Julius Falke’s Manual for Barbers and Hair-Dressers

FalkesManualCoverPage

J. Falke’s Manual for Barbers, Hair-Dressers, Dyers and Druggists

Manufacturer’s of St. Jacob’s Bitters

10 December 2013 (R•060719)

Apple-Touch-IconAThanks to Joe Gourd for the Against Prohibition trade card post yesterday. On the reverse of one of the trade cards was some information on J. Falke & Co., listed as the manufacturers for St. Jacob’s Bitters. This bitters appears to be unlisted and f0r now, is being treated separately from the embossed Saint Jacob’s Bitters bottle from Cincinnati.

Here are some rather interesting and suggestive cards from Joe’s collection. The titles are precious. You do a double-take on this first example.

Here is a puzzle card from Joe’s collection. The reverse note’s that Falke’s St Jacob’s Bitters is manufactured by the Falke – Hall Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo.

The new listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2 is as follows:

Puzzle card
F 1.2 FALKE’S ST. JACOB’S BITTERS, Puzzle Card.- Find Bull, Two Deer, Camel, Chicken, Shrimp, Face, Monkey, Old Man Smoking Pipe, and a Bottle of St. Jacob’s Bitters. (over) Falke’s St. Jacob’s Bitters. A Sure Cure for Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility, and a Never Failing Appetizer and Blood Purifier. Manufactured by The Falke-Hall Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo.
Trade cards
F 1.2 ST. JACOB’S BITTERS, Against Prohibition Series (reverse) The Falke Leads Them All (logo) J. Falke & Co. Manufactures of St. Jacob’s Bitters., Family Medicines, Laboratory, 418 Elm Street, St. Louis, Mo. J. Falke & Company dates the card from 1883 to 1888 when the company changed its name to The Falke-Hall Medicine Company.

J. Falke’s Manual

I thought I would look up and confirm the connection and see what else I could find out about J. Falke & Co. Family Medicines in St. Louis, Missouri. Not only did I find the Julius Falke patent number for the bitters, I found this cool Manual for Barbers and Hair Dressers.

J_FalkesLeather

J. Falke’s Manual or Self-Instructor in the Art of Chemistry for Barbers, Hair Dressers, Dyers and Druggists Compiled from Original Discoveries

Published by Julius Falke – A. Ungar & Co., Printers, St. Louis, Mo., 1882

Read: Julius Falke’s Manual

FalkePageSpread

Typical page spread – Julius Falke’s Manual for Barbers and Hair-Dressers

This is a “recipe” book providing ingredients and specific instructions in how to prepare hair dyes, skin ointments, etc.

Partial contents: Preface, General Introductory remarks about tonsorial art, Instructions for making Bay rum, Bay Rum Cologne, Gum of Benjamin (Lime Juice), Eau de Cologne, Florida Water, Face Powder, White, Face Powder Violet and Rose, Quick Depilatory (for removing hair), Rose Cold Cream, Cold Cream, Violet Cold Cream Imitation, Camphor Ice, Hair Invigorator or Hair Tonic, Ordinary Hair Tonic, Cream Capillara or Hair Tonic, Hair Invigorator, Sea Foam or Egg Shampoo, Sea Foam Tonic (Egg Shampoo), Pomatum, Bear’s Grease Pomatum, Pomade Philicome, Benzoinated Pomade, Lightening Hair Dye (Black), Remarks in regard to the Art of Dying, Hair Dye Black, Hair Dye Brown, Hair Oils – Hair Oil Philicome, Hair Oil, Ointment for Curing all Diseases of the Skin, Kah-Kan-Kee, Hair Restorative, Instructions About Barbershops, Looking Glasses, Looking Glass Brackets and Wash Stand, Instructions – Portable Wash Stand, Cup Case – Barber Poles, General Instructions, Cosmetic or Stick Pomatum, Eureka Safe Hair, Salbrina.

FalkeSLMap

Fold-out map of St. Louis in the back of book. Measures 18″ wide x 8 /14″ tall “Map of the City of St. Louis showing the central portions of the city only. – Julius Falke’s Manual for Barbers and Hair-Dressers

There is a fold-out map of St. Louis in the back of book. Measures 18″ wide x 8 /14″ tall “Map of the City of St. Louis showing the central portions of the city only. R. P. Studley & Co., Publishers – 221 North Main St. Index to Numbers in red: Turner’s Hall (headquarters), Central, Concordia, West, Social, Nort, Carondelet, Fait Grounds, Schnaider’s Garden, Merchant’s Exchange, Masonic Hall, Union Depot, Court House. The map also shows: Street Car lines run to or near the Fair Grounds: Benton-Bellefontaine Line, Citizen’s Line, Cass Avenue & Fair Ground Line, Mound City Line, St. Louis Line, Union Line, Rate of Fare (5 cents, slips of five tickets good on an line, to be had from Conductors.

Select Date Listings for Julius Falke:

It would seem that St. Jacob’s Bitters dates from the 1883 patent date noted below. The top trade card represented within this post for St. Jacob’s Bitters says J. Falke & Company which dates the card from 1883 to 1888 when the company changed its name to The Falke-Hall Medicine Company. This period dates from 1888 to 1890. A second Falke’s St. Jacob’s Bitters trade card from Joe Gourd with The Falke-Hall Medicine Co. copy is pictured at the bottom of this post.

1841: Birth, Julius Falke
1881: Perfumery: J. FALKE, Manufacturer and Importer of Perfumery, Excelsior Pure Fruit, Flavoring Extracts, Carmine and Violet Inks, Olive Oil, & c., also Manufacturer of the Kah-Kas-Kee Hair Restorative and Eureka Safe Hair Dye, 505 Walnut Street, St. Louis, Mo., St. Louis Business Directory
1881: Falke & Co. (Julius Falke and Gustavus Heidel), perfumery, 505 walnut, St. Louis City Directory
1882: Julius Falke’s Manual for Barbers and Hair-Dressers (see above)
1883: Patent No. 3282, St. Jacob’s Bitters, Julius Falke, St. Louis, Missouri, June 12, 1883
1886: J. Falke & Co., pat. med., 628 S. B’way, St. Louis City Directory
1888: J. Falke & Co., druggists, specialities, 108 Walnut, St. Louis City Directory
1889: The Falke-Hall Medicine Co., Medicine, 108 Walnut st. – Official Manual of the State of Missouri, Secretary of the State also St. Louis City Directory
1989: Falke-Hall Medicine Co., 108 Walnut (Julius Falke, pres., Benjamin Falke, vice-pres., St. Louis City Directory
1989: Joseph Falke (son), lab, St. Louis City Directory
1890: Falke & Son Laboratory, St. Louis – Annual Report, Missouri. Labor and Industrial Inspection Dept.
1890: Falke-Hall Medicine Co., St. Louis- Annual Report, Missouri. Labor and Industrial Inspection Dept. 
1890: Falke-Hall Medicine Co., 108 Walnut, St. Louis City Directory
1890: Falke-Zahn Laboratory Co., 110 Walnut, St. Louis City Directory
1892: J. Falke & Son (Julius & Benjamin), specialities, 1312 Mississipi ave, r. 1312 Mississipi ave, City Directory for St. Louis, Missouri
1921: Death, Julius Falke
Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, Ephemera, Hair Tonics, History, Medicines & Cures, Perfume | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Lager’s amber Fluid mild, Gives health and strength to wife and child

BabyDrinkingBeer

Lager’s amber Fluid mild, Gives health and strength to wife and child.

AGAINST PROHIBITION

09 December 2013

Hi Ferd,

Read the post about: “better to drink beer than bitters or other patent medicines”. It put me in mind of a series of trade cards that are “Anti-prohibition” themed. There are six cards in the series, I have three. Strange as it sounds, there are Mom, Dad and BABY drinking beer! Captions extol the health benefits of drinking beer.

