag surrounded by an ornate border. The bitters, a popular digestive remedy at the time, were produced by A. Velati of Columbus, Georgia. Mounting remnants of the verso, else fine. Estimate: $700 – up.

ConfederateStomachBitters_label

Thursday, 04 December 2014

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Bryant’s Stomach Bitters post updated with NYC advertisements and a little info on Dr. George N. W. Bryant.

Bill Ham alerts us to a new Greer’s Eclipse Bitters variant on eBay. See Listing. He says that there is not much difference except that it is slightly smaller than the other two flat panel ones. It is shorter and has a smaller base dimension than G 109 and G 110, although having all flat panels. G 111 is similar height but has smaller base dimension and three indented panels. It is actually closer to 8 3/4 inches high. Should have had number G 110.5. Listing…

G 110.5 // GREER’S ECLIPSE / BITTERS / f / LOUISVILLE, KY. / f /
8 3/4 x 2 5/8 (6 ¾)1/4
Square, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, Very rare

Wednesday, 03 December 2014

FrogMate

Refreshed a older Crooke’s Stomach Bitters post earlier this AM while sitting in the Charlotte airport.

Monday, 01 December 2014

Hoping I can make it out west to the Roseville Show. Need to head to the east coast first. Look for a post for Comus Stomach Bitters from NOLA.

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

Bottle News from the Big Sky Country

BigSkyLicPlate

Bottle News from the Big Sky Country

30 November 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAAlways like to hear from James Campiglia up in Bozeman, Montana aka Big Sky Country. He and his digging buddies with Outhouse Patrol have it covered or uncovered in this case. James takes a moment to bring us up to speed.

"Going digging tomorrow in an 1869 camp. Still can’t find a thing, but only spent about three days there. The trash pit just had cans and some bones. I am researching a lot, have some maps and now own a drone. We will fly around and image from the sky now and can run over on other property too if needed. Long as the hunters don’t shoot us down! Found tiny pieces of a Drakes Plantation Bitters in a yellow-green coloration. Found a nice military button with an eagle. I do plan to get an article together for you this time with some nice pictures. James

Cylinder&Brady's_JC

P.S #1: Ferd, Just wanted to show you the Brady’s Family Bitters, cleaned up. The Whiskey is a nice McCully Pittsburgh bottle from an 1869 hole. Dug the rest of the hole and nothing to exciting other than a new base marked, W. Mc C & Co. Six straight across for my collection but plain amber. And two, J & C Maguire, St Louis, MO., clear though. Bottles were mixed with a heavy seed layer at the very bottom for most then some Jamaica Gingers up higher but all were 5+ feet and we were lucky to find this very filled-in hole.

Digging was tough this year but I played hookey as you know and went to shows a lot. Dug til the rain came down and down last Sunday and the next day snow and now below zero temps warming to about 10 tomorrow. We were on a great site but the one hole we found after 2 days searching was all burned with a heavy iron content, old stove parts, springs, etc. and all the old black ales were smashed and that is all there was; ales or Guinness, old 3-molds from across the sea. Probably 80’s so the old holes from 1865 to the 1880s still are to be found. Next Spring.

Frozen in Montana but want to dig more!

Regards, James

JamesPic1

P.S. #2: Thought you might enjoy some of my pictures. The Hostetter’s with the hooked J and base marked W. Mc C & Co. (in arch) 6. Fun to pair up the molds in totally different colors. Dug a nice W Mc C lately too but not a great color but 1869 camp in the hole where the Brady’s Family Bitters was found and some old J & C Maguire St. Louis bottles. Not many bottles but all were whole in the hole. 

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P.S. #3: Two more with nice colors W Mc C & Co G but slight different G’s.

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P.S. #4: Hello Ferd, Another one from my book cabinet/DVD player cabinet… I change this display often. I have really gotten more into the Townsends. Have quite a few now..

JamesDeskTopR

P.S. #5: Ferd, A few more pics.Hope all is well, Keep up all the great bottle work. Cant wait for the next National. What a hobby! – James

James5

James6

Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Digging and Finding, News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Digging News from St. Joe

STMMap

Digging News from St. Joe

29 November 2014

SJBrick

Apple-Touch-IconANice to get some digging news from St. Joseph, Missouri. I went to college in Kansas City, Missouri and I remember St. Joe being north. In business I am aware of St. Joe bricks. The Kansas City Queen figural bitters showed up at a bottle show in St. Joe a couple of years back. A jealous, Cajun girlfriend threw an almost cooked turkey out the back door in 1979 or so in Rulo, Nebraska in a frozen, snow-covered cabin once. It slid down a hill onto a frozen lake. Image etched in my mind. We drove thru St. Joe to get to Rulo in my girlfriends car. I had to hitchhike back to my dorm. Memories take on many levels here.

Hello Ferdinand

I live In St Joseph, Missouri and have been digging here heavily for the past fifteen years. I have been following your website for the past few always enjoying images of bottles we don’t dig in our area.

This spring I was complaining to myself how we never find any good whiskeys or bitters here even though there are a few dozen great whiskeys and bitters from St Joseph. After over 1,500 pits dug here, we only had a scant few examples to show.

This year things finally started to change a little with a dig in May. We found what I believe is an unknown E. H. Taylor Jr. Co whiskey (see pic below) from a pit dating to about 1881. I read your story about a stoneware jug from that distillery and decided I should share this info with you.

Read: A question regarding an “Old Taylor” find

Read: 20th Century Old Taylor Kentucky Bourbon Advertising

EH_Taylor

Since May, things have gotten crazy here. It has truly been our best year of digging.

Other notable finds concerning whiskeys and bitters were:

1/2 pint “Not For Joe” in aqua, unknown. (see pic below) 

NotForJoeStJoe

2 Dr. B.F. Sherman paper label bitters from mid 1860s (of the Prickly Ash Bitters Co. of Kansas City). We dug 2 of these 15 years ago also on my very first dig in my own backyard! (see pic below) 

MishlersStJoe

1860s side-wheel steamboat figural whiskey nip in clear with a ground top.