Have some fun with this ….. Joe (Gourd)

Read: The Ladies’ Home Journal Endorses Beer as Opposed to Patent Medicines

Lager’s amber Fluid mild, Gives health and strength to wife and child

Falke's #2 front_8

Falke's #2 back_10

The youngster, ruddy with good cheer, Serenely sips his Lager Beer.

Falke's #3 front8

Refreshing Beer gives strength and health, And smooths the rugged road to wealth.

Falke's #5 front_8

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Breweriana, Humor - Lighter Side, Medicines & Cures, Trade Cards | Leave a comment

The Ladies’ Home Journal Endorses Beer as Opposed to Patent Medicines

LHJ_5

The Ladies’ Home Journal Endorses Beer as Opposed to Patent Medicines

08 December 2013

“A mother who would hold up her hands in holy horror at the thought of her child drinking a glass of beer, which contains from two to five per cent of alcohol, gives to that child with her own hands a patent medicine that contains from seventeen to forty-four per cent of alcohol.”

Apple-Touch-IconAI like this advertisement for the ‘King of Bottled Beers’ with an endorsement from The Ladies’ Home Journal for beer over patent medicines. The advertisement appeared in the Chicago Daily Tribune on May 4, 1904. This was not a good time for quack medicines with the impending Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906.

Ladies’ Home Journal first appeared on February 16, 1883, and eventually became one of the leading women’s magazines of the 20th century. The Journal arose from a popular single-page supplement in the American magazine Tribune and Farmer titled Women at Home written by Louisa Knapp Curtis, wife of the magazine’s publisher Cyrus H. K. Curtis. Knapp continued as editor until she was succeeded by Edward William Bok in 1889.

In 1892, it became the first magazine to refuse patent medicine advertisements.

LHJ_bud-poster

“think of beer, which contains only from two to five per cent of alcohol, while some of these ‘bitters’ contain ten times as much…”

LHG1

What Mr. Edward Bok says… – Chicago Daily Tribune, May 4, 1904

“Budweiser contains only 3 89/100 per cent of alcohol. It is better than pure water because of the nourishing qualities of malt and the tonic properties of hops.”

LHJ2

Mr. Edward Bok continues… – Chicago Daily Tribune, May 4, 1904

“Budweiser is pre-eminentely a family beverage; its use promotes the cause true to temperance – it guards the safety of health and home.”

Posted in Advertising, Advice, Ales & Ciders, Bitters, History, Humor - Lighter Side, Medicines & Cures, Publications | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Agents and Distributors of Brady’s Family Bitters

BradysFamily_JA_SangstonAgents and Distributors of Brady’s Family Bitters

07 December 2013

Apple-Touch-IconABitters trade card collector Joe Gourd (Chicago, Illinois), forwarded the image of the top trade card for Brady’s Family Bitters suggesting possibly that J. A. Sangston & Company in Cincinnati, Ohio was producing and distributing the brand. This quite amusing illustration of a family getting blitzed on Brady’s ‘Family’ Bitters while smoking cheroots epitomizes the absurd marketing of bitters products during this time period. When you have a family this happy, who needs food? Every Body Takes It, as their marketing slogan says!

Joe added with his e-mail picture:

While I don’t have a trade card in my collection for this bitters, I do have an image of a trade card that I obtained from the collection of John Kemler in my “wanted” database. It’s interesting that the information on the card would lead one to think that the bitters were manufactured in Cincinnati, Ohio by J. A. Sangston & Co. Is this another mystery?

B193Brady'sFamilyBittersBrady’s Family Bitters was manufactured by D. C. Brady in Louisville, Kentucky. The brand was being shipped to many places and even advertised and sold big time in Houston, Texas. (Read: What was here, Early Houston Advertisements – Part II. I have also found records documenting crates of bottles being on manifests of trains and boats arriving in St. Louis where Charles P. Wiggins and his brother Henry, were heavily marketing and selling Brady’s Bitters from 1869 to 1872 or so.

The Cincinnati, Ohio trade card for J. A. Sangston is interesting. It could be that the Brady’s formula was used by Sangston to make Brady’s Family Bitters on premise or most likely, it all came out of Louisville to the various Brady’s agents around the country. I suspect the latter. I event see records of Brady’s bottles being found in Australia!

Read: Brady’s Family Bitters – “Every Body Takes It!”

Here are a couple of references to Brady’s Family Bitters being received and sold in St. Louis by Charles P. Wiggins & Bro.

1869: CHARLES P. WIGGINS & BRO. (Charles P. and Henry D. Wiggins) BRADY’S FAMILY BITTERS, case goods, etc. 904 n. 5th, Charles P. Wiggins r. 904 N. 5th., St. Louis City Directory

BradysBittersCorneAds_1869_SL

Small Brady’s Family Bitters corner ads placed by C. P. Wiggins & Bro. –  1869 St. Louis City Directory,

WigginsbyRailroad

CP Wiggins & Brothers (St. Louis), 50 boxes of bitters being received on the Indianapolis and St. Louis Railroad – The Missouri Republican, St. Louis, Friday Morning, September 24, 1869

WigginsClipping1

Wiggins & Brothers (St. Louis), 10 bbls of bitters, 50 boxes, 3 casks bottles, 2 boxes posters received on the ferryboat AnnaThe Missouri Republican, St. Louis, Friday Morning, September 24, 1869

1870: Bitters, Charles P. Wiggins & Bro., 824 N. 4th, St. Louis City Directory

1872: Charles P. Wiggins, agt Brady’s Bitters,  824 N. 4th. (Henry D. Wiggins clerk), St. Louis City Directory

1875: Out of bitters business. Charles P. Wiggins, salesman, Owens, Lane & Dyer, Henry D. Wiggins, machinist, both residing 1126 N. 21st, St. Louis City Directory

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, History, Liquor Merchant, Medicines & Cures, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Agents and Distributors of Brady’s Family Bitters

Tracking the Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters – Botanic Medicine Company

BotanicIronTonic_front

Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters trade card front – Joe Gourd Collection

Tracking the Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters – Botanic Medicine Company

07 December 2013

Apple-Touch-IconAWell, Joe Gourd has done it again with an e-mail containing a trade card showing three cats playing for an unlisted Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters – Botanic Medicine Company with a Fort Worth, Texas indication. Joe says:

Ferd, Here is another mystery for you. It happens to be an unlisted and potentially Texas bitters. “Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters” was manufactured by the Botanic Medicine Co., H. W. Williams & Co., Sole Agents, Fort Worth, Tex. (note that it does not say that the Botanic Medicine Co. is a Texas company). You can see that it was also distributed in Texas by the druggist named on the front of the card.

Your mission (if you choose to accept it) is to track down the Botanic Medicine Co. and prove that it existed in Texas. 🙂

Have a great day…….. Joe

BotanicIronTonic_back

Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters trade card back- Joe Gourd Collection

I have accepted the mission. Let’s look at some clues.

BOTANIC IRON TONIC BITTERS

B. I. T. B.

A GREAT REMEDY FOR

Loss of Appetite, General Debility, Nervous Prostration, etc., etc.

Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters

Online searches in the cities of Sherman, and then Fort Worth, and then Texas, and then the surrounding region, and then the United States pull up no obvious hits for Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters. Some interesting similar listings can be found for a Dr. Gray’s Tonic Bitters, Central Botanical Company, Cherry Creek, NY, Botanic Bitters, F. E. Mayhew & Co,., San Francisco, Cal., Botanic Aromatic Bitters, New York City, and a few other Botanic Bitters references without other information. Dead end here, at least for now.

Botanic Medicine Company

This is kind of a dead end too because I find page after page of botanic and herbal medicine links for new age wellness etc.

H. W. Williams & Co., Sole Agents, Fort Worth Texas

HW_Williams_Logo

H. W. Williams & Co., Importers & Wholesale Druggists, Fort Worth, Texas letterhead graphics

Now, finally we are on to something. I find a little bit of information here about Henry W. Williams, Sr. (1838 – 1925) who was a native of Georgia who moved to Sherman, Texas in 1873 where he established his drug store in 1874. His wife died in 1880, leaving him with a son, Henry Williams, Jr.

Both father and son relocated in 1884 to Fort Worth, where the elder Williams opened a wholesale drug business. Besides being a druggist and importer, he sold other items like cigars, druggists’ sundries and manufacturers proprietary articles. Directory listings show his address at 305-315 W. 15th Street near Throckmorton. He also served as vice president of Farmers and Merchants National Bank.

This company letterhead pictured below also notes a Charles S. Williams. Charles is listed in Forth Worth directories in the same time period with Henry Williams. I wonder if Charles is the link to their New York office on 99 Maiden Lane? You can also see this on the letterhead. Unfortunately, I can find no additional corresponding information for Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters or Botanic Medicine Company to support the trade card and confirm that this is a Texas bitters. I would say there is a very high probability.

HWWilliamsLetterhead

H. W. Williams & Co., Importers & Wholesale Druggists, Fort Worth, Texas letterhead, October 13, 1890 – ebay

WW_WilliamsMonogram

H. W. Williams & Co., monogram

The 99 Maiden Lane, New York Connection

The mysterious 99 Maiden Lane copy on the above letterhead could be a clue as it takes us back to the heart of historic merchant retail in New York City. Maybe the Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters came from here and was shipped to Fort Worth? It is really interesting to enlarge the below picture and try to find a sign relating to H. W. Williams, Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters or Botanic Medicine Company. Remember, I did find a listing for a Botanic Aromatic Bitters in New York City as noted further above.

Broadway-1885-APL.jpeg

Looking up Broadway from the corner of Maiden Lane (at right) c1885-87

Maiden Lane is an east-west street in the Financial District of the New York City borough of Manhattan. Its eastern terminus is at South Street, near the South Street Seaport. It continues west, terminating at Broadway, near the World Trade Center site.

The street received its name in New Amsterdam, as Maagde Paatje, a “footpath used by lovers along a rippling brook”, a “pebbly brook” that ran from Nassau Street to the East River where wives and daughters washed linen.

In September 1732, a company of professional actors arrived from London and took an upstairs room near the junction of Pearl Street which was fitted up with a platform stage, and marked the origin of professional theater in New York; by the time the company was disbanded in 1734, their building was known as the Play House.

In the Spring of 1790, Thomas Jefferson rented a house at 57 Maiden Lane when he moved to New York to serve as the Secretary of State under George Washington.
Maiden Lane was a street of shops by the end of the 18th century, even before the new fashion for multi-paned shop windows caught on in the city. In 1827 the skylit New York Arcade, banking on the fashionable success of London’s Burlington Arcade (1819), spanned the block between Maiden Lane and John Street east of Broadway with forty smart shops; “it had not the success that had been anticipated,” Charles Haynes Haswell recalled, “and survived but a few years”. Maiden Lane was soon one of the first city streets to be lit with gas lamps.

One of the handful of mid-19th century commercial structures still standing in the Financial District, is the building 90-94 Maiden Lane, built for Roosevelt & Son, with a cast-iron front (attributed to Charles Wright, 1870–71) by Daniel D. Badger. Until the early 20th century Maiden Lane was the center of the jewelry district, which relocated on West 47th Street. At Broadway, the bronze and glass clock embedded in the sidewalk by William Barthman Jewelers still keeps time; in 1946 the New York police department estimated that it was walked on by 51,000 people every weekday between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. [parts from Wikipedia]

T. R. Legett, Druggist, Sherman, Texas (stamped in purple on front of trade card)

Botanic_frontTR_Legett

This is a tough one too. Henry W. Williams started out in Sherman, Texas so there is a connection. Thomas R. Legett was a druggist who owned a drug store in Sherman, Texas. He was born around 1864 in Arkansas and according to 1900 and 1910 Federal Census reports. His fathers birthplace was South Carolina, His mother was born in Alabama. He was married to Alice Herring on 11 September 1881. In his early life, he was a preacher as reported in the 1880 Federal Census. In another listing the settlement of Christoval began in the 1860s and increased in the 1870s and 1880s following the establishment of Fort Concho in nearby San Angelo. The town of Christoval began to develop by 1885. The South Concho Baptist congregation was organized in 1889 with four charter members. The Rev. T. R. Leggett served as first pastor at the Christoval Baptist Church.

Why it may have been tough to sell Botanic Iron Tonic Bitters in Fort Worth

FW_Sec111

Stiff laws for Bitters in Fort Worth – Laws Passed by the Legislature of the State of Texas, 1907

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Medicines & Cures, Questions, Remedy, Tonics, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Key West Revisited – Another Quest to Dive For Bottles | Layers

B&ECover_JanFeb14WaterR

Key West Revisited – Another Quest to Dive For Bottles | Bottles and Extras Cover Layers

B&E_LatestGrid

Covers for the last nine issues of Bottles and Extras, the flagship magazine of the Federation of Historical Bottle Collectors

06 December 2013

Apple-Touch-IconA

I thought I would give those interested, a peak at the January | February 2014 issue of Bottles and Extras. The issue has exciting articles like Duroy and the Ohio Wine WarHighland Bitters and/or Scotch TonicAmerican and World Antique Advertising Pot Lids – A brief historyThe Case of the Missing Case2014 Lexington National NewsWar Slogan Milk Bottles – Featuring the Collection of Paul Irby and The Animal Cure that Changed Bottle Collecting. There is also a feature article called Key West Revisited – Another Quest to Dive for Bottles from Pam Selenak. Her article inspired this issues cover design which I have broken down into layers below. Kind of fun. We need a blue cover too.

The January |February 2014 issue is with the printer in Missouri and you can look forward to the following:

Bottles and Extras

Vol. 25 No. 1 | January – February 2014 | No. 211

Features: Duroy and the Ohio Wine War Jack Sullivan 12 Highland Bitters and/or Scotch Tonic Gene Bradberry 20 American and World Antique Advertising Pot Lids – A brief history Greg Dean 26 The Case of the Missing Case Gary Beatty 32 2014 Lexington National News Ferdinand Meyer V 38 War Slogan Milk Bottles – Featuring the Collection of Paul Irby Alan DeMaison 42 Key West Revisited – Another Quest to Dive for Bottles Pam Selenak 48 The Animal Cure that Changed Bottle Collecting Michael Seeliger 56

Vignettes: 2014-2016 FOHBC Elections 19 

Departments: FOHBC Officer Listing 2012-2014 2 President’s Message 3 FOHBC News 6 Who Do I Contact at the FOHBC? 63 Classified Ads & Ad Rate Info 64 Membership Directory 66 FOHBC Show-Biz, Show Calendar Listings 67 Membership Application 72

Become a member of the FOHBC

Original Images

DivArtPalette

Background Image @ 100%

B&ECover_JanFeb14WaterR_1

Layer #1 – Bottles @ 80% Saturation

B&ECover_JanFeb14WaterR_1_2

Layer #2 – Coral @ 37% Saturation

B&ECover_JanFeb14WaterR_3_37

Layer #3 – Photograph from Diving Boat @ 45% Saturation

B&ECover_JanFeb14WaterR_4_45

Layer #4 – Diver Photo @ 45% Saturation

B&ECover_JanFeb14WaterR_Diver

Layer #5 – Graphics and Typography

B&ECover_JanFeb14Water_Graphics

Final Cover

B&ECover_JanFeb14WaterR

Posted in Art & Architecture, Article Publications, Bottles and Extras, Diving, News, Photography | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dr. D. B. Wiggins had a Tonic Bitters in Buffalo, New York

B-W Buttons

WigginsfrontDirections

Dr. D. B. Wiggins had a Tonic Bitters in Buffalo, New York

A Puzzle that will Puzzle you.