Last but not least was an unknown mid 1860s bottle from a St Joe firm that was in business 1 year-1867. An olive whiskey with a strap side flask body and a fifth type quart neck. To make the story really crazy – I live in the house built for one of the partners listed on the bottle! (see pics below)

SmithKerrOgden4 SmithKerrOgden3 SmithKerrOgdenDetail SmithKerrOgden1

PRG: Ogden J C, of Smith, Kerr & Ogden. – North Missouri and Eastern Kansas Business Directory, 1867-68

In 1857, James Cochran engaged in the grocery business in Lexington, Missouri In 1859, he moved to St. Joseph, Mo., where he was a member of the wholesale grocery firm of Kinney & Ogden, which relation continued till the early part of the Civil War. In 1864, he was with Kercheval, Kinney & Powell, who, with 600 head of oxen and 60 wagons, loaded with groceries, crossed the plains, and located at Virginia City, Mont., the firm clearing about $150,000. The following year, Mr. Ogden entered the firm of C. D. Smith & Co., a grocery jobbing house in St. Joseph, Mo., the firm later becoming Smith, Kerr & Ogden. Mr. Ogden later withdrew, and as Buck & Ogden, at St. Joseph, engaged in the jobbing of hats. He established a number of retail grocery houses in small towns near that city, and was with the one at Union Star, Mo., when he died. James C. Ogden was an excellent business man, and possessed a remarkably straightforward religious character. “His religion was always on hand – week days, as well as Sundays.”

The Ogden Family in America

I plan to get you some good images of these, but just wanted to drop you a line now so I will stop putting this off.

Thanks and keep up the good work!

Daniel Moser

Posted in Bitters, Digging and Finding, Historical Flasks, Liquor Merchant, News, Whiskey | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. Virgin’s Wine Bitters – Concord, New Hampshire

Virgins2GWA105

Dr. Virgin’s Wine Bitters – Concord, New Hampshire

27 November 2014 (R•030516)

Apple-Touch-IconAFirst of all…Happy Thankgiving. Here is another important bitters that sold this past Monday night in the Glass Works Auctions, The ‘Christmas Comes Early’ Catalog Auction #105 . The Dr. Virgin’s Wine Bitters from Concord, New Hampshire (Ring/Ham, V-24) is bluish aqua, 10 1/8” tall with a smooth base and has an applied double collar mouth. This particular bottle is also from the Paul Hadley Collection and is extremely rare, possibly even unique. It is also Ex. Carlyn Ring Collection. All the bells and whistles. Both pictures in this post are from the auctioneer.

Read about the other aqua bitters that sold: T. J. Lummus’ A.V. Bitters – Lynn Mass

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

V24Drawing

V 24  DR. VIRGIN’S WINE BITTERS
f // DR. VIRGIN’S // WINE BITTERS // CONCORD N.H. //
10 1/4 x 4 x 2 3/8 ( 6 1/2) 1/2
Rectangular, Aqua, LTC, 3 sp, Extremely rare
VirginsGWA105

“DR. VIRGIN’S – WINE / BITTERS – CONCORD, N.H.”, (Ring/Ham, V-24), New Hampshire, ca. 1865 – 1875, bluish aqua, 10 1/8”h, smooth base, applied double collar mouth. Paul Hadley Collection. Near perfect, (a 1/8” long vertical in manufacturing ‘crazing’ line is in the top edge of the lip). Overall pristine condition, super impression. Here’s one that’s extremely rare, possibly even unique! Ex. Carlyn Ring Collection. – Glass Works Auctions | Auction 105

The Virgin Family

This bitters story starts with Ebenezer Virgin (1702-1766) who was the founding father of the Virgin name in America. It is thought that he came from Salisbury, England to Salisbury, Massachusetts in 1722. From Salisbury, Virgin went to Dunstable, Massachusetts, which was then called Tyngsboro, and in 1726, with seven men sent by the Massachusetts Bay Colony, he went to lay out a township on the Merrimack River, then called Penny Cook, later Rumford, and now called Concord. Concord, N.H. is embossed on the bottle. Of course this was too early to be making bitters here in the states.

Ebenezer Virgin married Mary Chandler of Andover, Massachusetts and they had five children, Phineas, Ebenezer II, William, Jonathan, Miriam, Elijah and John. Ebenezer Virgin II was born on May 25 1735. He had a son Jonathan (1758-1813) who had a son named Issac (1789-1870) who had a son named Rufus (1818-1899) who was the father of Fred Peaslee Virgin who I believe, put out the Dr. Virgin’s Wine Bitters.

FredPVirginFred Peaslee Virgin was born on January 25, 1853 and was the second son of and fifth child of Rufus and Mary Ann (Stevens) Virgin. He was a self-made man and one of the early outstanding citizens of New Hampshire. He obtained his education in public schools at Penacook and Pinkerton acadamies. He worked in farming like most of the many Virgins in New Hampshire but left when he was sixteen years old to go to Boston where he was employed by Martin L. Hall & Company, wholesale grocers. They were reported to be the largest wholesale grocery house in New England. He first started out as a clerk and was later promoted to salesman and by 1883 was made a partner of the firm that was established in 1831. Fred died in 1908 in Boston.

First_Concord_BridgeI said “believe” earlier because there is no information, advertising or a label to support that Fred P. Virgin was a doctor or put out this bottle. He is the only Virgin, that I can see, that was a salesman and merchant. I can picture Fred on that horse on the illustration above of the first bridge in Concord (1795) heading off to the big city in 1869 with nothing but ambition, his family name and the family recipe for wine bitters. He would then pitch this product as a salesman at Martin L. Hall & Company and they made a run of bottles and a batch of Dr. Virgin’s Wine Bitters from grapes from one of the Virgin’s Concord, New Hampshire farms or vineyards. Concord N.H. was not that far from Boston. Remember, this could possibly be the only known example of this bottle. There would not have been many made.