05 December 2013 (R•091919)

Apple-Touch-IconAThere are a number a puzzle’s here, like the puzzle on this extremely rare, 1883 trade card provided by Joe Gourd (Chicago, Illinois). You place black and white buttons on the trade card stars as directed and move the buttons around to solve the puzzle. The second puzzle is an unlisted bitters noted on the back of the trade card, this being the Wiggins’ Tonic Bitters from Buffalo, New York making the scene for the first time. The third puzzle is, how can this botanic physician, Dr. D. B. Wiggins, use his initials, “D”and “B” his entire career? I mean, was his name Dee Bee? As a tot at school, was he D. B? As we know, using initials back then was not uncommon at all, it usually takes just a little time to track down the full name. In this case, all I can find are initials for his first and middle name. All these puzzles…

Here is the new listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2.

Trade card
W 108.7 DR. WIGGINS TONIC BITTERS, A Puzzle that will Puzzle you. Stars and buttons promotional game. Dr. Wiggins’ Family Medicines. Copyrighted Sept. 28, 1883 by C. C. Knowlton, Buffalo, N. Y. Reverse: Dr. Wiggin’s Worm Powder, Honey Cough Balsam, Rheumatic Drops, Tonic Bitters, Compound Sarsaparilla Syrup, Stomach and Liver Pills, Anti-Bilious Pills. Dr. D. B. Wiggins’, 50 E. Seneca St. Buffalo, N. Y.
DrWigginsfront

Front – Dr. D. B. Wiggin’s Trade Card – Buffalo, NY – Joe Gourd Collection

DrWigginsback

Back – Dr. D. B. Wiggin’s Trade Card – Buffalo, NY – Joe Gourd Collection

This has been a ‘Wiggins Week’ so far as I started off researching the extremely rare J T Wigging Gentian Bitters. When Joe Gourd sent in the Dr. D. B. Wiggins trade card, we had our second, unrelated Wiggins. Now I also see that a bitters manufacturer and dealer called C. P. Wiggins & Bros in St. Louis were dealing in Brady’s Family Bitters. Save that one for later.

Illustrated Buffalo: the queen city of the lakes

Dr. D. B. Wiggins

Dr. D. B. Wiggins was a leading physician, botanic druggist and specialist located at 50 E. Seneca Street in the Buffalo, New York. His career spanned 45 years or so starting in 1849 when he establislied his first business located at the corner of Niagara and Eagle Streets, from which he then moved to 440 Main Street, and finally to East Seneca Street, two doors east of the post-office. He had stately residence called ‘Edgewood’ located in West Seneca, New York (pictured below).

EdgewoodWigRes

Edgewood – Residence of Dr. D. B. Wiggins, West Seneca, N.Y. Look at the passing trains in the background – Digital Collections, New York Public Library

Dr. Wiggins was a native of Vermont, and a graduate of the Physio-Medical College of Cincinnati from which he received his diploma in 1846. He was also a member of The Western New York Medical Association, and in 1858-9, occupied the chair of Anatomy and Physiology at the above college.

His Seneca address comprised an office for use with his visiting patients and a handsomely fitted up drug store where he kept all his well-known remedies such as Dr. Wiggins’ Tonic Bitters, Kidney Tea, Worm Powder, Honey Cough Balsam, Rheumatic Drops, Compound Sarsaparilla Drops, Stomach and Liver Pills and Anti-Bilious Pills.

WigginsKidneyTeaAd

Dr. Wiggins’ Kidney Tea and Tonic Bitters AdvertisementThe Free Thought Magazine, H.L. Green, 1894

Discarding the time-worn theories of old school medicine, D.B. advocated the use of botanical medicines. He devoted all his time and energies to the dissemination of the fruits of his scientific studies and researches and the preparations for the use of the public of such remedies as have only botanical properties for a basis.

BotanicDrugStoreWiggins

Dr. Wiggins selling his Drug Store, The Medical Brief, 1893. This was right before he retired.

In 1893, there are a number of advertisements that note that his botanic drug store is for sale. D. B. finally wants to retire.

And last, one more puzzle. Will we ever find a bottle embossed or labeled Dr. D. B. Wiggins’ Tonic Bitters? This would be highly unlikely. It was probably a labeled bottle meaning that bottles are in collections, we just don’t know what they contained because the labels have long since been removed from the bottles. Some times these trade cards and advertisements are all we have to go on. Who knows, maybe one will show up. Wouldn’t that be exciting? Might even have his full name on it. Now I have to go back and solve this button thing.

Reference: Illustrated Buffalo – Queen City of the Lakes

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, Ephemera, History, Medicines & Cures, Questions, Tonics, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Is there really a Swindle’s Texarkana Bitters?

TexarkanaStateLinePC

Is there really a Swindle’s Texarkana Bitters?

04 December 2013 (120713•Major update at bottom of post)
StateLineTexarkana

State Line marker sign at the U.S. Courthouse & Post Office in Texarkana, the only Federal facility which straddles two state lines.

TEXas, ARKansas, and nearby LouisiANA

Apple-Touch-IconAIs there really a Swindle’s Texarkana Bitters? Is somebody pulling our leg here? And a man named Swindle selling this concoction? It reminds me of the old Three Stooges episode where they visited some lawyers. The sign on the door read, “Dewey, Cheatem & Howe”. Yuk Yuk.

Texarkana was founded in 1873 on the junction of two railroads. The name is a portmanteau of TEXas, ARKansas, and nearby LouisiANA. There are three stories on how this name was derived.

One tradition tells of a Red River steamboat named the Texarkana which plied the water of the Red River as early as 1860.

Another story mentions a storekeeper in 1869 named Swindle who ran a general store in Red Land, Bossier Parish, Louisiana who concocted a medicinal drink called “Texarkana Bitters“.

A third account, and most popular, claims that when the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railroad was building its line through the area, Col. Gus Knobel, who made the survey, coined the name and erected a large sign at the site. He allegedly painted “TEX-ARK-ANA” on a plank and nailed it to a tree, saying, “This is the name of a town which is to be built here.”

800px-Old_map-Texarkana-1888

1888 Map of Texarkana

In 1876, Texarkana, Texas, was granted a charter under an act of the Texas legislature, and a Texarkana, Texas, post office operated from 1886 to 1892. Later, Congressman John Morris Sheppard secured a postal order officially changing the name to “Texarkana, Arkansas-Texas”

Typically, Scott Joplin joined the spastic circle of musicians spilling out into the dirt road in front of 618 Hazel Street. He played alongside Swindle, the fast talking singer from Plain Dealing, Louisiana who sold “Texarkana Bitters” to the colored folks in town, and with Professor Johnson, a music teacher, barber, real estate investor, and widely respected shaman in both Miller and Bowie Counties. 

Railroads were quick to see the possibilities of this vast area, and in the late 1850s the builders of the Cairo and Fulton Railroad were pushing their line steadily across Arkansas. By 1874, they had crossed the Red River and had reached the Texas state line. Between February 16 and March 19, 1874, trains ran between the Texas border and Red River, whence passengers and freight were ferried to Fulton to continue by rail. The Red River Bridge opened on March 20, 1874, and since then trains have run directly from Texarkana to St. Louis.

p21_t

“I … commenced selling the bitters on Main Street.” – from The Gentle Grafter, by O. Henry, Illustrated by H. C. Greening and May Wilson Preston

There was keen rivalry between the 1870s railroad builders. The Texas and Pacific reached across Texas to the Arkansas state line. The border was the logical place for the different railways to connect. On December 8, 1873, the Texas and Pacific Railroad sold the first town lots for the future city. First to buy was J. W. Davis, who purchased the land where today’s Hotel McCartney now stands, opposite Union Station.

Miller County is probably the only county in the United States which was abolished, only to be reestablished later. Miller County was formed in 1820 to honor James Miller who was Arkansas’ first governor. Miller County was formed with a large degree of uncertainty as to the location of the line dividing the county and the Mexican boundary. Consequently, settlers felt that Arkansas levied and collected taxes on land which eventually might be held by Mexico. Moreover, many who resented the oppression of Texans by the Mexicans were openly declaring allegiance to the Texans.

AllDerinksOneDollar

“They began to cuss, amiable, and throw down dollars.” – from The Gentle Grafter, by O. Henry, Illustrated by H. C. Greening and May Wilson Preston

This led to general unrest, and after the Texas Republic was created, it grew worse. So, in 1838, Governor James Conway proposed that the “easiest and most effective remedy is the abolition of Miller County to an area which is more patriotic.” From that year until 1874, it was a part of Lafayette County. Its re-establishment sprung only from the sale of town lots in Texarkana in 1873. Efforts of the young town to be incorporated were not realized until October 17, 1880, nearly seven years after Texarkana, Texas (June 12, 1874) was formed. December 8, 1873, is generally recognized by both cities as the date of organization. [Wikipedia and other sources]

TexarkJk

So is there really a Swindle’s Texarkana Bitters? I doubt it. But I am looking!


There is a Texarkana Bitters!

07 December 2013

TexarkanaBittersSwindle

Ferdinand, Hello again, my name is Wayne Loschen and I sent you the picture of the Malakoff Bitters from New Orleans a while back. I have a little info on the Texarkana Bitters you wrote the article on yesterday. I have an actual receipt or bill of sale from the store in Redland you referenced. At the moment it is on display at the Spring Street Museum in Shreveport, where my son is director. He is going to take a photo of the receipt and will try to get it to you.

The receipt dates from around 1871 and it states at the top of the letterhead that Swindle, Crawford Co. is the sole proprietor of the celebrated Texarkana Bitters, Louisiana Cough Balm, and Talbots Horse Liniment. I believe this was probably a backroom concoction and was put up with a plain bottle and paper label. So your question is answered, there was a Texarkana Bitters. I live around 10 miles from Redland and have always dreamed of finding that bottle, but there are no signs of the old store anywhere to be found.

Your fellow collector,

Wayne

Dear Sir,

Here is the sales receipt from Swindle’s store dated, April 17th 1875  from Redland Louisiana. I have it on display at the Spring Street Historical Museum in Shreveport. I’m sure you know that Redland is an old ghost town just east of Plain Dealing. I hope this answers your question.

Regards,

Marty Loschen, Spring Street Director, Museum Division

Apple-Touch-IconAI have taken the liberty to look further at this wonderful information provided by Wayne and Marty Loschen related to the April 17, 1875 Swindle, Crawford and Company receipt from Red Land, Louisiana that is held by the Spring Street Historical Museum in Shreveport, Louisiana. I have isolated the graphics and clearly see the Celebrated Texarkana Bitters product name along with Talbot’s Horse Liniment, Louisiana Cough Balm and Southern Chill Cure. I also see three persons listed on the receipt; J. J. Swindle, J. B. Crawford and Wilson Covington.

“the receipt was given to me back in the 70’s by the great niece of the man whose name is on the receipt. Timothy Okley died in 1911 and is buried in a small country cemetery not far from my house here in Springhill”

Wayne Loschen

TexarkanaBittersGraphic

Detail from invoice noting the elusive Celebrated Texarkana Bitters from Swindle, Crawford and Co. – Spring Street Historical Museum

SWCMasthead

Swindle, Crawford and Co. invoice header – Spring Street Historical Museum

Swindle, Crawford and Company – J. J. Swindle, J. B. Crawford and Wilson Covington – Red Land, Louisiana

Red Land, now an old ghost town just east of Plain Dealing, was organized in 1856, and Chartered 10 February 1857 and located within Bossier Parish, Louisiana.

John Jones Swindle, partner, Swindle, Crawford and Company, was Caleb Swindles son. Caleb Swindle was born on September 20, 1800 in North Carolina. He resided in 1842 in Red Land, Bossier Parrish, Louisiana. He died on January 15, 1880 in Bossier Parrish, Louisiana. Caleb had eight children with four wives. John Jones Swindle was born on April 25, 1840 and died in 1897. J. J. Swindle had 9 children. In May, 1862, J. J. Swindle joined the Bosier Cavalry. He was married to Mattie E. Eden on January 1, 1861. He was also married later to Mary Graham.

J. B. Crawford, partner, Swindle, Crawford and Company, was born about 1838 in Alabama. His wife was named Elizabeth Holloway. He is mentioned in several instances in Court Documents as being in attendance at family meetings in regards to minor children, in 1879.

Wiliam Wilson Covington, partner, Swindle, Crawford and Company, was born in Tippah County, North Carolina on March 1, 1832, and was as son of Miles and Margaret (Weeks) Covington. They came to Bossier Parish, Louisiana in 1841, locating near Red Land. When Wilson was 21 years he began farming, like his father before him, and had a good farm of 380 acres that had a considerable portion under cultivation and was well improved with excellent buildings. He raised stock but specialized in cotton and corn. In March 1862, he joined the Company C, 6th Louisiana Cavalry C.S.A., “Bossier Cavalry” and was a Proud Confederate Soldier (inscribed on his grave marker) and remained there until the end of the Civil War. In May 1865, he left the command at Alexandria, Louisiana and came home, and here, in 1870, opened a dry goods store at Red Land, being a member of the firm of Swindle, Crawford & Co.. This firm was afterward dissolved, and Mr. Covington and Mr. Crawford became associated in business for another five years. Mr. Covington died on May 24, 1895.

Posted in Bitters, History, Humor - Lighter Side, Museums, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Are the J.T. Wiggins Gentian Bitters and Dr. Goddin’s Compound Gentian Bitters related?

JT_Wiggins3

Are the J.T. Wiggins Gentian Bitters and Dr. Goddin’s Compound Gentian Bitters related?

03 December 2013 (R•120813 – J T Wiggins info update) (R•120813 – Embossing Comprison) (R•120813 – JT Higgins Pure Herb Bitter added) (R•012414 – Glass Works Auctions 3rd Example appearance) (R•032019)

Apple-Touch-IconAA good number of us bitters collectors are aware of the extremely rare, Dr. Goddin’s Compound Gentian Bitters from Richmond, Virginia. There are two variants and they are both aqua, square and very architectural in design with fluted vertical ribs and a gorgeous geometric sculpted shoulder. Variant 1 (G 52) has Richmond, Va embossed on the bottle and the other variant (G 51) is without this Richmond copy and an abbreviated ‘Compound’. I am fortunate to have both examples in my collection (pictured below). Jeff Burkhard has an example (without Richmond) and I believe another midwest collector has an example with the Richmond copy. I suppose there are others but I have not had the opportunity to see.

What many bitters collectors may not know, is that there is an almost identical bottle in amber, embossed J T Wiggins Gentian Bitters. This is the story of the two brands, or at least part of the story where I try to answer the question “are they related?”