UPDATE:

Ferdinand,

I was pondering that Dr. Virgin’s bitters from Concord, New Hampshire that you wrote about some time ago. I really think that the fellow that put these out may have been Frank Pierce Virgin.

Franklin Pierce Virgin was born on October 13, 1850 in Rumford, Maine to Benjamin F. Virgin and Eunice L. Virgin. In 1870, He lived in Lewiston, Maine.

In 1876 we find him listed in the Concord, New Hampshire directory as a student at Gage & Conn, who were physicians in Concord, New Hampshire. In 1872 we find him listed as a Sophomore at Bowdoin College; he graduated in 1875 from undergraduate school and appears to have continued on as a medical student in Concord. His preceptor was listed as Gage & Conn in the Bowdoin directory in 1876 and 1877. He apparently actually received his medical degree from the Detroit Medical College in 1877 while still at Gage & Conn.

By 1878, it appears that he was a doctor in Dover, New Hampshire. By 1880 he was a physician in Rochester, New Hampshire, and the 1900, 1910, and 1920 census lists him as a physician in Weymouth, Massachusetts, where he apparently moved in 1888.

I would guess that during his time with Gage & Conn in the 1876-1877 timeframe, he put this medicine out as this looks like the right timeframe for the bottle, and it appears that he had some family money so may have tried to get into the patent medicine business.

Note that there was another Frank Pierce Virgin who was the son of Rufus of Concord, but he was born in 1847, was a farmer and passed away in 1871.

Best Regards,

Brandon DeWolfe, P.E.

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

T. J. Lummus’ A.V. Bitters – Lynn Mass

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T. J. Lummus’ A.V. Bitters – Lynn Mass

26 November 2014 (R•112714) (R•121115)

Apple-Touch-IconAAn important bitters sold this past Monday night in the Glass Works Auctions, The ‘Christmas Comes Early’ Catalog Auction #105 . The T. J. LUMMUS’ A.V. BITTERS from Lynn, Massachusetts (Ring/Ham, L-133) is bluish aqua, 7 1/2” tall with an open pontil and has an applied tapered collar mouth. This particular bottle was from the Paul Hadley Collection and is extremely rare, this being the first to come to auction in almost 20 years according to Glass Works. Both pictures in this post are from the auctioneer. The lot closed with call backs at 30 bids and a price breaking $3,500 with the auction house premium. I did find reference to another example residing in the Old Sturbridge Village Museum.

I was curious about this bitters so I developed this post. I wanted to find out who T. J. Lummus was and what A.V. Bitters was? The best I can come up with so far is “A Valuable” Bitters or “A Vegetable” Bitters or “Anti-Virus” Bitters or “Anti-Vomit” Bitters? I have ruled out “Audio Visual”, a term used in my profession. At this point I can find no advertising for the bitters or a label.

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

L 133drawing

L 133  T. J. LUMMUS’ A. V. BITTERS
T. J. LUMMUS’ / A. V. BITTERS //LYNN // f // MASS. //
7 1/2 x 3 1/4 x 2 (5 1/4) 3/4
Rectangular, Aqua, LTC, Rough pontil mark, Extremely rare
Lettering reads base to shoulder
LummusGWA105

“T.J. LUMMUS’ / A.V. BITTERS – LYNN – MASS.”, (Ring/Ham, L-133), Massachusetts, ca. 1840 – 1860, bluish aqua, 7 1/2”h, open pontil, applied tapered collar mouth. Paul Hadley Collection. Pristine attic mint condition, wonderful glass whittle and no trace of wear. Extremely rare, the first to come to auction in almost 20-years! – Glass Works Auctions | Auction 105

Thomas Jefferson Lummus

Thomas Jefferson Lummus, not too much doubt here as to who he was named after, was born on September 22, 1803 in Lynn, Essex County Massachusetts. He came from a line of doctors and medicine men and ended up as a shoe man.

His grandfather was Dr. Aaron Lummus who was born in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts, on 17 August 1757. His wife was Eunice Coffin (1760-1843). He died on 5 January 1831 in Lynn, Massachusetts. His father was John Lummus (1722-1785) and mother Hannah Porter (1724-1787). In 1792, Dr. Lummus settled in Lynn, Massachusetts. and had a number of sons and daughters including Aaron Lummus (b 1792), Edward A. Lummus (b 1794), George Lummus (1796-1860), Charles F. Lummus (1801-1838) and Thomas J. Lummus (b 1803). This is our “T. J.”. Daughters were Clarissa Lummus (1787-1807), Hannah Lummus (b 1789) and Elizabeth C. Lummus (b 1798).

Aaron Lummus was a Justice of the Peace and grocer, George Lummus was also a druggist and Edward Lummus was a grocer who sold medicines. Thomas J. Lummus, the subject of this sketch, was a druggist in the late 1830s and went into the ink and shoe blacking business the second half of his career. These guys were all intertwined in business in Lynn. The Lummus’ A.V. Bitters was made and sold in the early 1840s, probable for only a year or two. Still do not know what “A. V.” stands for. The “A.V.” stand for “Aromatic Vegetable” per this 1841 Salem, Massachusetts advertisement below submitted by Brian Wolff.

LummusAd1841Salem

According to Ring and Ham, T. J. Lummus was a witness to the battle between the HMS Shannon and the American frigate Chesapeake, was a schoolmate of William Lloyd Garrison and played the clarinet in a Lynn band during a ceremony to lay the cornerstone of the Bunker Hill Monument.

Read about another New England ink manufacturer that made a bitters: S.O. Dunbar & his Tomato (ya ya ya) Bitters

Lummus1867Ad

T. J. Lummus Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals, Perfumery, Patent Medicines advertisement – 1867 Lynn, Massachusetts City Directory

Lummus1880Ad

T. J. Lummus Shoe and Ink advertisement – 1880 Lynn, Massachusetts City Directory

Lummus1883Ad

T. J. Lummus, ink and blacking, Union Block, Union Street, Lynn advertisement – 1883 Haverhill, Massachusetts City Directory


Hi Ferdinand,

I got a chance last night to catch up on your excellent website when I saw the photo essay you did on the TJ Lummus AV Bitters, I thought I’d send you a note about a situation that is very unusual – to me at least. I’m just wondering if this is a more common experience than I think.