Dr. Goodin’s Compound Gentian Bitters

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

G 51 DR. GODDIN’S COMP GENTIAN BITTERS
DR. GODDIN’S / COMP GENTIAN BITTERS // 3 vertical ribs /
f // 3 vertical ribs //
9 5/8 x 3 (7 1/8) 1/2
Square, Aqua, LTC, Applied mouth, Extremely rare
G 52 DR. GODDIN’S COMPOUND GENTIAN BITTERS
DR GODDIN’S / COMPOUND / GENTIAN BITTERS / RICHMOND. VA. // three vertical ribs // f // 3 vertical ribs //
9 5/8 x 3 (7 1/8) 1/2
Fancy square, Aqua, LTC, Applied mouth, Extremely rare
Compound abbreviated on the G.51 variant. G 52 has Richmond, Va. embossing.
Goodins Bitters

G 51: Dr. Goddin’s Comp Gentian Bitters (without Richmond, Va) – Meyer Collection

Goddins_eBay1wRichmond

G 52: Dr. Goddin’s Compound Gentian Bitters (with Richmond Va) – Meyer Collection

Goddins_RonaldBittersFSnap

Amber THE GREAT DR GODDIN’S COMPOUND GENTIAN BITTERS, AMERICAN TONIC with back embossed M.A.M. GODDIN M.D., RICHMOND, VA.. Despite it’s missing neck, still an impressive bitters that is listed in the Ring/Ham Bitters book as extremely rare in aqua and unknown in this amber color. The amber is an oval shape, which differs from the square shape of the aqua. – Ronald Hinsley (from antique bottles.com, February 2003, Reggie Lynch)

Reverend Norman Avery Harwood Goddin ‘aka’ Dr. Goddin

b. 1828, Death: Apr. 7, 1892, Norfolk City, Virginia

Excerpt: In 1855, 18-year old Ellen married 27-year old Rev. Norman Avery Harwood Goodin of Henrico Co, Virginia, youngest son of Capt. John O. Goddin and Roxana Ford. Her husband, N.A.H. Goodin was at that time a Methodist minister in Enfield, and shortly after their marriage they removed to Wilson, North Carolina (where her brother Alpheus P. Branch, of BB&T Bank fame, had settled). Here they would become parents to two known children: James W. Goddin (1857-aft 1880), and Ida Goddin, who died in infancy about 1859.

When the Civil War broke out, her husband enlisted and was commissioned Captain with Company G. of the North Carolina 5th. The 5th North Carolina Infantry Regiment was organized at Halifax, North Carolina in July 1861. Ordered to Virginia and joined with General Longstreet when they arrived at Manassas on July 19th, 1861, and fought in the Battle of First Manassas. It later was brigaded under Generals: Early, Garland, Iverson and R. D. Johnston. It served in the Army of Northern Virginia in the campaigns from Williamsburg (1862) to Cold Harbor (June 1864); and served under General Early during the Shenandoah campaign in August 1864, later Petersburg and Appomattox campaigns.

In 1861, Ellen took sick and her husband resigned his commission on August 17, 1861 to return to her side. She lasted but a few months, and died on December 4, 1861. She was only 24 years old. She is buried here with her infant child, Ada, and memorialized on the same monument erected for her brother, Alpheus P. Branch.

After Ellen’s death, her husband returned to Enfield where he would later marry Ellen’s older sister in 1862, Rebecca Branch (1829-1895), the widow of Edward Tillery of Enfield, Halifax County. Rebecca came to the marriage with two Tillery children – Olivia Tillery (1850-1897) and Mary Eliza Tillery (1853-aft 1880). Rebecca would raise her nephew, James; and she and Rev. Goddin would have 2 sons together – Wellington L. Goddin (1863-1883) and Norman Avery (1867-1883). Rev. Goddin was known to still be in Enfield as late as 1867, where he performed marriages.

For reasons unknown, Rev. Goddin left the ministry, and by 1870, had returned to Richmond, VA where he became involved in the patent medicine business, and later opened a drug store under the name Goddin & Tribbett. From this point forward he was referred to as Dr. Goddin; however, whether he ever received a medical degree is not known. It is known he had several patented medicines, or “bitters” as they were known. [Find a Grave]

I think the above information may be incorrect regarding Goddin & Tribett. Norman Avery Harwood Goddin was a physician in Richmond and I can not find a link to him and Goddin & Tribbett who were grocers. His father was Capt. John Otey Goddin (b 1780 – d 22 Feb 1865). Capt. John Goddin owned Goddin’s Tavern (pictured below).

GoddinsTavern

Goddin’s Tavern. Built about 1791 and demolished in 1912, Richmond, Virginia. Capt. John Otey Goddin ran it for two decades.

Other records show a John Marshall Goddin being a partner of Goddin & Tribbitt (see obit below). As to who put out the Goddin’s Compound Gentian Bitters, I can not confirm at this point if it was John Marshall Goddin or Norman Avery Harwood Goddin. I also wonder why the older amber Goddin bottle pictured above is embossed M.A.M. GODDIN? Could this embossing really be ‘N A M’ for Norman Avery Harwood Goddin? So many questions…

JohnMarshallGoddinObit

John Marshall Goddin obituary – Richmond Dispatch, October 2, 1886

J T Wiggins Gentian Bitters

Where this gets really interesting is when you know that there is another brand, J T Wiggins Gentian Bitters that is very similar in many ways. The Wiggins is an extremely rare, amber bottle in almost the exact mold. I have only seen and held one example and that was with Howard Crowe (Gold Hill, North Carolina), when he had the bottle under his table a few years back at the Baltimore Antique Bottle Show. His bottle is perfect and was the only known example (that I am aware of) until one showed up on ebay a few years back. This was snagged by Jeff Burkhardt in Cedarburg, Wisconsin. That bottle is pictured in this post (top of post with the Dr. Goddin’s Compound Gentian Bitters and both pictures below).

JT_Wiggins1

W 108.3: J T Wiggins Gentian Bitters – Burkhardt Collection

JT_Wiggins2

J T Wiggins Gentian Bitters – Burkhardt Collection

WigginsGWA

“J.T. WIGGINS / GENTIAN BITTERS”, (Ring/Ham, W-108.3), American, ca. 1865 – 1875, amber semi-cabin, 9 7/8”h, smooth base, applied mouth. A 1/4” by 3/8” milky iridescent bruise is on a side panel. Another is on a shoulder panel above the vertical ribbing. Rated as extremely rare, probably one of only two or three, known examples! – Glass Works Auctions (January 2014) – Meyer Collection

“J. T. WIGGINS / GENTIAN BITTERS”, America, 1870 – 1880. Golden amber, semi-cabin with beveled roof edges, 2 sides with 3 vertical columns each, applied sloping collar – smooth base, ht. 9 ¾”; (a little light exterior wear including a few open surface bubbles, approx. 1/8″ to 3/8″; a bit of very faint spotty haze, primarily on the back label panel and in the base). R/H #W108.3. Extremely rare, believed to be one of only two known examples, the other being sold back in 1991.- American Glass Gallery | Auction #22

Very little is known about the J T Wiggins Gentian Bitters except a clue from Howard Crowe relayed to Jeff Burkhardt. Jeff relates the following:

“The bottle would appear to be from exactly the same mold as the aqua DR. GODDIN’S COMPOUND GENTIAN BITTERS, a Richmond, Virginia bottle. In speaking to Howard Crowe regarding the rarity and origin of the bottle, Howard told me research done by the original owner of his example indicated it may be from Wilmington, North Carolina”

“The bottle is extremely rare. To Howard’s knowledge, mine and his are the only two known examples. Howard has shown his to Jim Hagenbuch, who replied “I’ve never seen this one before”. The bottle was not listed in Carlyn Ring’s book, but is W-108.3 in Ham’s 1st volume, Bitters Bottles. Bottom line: Two known examples, maybe a 3rd exists.”

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

W 108.3  J T WIGGINS GENTIAN BITTERS

J T WIGGINS / GENTIAN BITTERS // 3 vertical ribs // f // 3 vertical ribs
9 3/4 x 3 (7 1/8) 1/2
Fancy Square, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, Extremely rare
See GENTILIAN BITTERS and DR. GODDINS COMP GENTIAN BITTERS

CLUE #1: Starting with the Wilmington, North Carolina clue, I find the following advertisement (see below) for a Wiggin’s Pure Herb Bitters represented by Adrian & Vollers, Wholesale Dealers and Commission Merchants listed in the 1871 Wilmington, North Carolina Directory. Bingo.

JT Wiggins_SQ

“J.T. WIGGINS / PxUxRxE / HERB BITTERS”, (W-108.5), American, ca. 1875 – 1885, amber, 9 3/4”h, smooth base, applied mouth. A 1/2” in size corner base chip has been polished out. Glass Works Auctions auctioned this bottle in 1995. At that time it was thought to be unique.

The Ring and Ham listing for the Wiggin’s Pure Herb Bitters (see above) is as follows:

W 108.5  J T WIGGINS PURE HERB BITTERS

J T WIGGINS / P x U x R x E /HERB BITTERS // f // f // f //
9 3/4 x 2 1/2 (7) 3/8
Square, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, Extremely rare

WigginsAd1871

Adrian and Vollers – Wiggins’ Pure Herb Bitters noted – 1871 Wilmington, North Carolina Directory

This next advertisement below, actually ties the two brands together. Wow! The Goodins Compound Gentian Bitters is linked to J. T. Wiggins, Proprietary Wholesale Agent as noted in The Old North State, Salisbury, North Carolina, December 10, 1869.

GoodinToWiggins

Goddin’s Compound Gentian Bitters linked to James T. Wiggins, Proprietary Wholesale Agent – The Old North State, Salisbury NC, Dec. 10, 1869

WigginsDrWorthington

Dr. Worthington’s sold by James T. WigginsThe Wilmington Morning Star, 21 December 1869

So, we now have Richmond and Norfolk, Virginia and Wilmington, North Carolina linking in this story.

James Thomas Wiggins – Wilson, North Carolina

James T. Wiggins was born 1844 in Henderson, Granville County (now Vance County), North Carolina, the youngest of three known surviving children (1 girl/2 boys) born to farmer Thomas T. Wiggins and his wife, Lucy Ann Lewis.

He was the paternal grandson of Thomas Wiggins (1777-1815) and Cealy Mitchell; and great grandson of Frederick Wiggins (ca. 1748-1836) and his (1st) wife Sarah Smith, all of Henderson, Granville County. On his mother’s side, he was the maternal grandson of Joseph Lewis and Elizabeth Walker of Granville County.

James’ father died before 1850 and his mother struggled to support her family. When the Civil War came, James would serve as a Sergeant with the North Carolina 54th; while his older brother, Joseph, served and died with the North Carolina 24th. His sister died in 1862, so by the wars end, James was the sole surviving sibling.

WigginsCottage

James T. Wiggins built this charming Italianate cottage in 1872 for himself and his wife.

In 1868, James married Ella Bland Gilliam, daughter of Thomas Booth Gilliam and Julia Foster of Virginia, who had settled in Wilson which was a quaint southern town located 40 miles east of Raleigh, North Carolina. The couple settled in Wilson, and although they had a long marriage, it was childless. Wiggins built the above charming Italianate cottage in 1872 for himself and his wife.

James was a retail merchant and ran a general store for some years where I would suspect the J T Wiggins Gentian Bitters was manufactured and sold around 1869 or so. He was also a tobacco planter, ran the town’s sawmill and helped develop the local school system. He would eventually become the Mayor of Wilson in 1899, but he eventually settled into real estate.

James T. Wiggins died in 1926 at the age of 81. His wife of 58 years would survive him 9 years. Ella died in 1935 at age 84.

It is important to note here that we now have record of Goddin and Wiggins both being in Wilson, North Carolina during the same tome period.

CLUE #2 is that both brands use the word “Gentian“.

Gentian is a herb. The root of the plant and, less commonly, the bark are used to make medicine. Gentian is used for digestion problems such as loss of appetite, fullness, intestinal gas, diarrhea, gastritis, heartburn, and vomiting. It is also used for fever, hysteria, and high blood pressure. Some people use gentian to prevent muscle spasms, treat parasitic worms, start menstrual periods, and as a germ killer. Gentian is applied to the skin for treating wounds and cancer. Gentian is used in combination with European elderflower, verbena, cowslip flower, and sorrel for treating symptoms of sinus infections (sinusitis). It is used in combination with other products for malaria. In foods and beverages, gentian is used as an ingredient. In manufacturing, gentian is used in cosmetics.

Alrich Adrian & Henry Vollers, Wilmington, North Carolina

1865: ADRIAN & VOLLERS, Wholesale Grocers and Liquor Dealers, Commission Merchants and Provision Dealers, Corner of Dock and Front Streets.

Standing prominently forward among the great commercial houses of this city, this extensive and veteran house has claims upon the attention of the reviewer of the business interests of Wilmington that are possessed by few houses in the city. The high character earned by nearly twenty years of honorable business enterprise, the great resources and facilities accumulated and acquired during that time, the experience of the wants of the trade, gained by long observation of its requirements, and the energy, business ability and liberality that characterizes all operations of the house, command for it a conspicuous and honored position among the mercantile institutions of the country. The establishment was founded by its present proprietors in 1865, and has from the start exerted a wholesome and continually increasing influence in the support and promotion of the interests of the City of Wilmington as a center of supply for the large area tributary to the city, particularly in the lines to which the house is specially devoted. They supply a heavy and growing trade throughout both North and South Carolina, their annual transactions in all lines amounting to more than half a million of dollars. Their stock of groceries and liquors is probably the largest in the city, being of an average value of $60,000. They also transact a large general commission business, and are extensive dealers in all kinds of provisions. Their business premises are centrally located, large and commodious, the building being a two-story structure, 60×150 feet in dimensions. In the different departments of the house, they employ eighteen assistants and keep two traveling salesmen constantly on the road.

The individual members of the firm are Messrs. A. Adrian and H. Vollers, both natives of Germany and residents of Wilmington thirty and thirty-five years, respectively. Each of these gentlemen have at different times been members of the City Board of Aldermen. They employ a large capital in their business, and the aggregate of their trade constitutes an important factor in the commercial wealth and progress of Wilmington.

Adrian&Vollers1868

Adrian & Vollers advertisement – The Wilmington Morning Star, 8 January 1868

1885: ADRIAN COMPANY, Wholesale Grocers, Front and Dock Streets.

The largest proportion of the wholesale grocery trade of Wilmington is with merchants away from the city, and almost exclusively in heavy groceries. The business of the above named house differs from others in this respect, inasmuch as it supplies chiefly the trade of the city and adjacent towns, not only with staple goods, but with every description of groceries. The business was founded some forty years ago as Adrian & Vollers. It was incorporated under its present designation about six years ago. The company occupy central premises at the above address, consisting of a store, with a warehouse at the rear. Here they carry a complete and most diversified line of staple and fancy groceries, making a specialty of case goods, table delicacies, etc.

Alrich Adrian

Alrich Adrian (1834-1897); and wife, Christine Fraas (1850-1937), natives of Germany. Adrian was a city alderman and co-owner of Adrian & Vollers, wholesale grocery.

Adrian&VollerHouse

Alrich Adrian built the Tuscan Villa style house in 1875 in Wilmington, North Carolina. Adrian was a city alderman and co-owner of Adrian & Vollers, wholesale grocery.