I am attaching three photos of the TJ Lummus AV Bitters. The first is the property of the Lynn Historical Society; the second you featured on your website and the third is in my collection. They are all the same body design and color, and OP, as well as height to shoulder, but the neck lengths and lips are all different:

LHS bottle: flare lip
Peachridge bottle: tapered lip
My bottle: square applied lip

This bitters was lightly advertised through the decade of its existence and my guess is that less than a thousand were made and sold over that time. I would love your thoughts on why it would be manufactured in three lip styles? I have a few thoughts, but I’d sure love the benefit of your expertise and insight!

Thanks so much for your time and interest.

Andy Rapoza

Microsoft Word - TJLummus.docx

Microsoft Word - TJLummus.docx

Microsoft Word - TJLummus.docx


Select Listings

1757: Dr. Aaron Lummus born in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts,. Dies 05 January 1831.
1786: Dr. Aaron Lummus marries Eunice Coffin in Glouchester, Mass.
1792: Dr. Aaron Lummus settles in Lynn, Massachusetts.
1803: Thomas J. Lummus born September 22, 1803 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts.
1833: Thomas J. Lummus marriage to Abigail M. Newhall on November 3, 1833 in Lynn, Massachusetts
1837: Thomas J. Lummus, Lynn, member of the convention, N.E., Christian Convention – The Liberator (Boston, Massachusetts)
1841: Thomas J. Lummus (also Edward A. Lummus, apothecary at another address), Apothecaries, 14 N. Common st. cor Franklin Avenue – Lynn, Massachusetts City Directory

Lummus1841

1841: Advertisements for T. J. Lummus’s Aromatic Vegetable Bitters
1850: Thomas J. Lummus, apothecary, Lynn, Massachusetts – United States Federal Census
1851-1854: Thomas J. Lummus (a number of other Lummus family members), drugs and medicines, 62 Market, corner Tremont, house 19 Franklin – Lynn, Massachusetts City Directory

LummusFamily

1854-1860: Thomas J. Lummus, Apothecaries, drugs and medicines, 62 Market, c Tremont, house 19 Franklin – Lynn, Massachusetts City Directory *Also Edward A. Lummus, Apothecaries, 187 (Old No. 67) Summer **William Lummus, architect boards at 19 Franklin (1860)
1860: Thomas J. Lummus, druggist, Lynn, Massachusetts – United States Federal Census
1863-1867: T. J. Lummus, apothecary and ink manufacturer, No. 18 South Common st, Lynn – Lynn, Massachusetts City Directory
1865: Patent US46684, Improved Red Ink, Thomas Jefferson Lummus, 7 March 1865
1878: T. J. Lummus, inks and varnishes, Union Block, rear 158 Union, house 17 Franklin – Lynn, Massachusetts City Directory
1880: Thomas J. Lummas, merchant, Lynn, Massachusetts – United States Federal Census
1880: T. J. Lummus Shoe and Ink, Union Block, Union Street advertisement (see above) – Lynn, Massachusetts City Directory
1883: T. J. Lummus, ink and blacking, Union Block, Union Street, Lynn advertisement (see above) – Haverhill, Massachusetts City Directory
1885-1886: T. J. Lummus, Shoe, Boot and Ink stains and varnishes, Union Block, Union Street – Lynn, Massachusetts City Directory
1895: Thomas J. Lummus Death 10 February 1895 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts
Posted in Advertising, Apothecary, Auction News, Bitters, Blacking, Druggist & Drugstore, Glass Makers, History, Inks, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. William S. Love’s Vegetable Elixir – Baltimore

DrLovesGWAside

Dr. William S. Love’s Vegetable Elixir – Baltimore

25 November 2014

Apple-Touch-IconAI don’t know if you noticed, but there was this incredible Dr. W. S. Love’s Vegetable Elixir – Baltimore in Glass Works Auctions The ‘Christmas Comes Early’ Catalog Auction #105 that closed last night. What a beauty. Great color, embossing, character and a rough open pontil. This bottle dates from around 1842 to 1844.

DrLovesGWA

“DR. W.S. LOVE’S / VEGETABLE / ELIXIR / BALTIMORE”, (Odell, pg. 232), Maryland, ca. 1840 – 1860, olive green cylinder, 7 3/8”h, open pontil, applied tapered collar mouth. A few light scratches, otherwise in perfect attic found condition. An exceptional example with highly whittled glass. How rare is it? The last one sold at auction was in 1994! – Glass Works Auction #105.

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Dr. W. S. Love’s Vegetable Elixir for the Cure of Ague and Fever advertisement – The Sun (Baltimore), Saturday, July 16, 1842.

William S. Love

William S. Love was a physician, apothecary and chemist who first appears in Baltimore directories in the early 1830s. He seems to move around a lot. Maybe he should have used a wagon but I guess you can not address a wagon. His advertisements for his Vegetable Elixir occur from 1842 to 1844 only. One advertisement example is pictured above. I wonder if he ever considered calling it Dr. Love’s Love Elixir? In 1847, in Baltimore, the Lucina Cordial or Elixir of Love was being sold. Different fellows selling this.

There is some evidence to suggest that William S. Love’s father was John Love who came to America in 1767 and lived in St. Augustine, Florida. He does show up in Baltimore directories from 1807 to 1822 as a druggist. John Love has a relationship to Paul’s Patent Columbian Oil from Baltimore. William Loves wife may have been Elizabeth Erreckson.

Select Listings

1807-1816: John Love, druggist, 16 Market space – Baltimore directory

1822: John Love M.D. apothecary, 22 m. m. space – Keenan Baltimore Directory

1833-1837: Wm. S. Love, apothecary and chemist, 65 w Lexington st – Matchetts Baltimore Directory

1842: Wm. S. Love, M.D. and apothecary, 65 w Lexington st – Matchetts Baltimore Directory

1845: Love W. S., druggist, 89 Hanover st. – Baltimore Directory

1849: Dr. Wm S. Love, physician and apothecary, dw 92 Barre – Matchetts Baltimore Directory

1851: Dr. Wm S. Love, physician and apothecary, s e cor. Hanover and Perry – Matchetts Baltimore Directory

 1853-1854: Love Dr. Wm. S. 156 German – Matchett’s Baltimore Directory

 1856-1857: Dr. William S. Love,  apothecary, 121
 w Fayette, dw 152 German – Woods Baltimore Directory

1860: Dr. William S. Love, n e corner Monument and Aisquith – Woods Baltimore Directory

 1863-1865: Dr. William S. Love, Apothecary, 9 Penn – Baltimore City Directory

1870: Dr. Wm. S. Love, apothecary, 226 Harford Ave. – Baltimore City Directory

 1871-1872: Dr. Wm. S. Love, apothecary, 259 s. Broadway – Baltimore City Directory

Posted in Advertising, Apothecary, Auction News, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

S.O. Dunbar & his Tomato (ya ya ya) Bitters

T35L Tomato and Sarsparilla8

S.O. Dunbar & his Tomato (ya ya ya) Bitters

DUNBAR’S LIFE BITTERS

23 November 2014 (R•112514) (R•060219) (R•082519)

Apple-Touch-IconABitters ephemera authority Joe Gourd, sent me the above handbill from the druggist, S. O. Dunbar from Taunton, Massachusetts. The Tomato, Sarsaparilla, Blackberry, Dandelion and Wild Cherry, Vegetable Compound  Life Renovating Bitters has to be the longest name for a bitters product ever. Samuel Oliver Dunbar pretty much spent his whole life in Taunton. We have heard from Mr. Dunbar before.

SO_DunbarInk_Heckler

“S.O. Dunbar / Taunton Mass” Ink Bottle, America, 1840-1860. Twelve sided, bright blue green, sheared mouth – pontil scar, ht. 2 1/4 inches; (shallow 1/8 inch flake from base edge). C #520 Interesting 1/4 inch piece of glass adhered to side. Rare in this color. Strong embossing. Ex Roger Long collection. – Heckler Auctions

I didn’t have to look far for good information as Ed and Lucy Faulkner, from up Virginia way, had done a nice article in the FOHBC Bottles and Extras back in 2010. Makes sense, as Ed and Lucy are ink bottle authorities and Samuel O. Dunbar sold some neat inks. Read article.

SODunbar_B&E_JulyAug2010r

These two trade cards from Joe Gourd for S. O. Dunbar started a chain reaction making us change the T 35 designation in Bitters Bottles to “L” listings in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2. The bottle image is from GreatAntiqueBottles.com

Trade cards
L 90.5 LIFE BITTERS, Illustration roses and flowers. S.O. Dunbar, Merry Christmas or Happy New Year, Basement Post Office, Reverse: Manufacturer of Fluid Magnesia, Writing, Stencil & Dotting Ink, Swan’s Cherry Syrup, Shepard’s Condition Powders, Life Bitters…Taunton, Mass. See s2L 90.5
L 91.5 L … Tomato, Sarsaparilla, Blackberry, Dandelion and Wild Cherry, Vegetable Compound Life Renovating Bitters
S. O. DUNBAR / TAUNTON / MASS. // c //
7 1/4 x 3 1/4 (4 1/2)
Round, Aqua, LTC, Rough pontil mark S. O. Dunbar, Sole Agent, Bank Row, Taunton, Mass.
S. O. Dunbar (Samuel Oliver Dunbar), apothecary and books, 9 and 10 Bank Row, Taunton. Taunton, Massachusetts, City Directory, 1859
BAR p40, UMB 519, WAT L45 Previously T 35 in Bitters Bottles. See s2L 91.7
Handbill
L 91.7 LIFE RENOVATING BITTERS, The Cheapest and Best Bitters to be had, Tomato, Sarsaparilla, Blackberry, Dandelion and Wild Cherry, Vegetable Compound Life Renovating Bitters. Prepared and sold by S. O. Dunbar, Taunton, Mass.
LIFE RENOVATING BITTERS See See s2L 91.5


S. O. Dunbar advertisement – The Bristol County Directory and Gazetteer, 1867-68


dunbar-magnesia

The bottle shown above is one of the 1850 age bottles known from the S. O. Dunbar Company in Taunton. This bottle was thought to have contained ink but this specimen, with the original label shows it to be a medicine. It is likely that he used this container for both ink and medicine. – Bottle Books

216DunbarGWA

“S.O. DUNBAR – TAUNTON – MASS.”, (Faulkner pg. 61), Massachusetts, ca. 1840 – 1840, aqua, 10-sided, 4 1/8”h, open pontil, thin tooled flared out lip. Perfect condition, highly whittled glass, rarely seen size and form. Ex. Bob Mebane Collection #128. – Glass Works Auctions


Select listings

1836: Samuel Oliver Dunbar publishes a Map of the town of Taunton, with a view of the public buildings (see below) – Norman B. Leventhal Map Center at the Boston Public Library See Map

DunbarMap

1855: S.O. Dunbar, Director, Farmers’ Insurance CompanyTaunton, Massachusetts City Directory
1859: Samuel O. Dunbar, Apothecary, 9 and 10 Bank, Taunton, Massachusetts – Taunton, Massachusetts, City Directory, 1859
1867: S. O. Dunbar advertisement (above) – The Bristol County Directory and Gazetteer, 1867-68
1875: S.O. Dunbar & Son, 10 and 11 Bank Row, City square, druggists – The Bristol County Directory and History
1880: S.O. Dunbar, Drugs and Chemicals, Taunton, Bristol, Massachusetts –  United States Federal Census
1893: Dunbar’s Drug Store, drugs, stationery, etc. 51 City sq. cor Lincoln (see advertisement below) – Taunton, Massachusetts City Directory

DunbarSDrugStore1893Ad

Posted in Advertising, Apothecary, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, Inks, Medicines & Cures, Sarsaparilla | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. Truman Stillman’s Temperance Bitters – NOLA

Here_lieth_a_temperance_man_--_cartoon

Dr. Truman Stillman’s Temperance Bitters – NOLA

21 November 2014 (R•112314) (R•121014) (R•061415)

BrownsSideMeyer

Apple-Touch-IconA

Dr. Truman Stillman’s Temperance Bitters (see advertisement below) is an unlisted bitters that was uncovered while I was trying to find out the original source of the Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters. Initially I thought that the Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters was made in Boston in the mid 1840s by F. Brown (Frederick) as his name is embossed on the bottle. Research shows that initially, he was only the New England agent for the bitters.

The new listing by Bill Ham for the forthcoming Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

Advertisement
S 196.4 DR. T. STILLMAN’S SARSAPARILLA AND TOMATO BITTERS
Truman Stillman M.D., 96 Customhouse Street, N.O. La.
The Times Picayune (New Orleans) Wednesday, July 21, 1841
Frederick Brown was the New England agent.
Advertisement
S 196.5 DR. TRUMAN STILLMAN’S TEMPERANCE BITTERS
Prepared only by Dr. Stillman, 96 Customhouse Street, N.O. La., proprietor and discoverer.
The Times Picayune (New Orleans), Tuesday August 16, 1842
The Times Picayune (New Orleans) Sunday, August 30, 1840
Stillmans2_The_Times_Picayune_Tue__Aug_16__1842_

Advertisement for T. Stillman’s Temperance BittersThe Times Picayune (New Orleans), Tuesday August 16, 1842

When you say “New England agent” that means the bitters is coming from some place outside of the region. Further research takes us to New Orleans and Dr. Truman Stillman who first started advertising Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters in 1842 (see advertisement below).

SarsandTomato_The_Times_Picayune_Sat__Aug_13__1842_

Advertisement for T. Stillman’s Sarsaparilla and Tomato BittersThe Times Picayune (New Orleans), Saturday August 13, 1842

Prior to advertising his Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters and his Temperance Bitters, Dr. Stillman was heavily advertising his Stillman’s Sarsaparilla Syrup and Blood Pills (see advertisements below).

Tomato&Sars_The_Times_Picayune_Sun__Aug_30__1840_

Dr. Truman Stillman’s Patent Medicines advertisement – The Times Picayune (New Orleans) Sunday, August 30, 1840

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Dr. T. Stillman’s Sarsaparilla Syrup and Blood PillsThe Times Picayune (New Orleans) Wednesday, July 21, 1841

There is scant information on Dr. Stillman, but what I do find is that Truman Stillman was born in Oneida County, New York about 1815. He next shows up in 1840 as a doctor in New Orleans at his Southern Chemical Laboratory at 96 Customhouse street. He is totally engrossed with the value of Spanish sarsaparilla and tomatoes and says that his bitters are natural without the need for alcohol. He is aiming for the female market and by using the word “Temperance”. The American Temperance Society was formed in 1826 and within 12 years they claimed more than 8,000 local groups and over 1,500,000 members. One advertisement says his product is “extremely pleasant as well as effective, and may be resorted to without the imputation of dram-drinking”.

He sells his products in a variety of places using agents like Frederick Brown in Boston. Other agents were in Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis, Natchez, Vicksburg, New York, Charleston, Augusta, England and the Island of Cuba (Don Pedro & Co.). He also places many advertisements warning of counterfeit imitations.

There are signs of trouble in 1845 when Dr. Stillman is arraigned for violently assaulting is wife.

StillmanAssultsWife

Stillman assaults wife – The St. Landry Whig (Opelousas, Parish of St. Landry, La.) July 03, 1845

In 1846 Dr. Stillman is listed as a doctor, surgeon and proprietor of the Louisiana Lock Hospital Institution at 37 Bourbon st. He must have moved on from his Southern Chemical Laboratory business. You went to the Lock Hospital for the “most speedy and permanent cure for Gonorrhoea, Gleets, Strictures, Affections of the Kidneys, Diseases of the Bladder, Gravel, Seminal Weakness, Involuntary Seminal Emissions and Impotency”. They offered “a perfect and permanent cure for certain secret habits and secret diseases” too. They also sold “Lucina Cordial” or “Elixir of Love” to restore vigor. Love this stuff.

I am wondering if he did not have good ventilation in his chemical laboratory of if he was putting mercury in his bitters because in early 1847 he is committed for a spell to the Lunatic Asylum in New Orleans for Delirium Traumaticum (see 1830 definition below). He dies in New York City later that year.

DeliriumTraumaticum

Delirium Traumaticum – The surgeon’s vade mecum, Robert Druitt, 1839

Below is a new picture that I came across showing an extremely rare Dr. Stillman’s Sarsaparilla.

Stillmans_nolabitters

Dr. Stillman’s Sarsaparilla New Orleans from an anonymous New Orleans collection.

StillmansSarsaparilla2

Dr. Stillman’s Sarsaparilla New Orleans – Gene Baudouin Collection

StillmansSarsaparilla1

Dr. Stillman’s Sarsaparilla New Orleans – Gene Baudouin Collection

Select Listings

abt 1815: Truman Stillman born in Oneida County, New York.
1835: Truman Stillman, M.D., 233 Broadway – New York City Directory
1836: Truman Stillman, M.D., 422 Broadway – New York City Directory
1837: Truman Stillman, M.D., 359 Broadway – New York City Directory
1840: Dr. T. Stillman, Free White Person, New Orleans Ward 1, Orleans, Louisiana – 1840 United States Federal Census
1842: Dr. Trueman Stilling, 96 Customhouse St. – Orleans Parrish Louisiana City Directory
1843: T. Stillman, occupation Doctor, passenger on Empressario from Havana Cuba to New Orleans, Louisiana, 27 March 1843 arrival date, age 28 – New Orleans Passenger Lists
1845: Dr. Truman Stillman violently assaults wife (see clipping above) – The St. Landry Whig (Opelousas, Parish of St. Landry, La.) July 03, 1845
1846: Dr. Truman Stillman, proprietor of the Louisiana Lock Hospital Institution (also listed under Doctors), 37 Bourbon st. – New Orleans annual and commercial register of 1846
1847: Admissions to Lunatic Asylum Orleans Parish, Truman Stillman, physician, from Oneida County, New York. Age 34 years. Delirium Traumaticum
1847: Death, Dr. Truman Stillman, 27 January 1847, death place, New York City, New York – New York, Genealogical Records, 1675-1920
Posted in Advertising, Bitters, History, Medicines & Cures, Sarsaparilla | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Sarsaparilla & Tomato Bitters – Boston

BrownsSideMeyer

Sarsaparilla & Tomato Bitters – Boston

20 November 2014 (R•112314) (R•083019)

Apple-Touch-IconAHere is a bitters bottle that could be the most underrated and undervalued bottle in our hobby. The Sarsaparilla & Tomato Bitters from Boston rarely sell for more than a few hundred dollars which is surprising. First of all, look at the form and beauty of the bottle. It sums up what bottle collecting is all about. Crude, aqua, applied top, rough pontil, ample embossing and in this case, the words “Bitters” and “Sarsaparilla” on the same bottle. It also dates from 1844 to 1855. Shut the door!

SarsandTomBitterslabel

What prompted this post was seeing these graphics above for the Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters that Chip Cable posted on Facebook. Chip said that this was found on the inside of a box made in 1842. Pretty cool! This doesn’t guarantee it is the same brand, but there is, what looks like “Devereaux & Brown” wording beneath the tomato. A label noted by Ring and Ham say, “Two red tomatoes and stem with four green leaves covers the entire bottle”. Bingo. All this is odd because Frederick Brown put out the bitters in Boston. As you can see, F. Brown is embossed on the bottle. The “1842” date might explain why Brown was at first, an agent for the bitters. Where did it come from?

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

S 36  SARSAPARILLA & TOMATO BITTERS
F. BROWN BOSTON / SARSAPARILLA / & TOMATO / BITTERS // c //
9 1/2 x 3 3/8 x 2 1/2 (6)
Oval, Aqua, LTCR, Applied mouth, Rough and Metallic pontil mark, Common
Label: Two red tomatoes and stem with four green leaves covers the entire bottle.
Advertised in 1856 – for the blood
S36Browns_Meyer

F. Brown Boston Sarsaparilla & Tomato Bitters – Meyer Collection

S36BottomMeyer

Pontil on a F. Brown Boston Sarsaparilla & Tomato Bitters – Meyer Collection

Frederick Brown

Frederick Brown was a druggist and apothecary and was located prominently at the corner of Washington and State Streets in Boston, Massachusetts. The first reference I could find puts him at that address in 1840. The first advertisement I could find (see below) said that Frederick Brown was an agent in New England for Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters located at 68 Washington Street, corner of State Street in Boston. This was in the Boston Post, on Thursday, October 14, 1841.

BrownsTomsars_Boston_Post_Thu__Oct_14__1841_

Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters, Frederick Brown, 68 Washington Street, corner of State Street, Boston, agent for New England – Boston Post, Thursday, October 14, 1841.

This means the listing in Ring in Ham is correct under “S” for “Sarsaparilla” though it could, I suppose, have been listed under “B” for “Brown”. Brown changed his advertising in 1843 and put “F. Brown” before “Sarsaparilla & Tomato Bitters”. These advertisement were usually placed in New England newspapers (though I did find one in New Orleans) and ran through early 1847. Brown also advertised that the product did not contain any alcohol and was based on “Spanish Sarsaparilla” and “Extract of Tomato”.

I believe Brown stayed at the Washington Street address until the late 1860s when he died. I did find this passage in from the “Boston Herald,” on 31 October 1895 about Capt. John P. T. Percival. “In 1867 he returned to Cohasset, where he resided during several years, and on the death of Frederick Brown, who was at that time in the druggist business at the corner of Washington and State streets, he bought out that business in connection with Mr. J. O. French. Later, Mr. French sold out his interest to Capt. Percival about the spring of 1869, leaving the latter in sole possession, with Dr. A.K. Tilden as manager. Not long after this … removal was made to the present store of Percival & Tilden.”

Here is a trade card from Joe Gourd noting that Capt. John P. T. Percival had taken over the brand.

Trade card
S 36.5 SARSAPARILLA AND TOMATO BITTERS, Paintings of water fowl. Reverse: Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters (A Purely Vegetable Compound) Prepared by J. P. T. Percival, 35 School Street, Boston
In 1867, Capt. John P. T. Percival, on the death of Frederick Brown, who was at that time in the druggist business at the corner of Washington and State streets, bought out that business which included Brown’s Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters. See S 36 in Bitters Bitters.

As far as information on “Devereaux” if that does say “Devereaux and Brown” on the crate sticker, I can only find a later listing in Boston in the 1860s.

BrownEmerald

As an aside, there was also a F. Brown, Druggist (see bottle above) in Philadelphia who parallels the F. Brown in Boston. Lots of info on this guy. I can not tie them together.

Washington Street

Look at this really neat illustration of the east side of Washington Street in Boston showing F. Brown at the corner of Washington and State Streets. I have included the entire illustration and a few detail enlargements. Look at the soldiers parading and the dog on a leash. Lots more if you really look close. See original print.

Grandr_panoramic_view_of_the_east_side_of_Washington_Street_Boston_Mass_commencing_at_the_corner_of_State_Street_and_extending_to_No_206

Grand panoramic view of the east side of Washington Street, Boston, Mass., commencing at the corner of State Street and extending to No. 206. – Boston Athenaeum Collection, 1853

StateStreetPanoramic

Illustration detail of F. Brown at the corner of Washington and State Streets – Grand panoramic view of the east side of Washington Street, Boston, Mass., commencing at the corner of State Street and extending to No. 206. – Boston Athenaeum Collection, 1853

DetailFBrownOnState

Illustration detail of F. Brown at the corner of Washington and State Streets – Grand panoramic view of the east side of Washington Street, Boston, Mass., commencing at the corner of State Street and extending to No. 206. – Boston Athenaeum Collection, 1853

FBrownRightOnR

Illustration detail of F. Brown at the corner of Washington and State Streets – Grand panoramic view of the east side of Washington Street, Boston, Mass., commencing at the corner of State Street and extending to No. 206. – Boston Athenaeum Collection, 1853

 Advertising

BrownsSarsaparillaBitters_Boston_Post_Mon__Apr_3__1843_

F. Browns Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters, 68 Washington Street – Boston Post, Monday, April 3, 1843.

BrownsSarsBitters_The_Middlebury_Galaxy_Tue__Dec_23__1845_

F. Browns Sarsaparilla & Tomato Bitters, 68 Washington Street – The Middlebury Galaxy, Tuesday, December 23, 1845

F. Brown Druggist and Apothecary, 68 Washington Street, Currency and Receipt

FBS&TBCurrency

Script note during Civil War: F. Brown Druggist, 68 Washington Street, 1 January 1863, 03c. – Heritage Auctions

BrownsSarsCard_AGG

Receipt: F. Brown, Chemist and Druggist – Agents for F. Brown’s Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters, 1844 – Meyer Collection

The New Orleans Connection – Dr. Stillman

After thinking about this further and looking at New Orleans newspapers around 1840, I now believe that the birth of Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters started here with Dr. Truman Stillman at his Southern Chemical Laboratory at 96 Customhouse Street in New Orleans, Louisiana. Note that the advertisement below says he is the “proprietor and discoverer” of Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters. The advertisement format is very similar as they use an abundance of product testimonials. Frederick Brown must have been the New England agent as I said before. Then he took over the brand. I would bet two tomatoes. Dr. Stillman, who was from New York, must have drank too much of his bitters, or not enough as he was admitted to a Lunatic Asylum in New Orleans in 1847 at the young age of 34.

Read More: Dr. Truman Stillman’s Temperance Bitters – NOLA

The new listing by Bill Ham for the forthcoming Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

Advertisement
S 196.4 DR. T. STILLMAN’S SARSAPARILLA AND TOMATO BITTERS
Truman Stillman M.D., 96 Customhouse Street, N.O. La.
The Times Picayune (New Orleans) Wednesday, July 21, 1841
Frederick Brown was the New England agent.
SarsandTomato_The_Times_Picayune_Sat__Aug_13__1842_

Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters, Sold only by Dr. Stillman, No. 96 Customhouse Street, proprietor and discoverer. – The Times Picayune (New Orleans) Saturday, August 13, 1842

Tomato&Sars_The_Times_Picayune_Sun__Aug_30__1840_

Dr.Truman Spillman on the cusp of discovering his Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters – The Times Picayune, Sunday, August 30, 1840

Select Milestones:

1840: Frederick Brown, druggist and apothecary, corner of State and Washington – article passage.
1840: Dr. Truman Stillman in New Orleans, Louisiana at his Southern Chemical Laboratory at 96 Customhouse Street. Working with tomatoes and Sarsaparilla.
1841: Advertisement, Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters, Frederick Brown, 68 Washington Street, corner of State Street, Boston, agent for New England – Boston Post, Thursday, October 14, 1841.
1842: Sarsaparilla and Tomato Bitters, Sold only by Dr. Stillman, No. 99 Customhouse Street, proprietor and discoverer. – The Times Picayune (New Orleans) Saturday, August 13, 1842
1855: Frederick Brown, druggist and apothecary, 68 Wasington – Boston City Directory
1863: Script note during Civil War: F. Brown Druggist, 68 Washington Street, 1 January 1863, 03c.
1867: Reference to Frederick Browns death.
From the “Boston Herald,” 31 Oct 1895: Capt. John P. T. Percival — Prominent Business Man Drops Dead on the Common.
Heart Trouble Follows an Accute Attack of Indigestion — Was the Senior Member of the Druggist Firm of Percival and Tilden — Followed the Sea in his Early Life.
Capt. John P. T. Percival of Percival & Tilden, the well known druggists of School street and City Hall avenue, dropped dead on the Common yesterday morning. He had an accute attack of indigestion, and it is believed that this superinduced a heart trouble, which occaioned his sudden death.
Capt. Percival was well known and highly respected, and very popular with all the patrons of his store, as well as with all who enjoyed the pleasure of his acquaintance. He was not himself a druggist, that part of the business being looked after by Dr. A.K. Tilden, his partner. He was 77 years of age, and was born in Hanover. In his early years he followed the sea, and was soon made master of a vessel, and during this pariod of his life he was in the Crimean war, trading in the Mediterranean. During the civil war in this country he was in the merchant service, and engaged also in trade with China, doing business in Shanghai, Foo Chow, Hong Kong, Formosa, etc. He was very popular and successful with the Chinese trade, and a massed considerable of a fortune therein.
In 1867 he returned to Cohasset, where he resided during several years, and on the death of Frederick Brown, who was at that time in the druggist business at the corneer of Washington and State streets, he bought out that business in connection with Mr. J. O. French. Later, Mr. French sold out his interest to Capt. Percival about the spring of 1869, leaving the latter in sole possession, with Dr. A.K. Tilden as manager. Not long after this … removal was made to the present store of Percival & Tilden.
Capt. Percival, though 77 years of age, was much younger in appearance. There was no one in the druggist business in this city more popular than he; every one seemed to know him, and he was esteemed by all. Yesterday, after his sudden death, his store was the mecca of not only old friends but many seafaring men, all anxiously inquiring about him and expressing sorrow at his sudden demise…. He leaves a widow (Sarah) and two daughters (by his first wife, Drusilla Snow). The arrangements for the funeral have not yet been made, but the remains will be interred in Cohasset.
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