Henry Louis Vollers

HenryLouisVollersPortrait of Henry Vollers. Henry Louis Vollers (1859-1922) was born in Wilmington, North Carolina, the son of German immigrants. Vollers was in the grocery business, a member of the firm of Turrentine, Vollers & Company in 1889. He opened his own wholesale grocery business, H. L. Vollers Company, several years later and was also President of the Independent Manufacturing Company, which operated a shingle mill in Castle Hayne, North Carolina. Vollers served as a member of the Board of County Commissioners from 1900 to 1912, and was director of both the Wilmington Savings Bank and Trust Company and the Murchison National Bank. He was an active member of St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, where he served as secretary of the Church Council for 28 years. He is buried in Oakdale Cemetery.

1890: VOLLERS & HASHAGEN, Wholesale Provisions, Cigars, Etc. A. C. L. Crossing.

The transactions of this city in grain, provisions and other staple food products are very large and are annually expanding. The above named enterprise serves to forcibly illustrate the character and magnitude of the business. This enterprise was founded in 1890 and has since steadily developed and grown. The firm occupy extensive premises at the above indicated address, comprising a warehouse 300×30 in area. It is admirably located for the receipt and shipment of goods, the railroad tracks entering the premises, so that goods can be loaded and unloaded at the doors. The firm are extensive handlers of salted meats, corn, oats, hay, flour, etc. They are in direct connection with the products of leading packers and flour mills of the West and obtain their supplies under the most favorable conditions. Goods are obtained in car load lots direct from the mills, elevators and packers to destination without breaking bulk. The business of this house in its particular department is perhaps equal to any other in this locality. At any rate it is certain that no similar establishment has better inducements to offer the trade. As regards flour, the firm sell this staple under their own brands. Of these we would mention “Q,” a fancy straight, “Silver Corn,” a fancy straight and “Stock’s Best,” a fancy patent flour. All of the above are in demand with the public and therefore with the trade. A special department of the business of this firm is their cigar trade. Messrs. Vollers & Hashagen are exclusive handlers throughout North and South Carolina of the celebrated goods made by the former house of Powell, Smith & Co., New York, which is now merged into the American Cigar Co. Of these in especial demand and standard on the market are “Cuban Blossom,” “Renown,” “Topical Twist,” and “Cremos,” five-cent cigars of the very best quality and of established popularity. The firm do a very large trade in these and probably sell about three-quarters of all cigars sold in this city. The individual members of the firm are H. L. Vollers and F. C. Hashagen, both of whom are well known business men. Mr. Vollers is a director of the Atlantic National Bank and of the Wilmington Savings and Trust Company. Mr. Hashagen is a director of a building and loan association and generally identified with the material welfare of the city. The firm, with all facilities and ample capital, is in every way in a position to attract and hold its full share of legitimate patronage.

Constantly in store and transit large supplies of PROVISIONS, GROCERIES, Liquors, Foreign and Domestic, Cigars and Tobacco, Also Agents for Udolpho Wolfe’s Celebrated Scheidam Schnapps, Imported Wines and Liquors.

Excerpt

From merchants in New York, Baltimore and Philadelphia. Additional contributions were made by a number of Wilmington citizens who gave building material, furniture, and books. Mr. W. P. Clyde, proprietor of the Clyde Line, donated $50 and made no charge for freight on many articles procured in the North, such as stained glass windows, the bell, carpet, etc. The ladies of the congregation, partly by collections and partly by a fair, raised a large sum of money. Messrs. Adrian and Vollers donated the bell, of 1,000 pounds weight, on which are cast the following inscriptions in raised letters:

On one side – Presented by Adrian and Vollers to the St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church Wilmington, N. C, 1868 And on the other side – “I TO THE CHURCH THE LIVING CALL AND TO THE GRAVE I SUMMON ALL.” – History of St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, Wilmington, North Carolina, 1858-1958 (1958)

CLUE #3: Mold Similarity (from Jeff Burkhardt)

I have compared  the embossing “GENTIAN  BITTERS” on both the Wiggins and Goddin’s, and find the embossed characters and position of same, to be identical. This leads me to believe that the “slugged-out” characters before the word GENTIAN on the Wiggins bottle, were once the embossing “COMP.” from the Goddin’s mold.

Attached are pictures of the faint “slug-out” and embossing of each. This means the Goddin’s is earlier, the mold for which was later modified and used by Wiggins. From your research, it appears James T. Wiggins was the link between these two bitters. Did Goddin’s sell the rights to his product to Wiggins? Did J. T. then go with a modified amber version of Goddin’s bottle to further market the product as his own? If so, couldn’t have been too successful as attested to by the rarity of the Wiggins mold.

WigginsSlugPlate

Slugged-out characters before the word “GENTIAN” on the Wiggins bottle, were once the embossing “COMP.” from the Goddin’s mold – Photo Jeff Burkhardt

WigginsEmbossingDetail

Partial embossing on the J T WIGGINS GENTIAN BITTERS – Photo Jeff Burkhardt

GoddinsEmbossingDetail

Partial embossing on the DR. GODDIN’S COMP GENTIAN BITTERS – Photo Jeff Burkhardt

Posted in Bitters, Civil War, History, Medicines & Cures, Questions, Tonics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

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

GreenMountainART

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

by Ken Previtali

01 December 2013

Regarding the post on “Artificially Purpled Glass” with the link to David Whitten’s fantastic website:

David also mentions the effects radiation has on bottles containing selenium. “Clear glass that was originally decolorized by using selenium as the active ingredient instead of manganese (the use of selenium was particular prevalent in the 1920s and 1930s and later) may turn strange shades of “burnt amber” or “smoky dull dark brown” under irradiation. . .”

GingerAleColoring

Here’s an Art Deco example from the late 20s or early 30s made by the F. E. Reed Glass Company, Rochester, NY (ginger ale, of course). Green Mountain Ginger Ale Company, Manchester, NH (a noteworthy location in July 2013). The irradiated bottle (on right) was a gift from Carl Pratt a few years ago.

In his article, David describes the un-articifical way clear glass will turn purple: “Glass containing enough manganese may naturally slowly turn some shade of very light to medium purple after several years of exposure to the rays of the sun.” Bottles with selenium content from the same period can have a subtle overall tint in a light yellowish brown or “straw” color, which I believe is a result of the same natural process David describes for “sun-colored amethyst”. They are not very common (or perhaps overlooked), and I don’t know how long it takes for the chemical change to take place. Anyone for “sun-colored straw”?

A long time southern collector I knew for many years (now passed on), was fond of selling irradiated bottles. He was very strict in labeling the bottles and clearly telling buyers that the bottles had been altered and were not the original color. I asked him one day how he turned his bottles. Here’s the story pretty much as he told it:

“I live near a poultry processing plant and the manager was a friend of mine. Since I knew that chickens were routinely irradiated I asked him if he could “zap” my bottles, and he said sure bring ’em on down. I brought about ten boxes of ones I thought would turn. He told me ‘Set the boxes here at the head of the conveyor line and my guys will plop ’em on the belt. You go way down to the other end of the plant and pick ’em off the line when they come through.’ Well, with my white visitor’s coat on, I went down as he said and waited. There were a couple of fellas there watching the production line. I said nothing, and I guess they figured I was an inspector or something. It was chicken, chicken, chicken, chicken, chicken on the belt for a while. Then came chicken, chicken, box, chicken, chicken, box, chicken, chicken, box and so on. I pulled them off as they came through. The fellas didn’t know what to make of it as their boss hadn’t told them. The look on their faces when those boxes came through! I told them what was going on, and gave each a nice purple bottle when it was all over.”

From clear to purple or brown that’s how irradiation runs. . . whether by machine or by sun.

Posted in Advice, Collectors & Collections, Color, Ginger Ale, Questions, Scams & Frauds, Soda Bottles, Soft Drinks, Technology | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments