Pole Top Discoveries & Glass Discoveries | Auction #68 Review

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Pole Top Discoveries & Glass Discoveries

Auction #68 Review

Just sitting here in amazement at how many great, diverse and gorgeous insulators Ray Klingensmith has put in his Auction #68 that just went online last night. The colors are just spectacular. Check it out. I have put together a few of my favorites that really stood out. The photography and descriptions are stellar too, as usual Visit Auction


PilgramHats_PTDsq

CD 737.5

Unmarked “Pilgrim Hat.”

Ice green

PilgramHats_PTD

CD 737.5 Unmarked “Pilgrim Hat”, Ice green, Height 3”, The diameter of the dome is much smaller than the diameter of the wire groove. Typically, most pilgrim hat insulators are constructed with a wire groove and dome of the same diameter. A rarely encountered hat, with only a handful confirmed to exist. Most are reported to have surfaced in the Maritime region of eastern Canada, and were likely used on one or more early telegraph lines constructed by American telegraph companies in the 1850s. Estimated: $5,000 – $7,000


502sq

CD 737

Unmarked,“Pilgrim Hat.”

Dark olive amber

PilgramsHat_Black_PTD

CD 737, Unmarked,“Pilgrim Hat.”, Dark olive amber. The overall contours of this large, impressive pilgrim hat threadless differ from the similar CD 738 in several aspects. The sides of the insulator between the skirt and dome traverse in a perfectly straight line, rather than being curved above the skirt and in the wire groove, as seen on CD 738. The cavity between the base and pinhole is also larger and more open on the CD 737. Note the very flat top and sharp corner on the dome. Only seven or eight of this impressive mold variant have been observed in the past four decades, indicating they are much rarer than the unmarked CD 738. Attributed to a Stoddard, New Hampshire glass house, as an example was found by a bottle collector who excavated Stoddard glass factory sites. Estimated: $1,800 – $2,200


505b_sq

CD 735

U.P.R.R., MULFORD & BIDDLE

Rich dark blue

Mulford&Biddle

CD 735, U.P.R.R., MULFORD & BIDDLE, Rich dark blue,The CD 735 threadless insulators with “U.P.R.R.” embossing were produced for use on the historic, first transcontinental railroad line in America. Although most examples found are aquamarine in coloration, various blue examples have also been found in central and eastern Wyoming. Examples of this rich blue shade were dug from a dump near the old U.P.R.R. grade west of Rawlins, Wyoming in the late 1960’s. Estimate: $ 1,200 – $ 1,500


510b-1sq

CD 740.7

Unmarked, “High Dome Canadian Hat”

Green

HighDomeCanadianInsulator

CD 740.7, Unmarked, “High Dome Canadian Hat”, Green, Circa 1857-1859. A seldom encountered hat style threadless from Canada. The CD 740.7 has a base and skirt similar to the CD 740. From the wire groove upward, however, there are some dramatic differences. The wire ridge on these units is sharply pronounced, the dome is quite high and the top is flat. This design has been found in limited numbers. Some were used on the Port Hope, Lindsay & Beaverton Railway which opened in 1857. A section of the main line Grand Trunk Railway in Southwestern Ontario, and the Ottawa & Prescott Railway also used this type. Estimate: $ 2,500 – $ 3,000


517bSQ

CD 740.4

Unembossed

Bubble, carbon filled aqua

InsulatorCarbonFilled

CD 740.4, Unembossed, Bubble, carbon filled aqua. An amazing example of a scarce CD! The glass is loaded with thousands of bubbles and an abundance of carbon, creating a slag-like appearance. Nearly the entire insulator has “contamination,” as can be seen in the three photographs provided. This design has been found primarily in New York State, mostly on railroad right of ways. At least one of those railroads was completed in 1869 or 1870, indicating a possible rather late production date in the threadless era, at least for some examples. Estimate: $ 3,200 – $ 4,500


519bSQ

CD 740

Unembossed

Dark yellow

CD740DarkYellow

CD 740, Unembossed, Dark yellow, Phenomenal coloration that passes plenty of light through the entire insulator when displayed in a north window. Sold in the 1996 Richard Gay Collection Auction conducted by Pole Top Discoveries, and has been locked into a collection since. Great items such as this have a way of disappearing from the market for decades. Estimate: $ 3,000 – $ 4,000


527_SQ

CD 731

TILLOTSON

Rich blue

TillotsonRichBlue

CD 731, TILLOTSON, Rich blue, A wonderful example with great color saturation! Different than the lighter sapphire blue examples and more teal/midnight toned than cobalt blue. Certainly an attractive and desirable variant for the threadless collector! Estimate: $ 3,500 – $ 4,500


545_SQ

CD 317.5

CHAMBERS, PAT AUG 14 1877, PATENT DEC 19 1871

Rich green aqua

CD317_5_Chambers

CD 317.5, CHAMBERS, PAT AUG 14 1877, PATENT DEC 19 1871, Rich green aqua, The CD 317.5 and CD 317 were both used in the same manner, supporting the horizontal cable on a lightning protection system. The CD 317.5 “Bell Chambers” is much scarcer than the CD 317. Only a limited number have been found. Estimate: $ 2,000 – $ 2,400


544b_SQ

CD 130.1

CAL. ELEC. WORKS. PATENT

Bright cobalt blue

CaliforniaElecWorks

CD 130.1, CAL. ELEC. WORKS. PATENT, Bright cobalt blue. One of the all time “classic” insulators. The combination of highly unusual design, rarity and fabulous color make these beauties one of the most desirable insulators in the hobby. The majority of those in collections have been found along the Ridge Telephone line route, which was constructed shortly after the formation of the California Electrical Works in 1877. The line was built for controlling water used in hydraulic mining. This was one of the first long distance telephone lines in the world, extending from French Corral, North San Juan, and Graniteville to reservoirs high in the mountains to the east. Great condition! Of the eight individual sections forming the wire groove, four are perfect! Two have only the very corner edge grazed, and two have flaking on only a portion of the projection. Estimate: $ 6,500 – $ 7,500


566b_SQ

CD 151

H.G. CO., PETTICOAT

Olive green with amber streaks

CD151_HG_CO

CD 151, H.G. CO., PETTICOAT, Olive green with amber streaks, A great mix of yellow green, olive and amber creates an attractive beauty! Colorful 151’s such as this are rarely encountered. How many have been for sale in the past 10 years? Estimate: $ 4,000 – $ 6,000


599_Sq

CD 199

Embossed Prism

Green and aqua two tone

CD199_Prism

CD 199, Embossed prism, Green and aqua two tone, These large, impressive transposition style insulators are quite attractive, especially in this rare color mix! The only example we have seen or heard of in this wonderful color. Estimate: $ 1,800 – $ 2,300


580b-SQ

CD 162

H.G. CO. PATENT MAY 2 1893

Brilliant yellow

CD162_Yellow_PTD

CD 162, H.G. CO. PATENT MAY 2 1893, Brilliant yellow, This is the highly sought, true yellow HG Co signal. Although the yellow Hemingray 19 is available for purchase occasionally, this is not so true with the more radiant HG Co, which rarely surfaces for sale. Estimate: $ 2,200 – $ 2,800


643b_SQ

CD 266.5

PATENTED JUNE. 17. 1890

Green

CD266_5

CD 266.5, PATENTED JUNE. 17. 1890, Green, An item which has been “in the hobby” for a number of years, but only recently was discovered to be lacking the typical pair of inner petticoats. Upon notifying Mr. N.R Woodward of the discovery, he immediately assigned the new CD 266.5. The “No 5 Boston Cable” was illustrated in the 1902 C.S. Knowles Catalogue. That drawing shows the insulator with only a single petticoat. Mr. Woodward mentioned another different supplier catalogue also showed this design without inner petticoats. Apparently some were produced with a single petticoat, and then perhaps later, the designing engineers thought to add two inner petticoats to increase the insulating properties. At that time, molds were made with the triple petticoat design, and the CD 266 were produced. The glass of this new CD example was produced in a color different than the CD 266, which is typically dark aqua. Estimate: $ 5,000 – $ 10,000


572_SQ

CD 145, H.G. CO., PETTICOAT

Purple

CD145_Purple

CD 145, H.G. CO., PETTICOAT, Purple, The narrow skirt variant. Excellent saturation of color! A great contrasting color to all the differing green HG beehives. Estimate: $ 900 – $ 1,200


584b_SQ

CD 162

H.G. CO. PATENT MAY 2 1893

Red amber oxblood

CD162_Oxblood

CD 162, H.G. CO. PATENT MAY 2 1893, Red amber oxblood, Bright, red toned glass. The color is identical to the darker oxblood offered in Lot #565, just a lighter version. Transition embossing. These are highly sought items. Sold by Pole Top Discoveries several years ago, where strong collector interest escalated the bidding to double the low estimate shown here! Estimate: $ 1,400 – $ 1,800


Posted in Advice, Auction News, Insulators | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Memphis, Yellow Fever and “The Great Bottle Treasure Map of 1880”

MemphisYellowFever_HW

A Harper’s magazine sketch of a hospital scene during the yellow fever epidemic.

Ferdinand, here is the article on “The Great Memphis Bottle Treasure Map of 1880“. The newly founded National Board of Health conducted a Sanitary
Survey in the winter of 1879-1880. Yellow Fever hit Memphis hard in 1878, over 5,000 people died that year.

They began a house to house Survey in Ward 1, the oldest section of the city in late 1879…Exact locations of privies, wells, cisterns, and all buildings were logged….Most privies in this business area were inside or alongside the buildings.

This article may cause some diggers to rethink and perhaps revisit some sites that were less that fruitful. A little food for thought? 5,914 Privies were mapped!

Thanks, Reg Shoeman

Memphis-1880

NATIONAL BOARD OF HEALTH

The Original Outhouse Patrol

Memphis, Yellow Fever and “The Great Bottle Treasure Map of 1880”

BaltoPrivyReportCover

Link above to Report On Sanitary Survey of Memphis, TN  See Pages 416-441

I guess I have always been a researcher, as a kid I would take the family maps and atlases to the “john” to research and dream about some far away place. In my 20’s I began using metal detectors, I researched old homesteads and amusement parks to hunt for coins, with mixed results. Some years later I began water hunting in Clear Lake, and Okoboji in Iowa, I had shifted to scoops, screens and underwater metal detectors by this time.

Metal detectors did work well, at least in swimming areas (8 gold rings in one day was my best haul). But not gold, no grub, so after a streak of about 30 sterling rings in a row with no gold, a local welder fabricated a rectangular metal basket with half inch mesh in the bottom and stainless steel cutting blades. We attached a 5 foot (later 10 foot) T Handle and waded into Clear Lake alongside the 1870’s dock area at the end of Main street.

Success was almost immediate, in an area metal detectorists had shunned as being “to junky”, up from the bottom came Silver Dollars, half dollars, change of all sorts, trade tokens, watches, brooches, coin purses, some great  costume jewelry, (a belated thank you to all of the women who kept me in beer money!), intact pieces of flow blue china, and more than a few bottles…Sometimes the bottles came up in the scoop, other times they just floated to the surface. The “floaters” all had plant growth inside,  once loosened from the lake bottom by the scoop they magically appeared. Divers tell me gasses generated by the vegetable matter are responsible.

Over the next few years I gravitated to the hunt for bottles, while appreciating the history, I am not a collector, I just love the hunt and the research. So most everything was sold, collectible glass turned into gasoline. Like the old prospector told the reporter after finding his gold mine, “Well, I just sold it so I can go find another”!

COURTHOUSE RESEARCH

While living in Las Vegas, Nevada members of the bottle club began digging in the old town of Pioche, Nevada where the boom lasted from about 1869-1872. While a number of histories had been written on Pioche, nobody knew where all of the saloons, hotels, and other sites were. But, I wanted to know! I wandered down to the Lincoln County Courthouse with no background in research, but managed to find business license receipts, treasurers books, and other sources. Nothing had been thrown away, I got lucky.…I was able to put together a color coded map of the business district, it was on the job training, but I learned how to research.

ONLINE RESEARCH

When I was exposed to NewspaperArchive.com I was off to the races. Keyword searches were indeed the key….I tried various searches to find out where bottles might be hidden. For example, cellar filled, dump (actually a more modern term and returns were limited), privy attached, refuse, trash and other terms, I did find info, but most of these terms never made the paper………and then came Google Books!

Less than 5 years ago, I believe, Google spent about $5,000,000 or more to scan many book that are in the public domain, such as Canal Commissioners Reports, Philadelphia Common Council, Boards of Health, City Ordinances, and many others. So this time, instead of a few hits as on a newspaper search, I got many hits just by trying privy, privies, water closet, well condemned and many others. The medical profession was researching causes of diseases such as cholera, diphtheria, and yellow fever.

In a numer of journals I found maps, suspect wells that were found to be contaminated, they showed the privies, often close to the well…..I started getting returns for ordinances: Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Keokuk, many other cities, some very revealing, at least for a bottle digger, “No privies over 2 feet deep” says the New Orleans ordinance of 1877. Privies must be attached to the dwelling, says the Savannah, Georgia code from 1831-1871. What? I new some were attached, but mandated?  Many other diggers told me they were usually out back….I was beginning to doubt they were  usually “out back” very often, at least in the more densely populated areas of cities…….The crowded tenements and the main business areas.

I continued searching, gathering enough ordinances to put together what I thought would be a pretty nice article. One day I was trying the phrase “ Memphis Privies” from a 1880 National Board of Health report: Total Number of Privies: 5,914. Was this the Holy Grail of bottle diggers? 6,000 privies, bitters, whiskies, sodas, pontiled stuff?  It could be!

“The Great Memphis Bottle Treasure Map of 1880”

Yellow fever struck Memphis, Tennessee in the summer of 1878. Before the frosts came in October half of the city’s population of 50,000 had fled, 5,000 were dead, and many thousands more had been infected, but survived the mosquito borne virus.

In 1878 there was no sewer system, animals were left rotting in the streets. Memphis was named the most unhealthy city in America with the US Surgeon General calling it a national disgrace. Visitors to the city reported the stench was so bad you could smell it from 5 miles away.

Congress created the National Board of Health (1879-1883) in the Summer of 1879. No one knew the cause of yellow fever, but the Board attempted to find it. One of it’s first large projects was to organize a “Sanitary Survey” of the city of Memphis, “ including a careful house to house inspection”.

Careful is a bit of an understatement, as we can see from the sample inspection sheet below. The inspection sheet contained location, condition, and dimensions of the privies, when they inspected basements they also looked for locations of older privies that had been filled….One part of their report indicated some basements  contained 1 to 5 old privy sites “Covering a span of a quarter century”.

MemphisPrivy

Boggy Creek Monster – The Memphis Diggers

NATIONAL BOARD OF HEALTH

1879

Sanitary Inspection of Memphis

  1. Ward__ Street_____No_____
  2. Owner or owners___________
  3. Area of lot____ of house____ out houses____
  4. Age of house____ material____
  5. No of stories____
  6. Cellars and basement____
  7. Rooms and passages____
  8. Sinks drains and cesspools____
  9. Privies or water closets location and condition____
  10. Yards____
  11. Hogs or other animals____ fowls____ No ____where kept____
  12. Public nuisances on or near premises____
  13. No of families in house____ names of heads of families_________ No of persons in each specifying No of whites_____ and blacks____
  14. Sickness now in house what diseases____
  15. Any sickness during past year____ what diseases____ No of cases____
  16. Any deaths during past year____ what diseases____
  17. Water supply____ sources of____ and sources of contamination____
  18. Presence of possibly infected material________
  19. Sanitary needs and estimated cost ____

The above is correct as personally examined by me this____ day of____ 18____

Refer to directions often

Inspector______________

Fifty such sheets were put together forming a memorandum book on the back of which was printed the following;

DIRECTIONS

The figures below refer to the corresponding numbers on the other side

See above

1. and 2. Give the exact and full name of the owner or owners of the estate. Give the street and number and describe the location so that it cannot be mistaken

3. Give dimensions of sheds privies stables &c with their relations to living room

5. Examine cellars very carefully and describe their condition particularly with regard to dampness amount and kind of filth ventilation &c

7. Is there any offensive smell from the sinks Are the pipes or spouts watertight Are there any traps to prevent foul air from coming into the rooms Are the spouts broken leaky and filthy Are the sink drains clogged or uncovered Are the cesspools tightly covered and clean Do the cesspools leak into the cellar or into the well

8. Privies and vaults Describe their condition particularly Are they full or running over Are they filthy Is the vault tightly covered Do they smell badly Do the vaults need emptying

9. Describe particularly the kind and amount of all heaps of filth about the premises and the general condition of the yards

11. Public nuisances as sewers stables offensive manufactories &c

12. Note overcrowding

13. 14 15 Inquire particularly

 National Board of Health Bulletin Volume 1 No. 24 Contained the following entries

Ward 1 Survey See Page 167 (see above link)

The  first ward, the oldest part of the city, was selected for the first set of inspections. This is the  area bounded north by Auction street south by the alley between Exchange and Market streets east by Main street and west by the navy yard.

a force of twenty six men subsequently increased was put into the field on  Monday November 24, These were paid at tho rate of two dollars per day and worked in ward squads each ward under the immediate charge of a sanitary inspector detailed by the National Board of Health. These men were furnished with fifty foot measuring tapes, two foot rules, lanterns ,indelible pencils, and printed forms for returns”  NOTE: These guys were the original outhousepatrol!

“Within the area described there are 154 occupied dwelling houses, 20 unoccupied, 3 saloons, 5 junk shops, boarding houses and saloons, 3 negro boarding houses and saloons, 7 tenement houses, 2 barber shops, 1 colored Baptist church, 1 ironworks, 1 lumber yard, 2 blacksmith shops, 1 beef market, 2 large … there are 65 cellars reported greatest depth eight feet…. 32 contain privy vaults all foul not covered varying in depth from twenty to forty five feet Outhouses (the word, at least in 1880, had  no connection with privies) 72 comprising wooden sheds summer kitchens stables and cow sheds.”

 Most privies were located where?

INDOORS or ATTACHED!

The were 192  inspections (referring to lots I believe) made in the first ward ………“Privies 184 of which 32 are in cellars48 in the other parts of the houses with vaults beneath…… 48 adjoining houses and the remainder in the yards at distances of from three to forty feet from living rooms 23 houses without privies the occupants using neighboring ones.” The math says exactly 2/3 of the privies were in, under, or attached to the buildings! Others were very close.

In addition, in the two principal business wards of the city, the third and fourth, more than one third of the buildings were found to have privy vaults in cellars or basements. Many of these buildings are upwards of twenty years old and the cellars contain from one to five vaults each the accumulations of an average of a quarter of a century being imperfectly covered over with ashes or earth.

The following is a general summary of the house to house inspection at Memphis Tenn 1879 – 80

Total number structures and premises inspected 12,096               

structures – 10,873
vacant lots – 1,218                                                                                                                                cemeteries – 5
Total number structures inspected – 10,873
dwellings including 535 with stores or shops attached – 6,386
outhouses – 3,617
stores and office buildings – 48
churches – 51
halls theaters hotels and public buildings – 39
manufactories mills and works – 35
academics and private schools – 22
livery stables and stock yards – 21
cotton presses gins oil mills &c – 17
public schools – 11
public markets and slaughter houses – 6
hospitals and charities – 5
railroad depots and grounds – 5
fire engine houses – 3
jail station and poorhouse – 3
gas and water works – 2
United States Government building – 1

Total number buildings stores dwellings schools &c excluding public building &c as well

as out houses – 7,202
of wood – 5,223
brick – 1,778
wood and brick – 187
stone – 13
iron – 1
under 5 years old – 793
between 5 and 10 years old – 1,731
over 10 years old – 4,678
sub ventilation good – 2,204
bad – 2,030
none – 1,453
with cellars – 891
basements – 624
Total number cellars and basements – 1,515
6 feet deep or less – 342
7 to 8 feet deep – 768
9 feet deep and over deepest 20 feet 405

Total number privies 5,914

under house – 451
adjoining house – 165
within 10 feet of house – 367
between 10 and 50 feet from house – 3,226
over 50 feet from house – 1,705
Total number water closets – 398
Total number urinals – 153
Total number cisterns and wells – 4,744
within 10 feet of privy – 369
between 10 and 50 feet of privy – 3,039
over 50 feet from privy – 1,336

According to the above census of privies, 16.6% of the total numbers, City Wide, were inside, alongside, or within 10 feet. As the ward one survey shows, most privies were close, very close. Main business district examinations which was ward 3 and 5, show more than 1/3 of buildings had privies associated with basement or cellars.

Not only were privies in the commercial district close on board, they were DEEP. Memphis ordinances enacted in 1857 and 1873: It shall be a misdemeanor to construct a vault or privy less than fifteen feet deep.

So, when the smoke, or in this case the smell, had cleared,ninety six folio volumes of inspection returns covering 9,508 inspections have been paginated indexed and grouped by wards in such a manner as to make instant reference to the original inspection of any locality possible Tho tabulation of the returns fills four royal folio volumes containing 170,433 different entries. On these sheets it is believed every structure and individual lot of ground within the corporate limits of Memphis is succinctly described with its sanitary history at the date of the inspection.

THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES

Early in 2011 we hired a professional researcher to hunt the National Archives in an attempt to find all of the data from the Memphis survey. The National Board of Health was eliminated in 1883 after funding was cut off by congress.

The log books from the National Board of Health were locate in the Archives, and it showed  that records from the survey were logged in at the Board of Health. Over 170,000 entries covering the above 9,508 inspections of different sites.

This survey generated a large amount of paper, but a blip compared to the Archives. Destroyed, misfiled, or whatever, to this point at least, it is missing. Some copies apparently went to State Agencies in Tennessee,….the Yellow Fever Museum in Memphis had no knowledge of them, the Tennessee State Archives also does not hold them.

Do They Exist?

The log book from the Board  did make it to the Archives, so there is a reasonable chance, they exist, but the jury is still out.

What else was learned?

This was the only thorough sanitary survey conducted prior to 1900 that logged locations of about 6,000 privies….they were located under floors, in the cellars, attached to the buildings. Of the approximately 200 houses or stores in Ward 1, exactly NONE had a privy more that 40 feet away!

In these same report it was stated that Ward 3 and Ward 5, one third of the buildings, in this, the main business district, had privies in cellars or basements. Unsure what percentage of buildings had basements in those wards, but in Ward 1 it was  at 33%, and almost half had privies. Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps should answer a few of these questions.

The Baltimore Sanitary Survey, done shortly after Memphis was surveyed, showed many privies attached or in the basement. No count of privies in that study, be still very revealing.

Where else should we search?

Many of the same areas we had already hunted, we missed privies because our search failed to cover the entire area. (Hunting “out back” did make sense at the time), but the Memphis study shows in some areas 2/3 of the privies are “Up Front” and seldom way “Out Back”. Half of Memphis basements in Ward 1 had privies. How many dirt cellars still exist in the Eastern state? In big cities probably not many. In the Western mining areas they may still be dirt to some extent. If boom time had come and gone by 1900 or so, some the cellars should be dirt.

The hunt continues!

Reg Shoeman

outhousepatrol@yahoo.com

Read More: Strong clues as to depth and location of Baltimore privies

Read More: Ordinances Regulating Location, Depth, etc. of Urban Privies

Read More: Collector Rights

Posted in Advice, Article Publications, History, Publications, Questions, Regulations, Treasure | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Elvin Moody Bottle Collection pictures surface!

Moody4

Elvin Moody Bottle Collection pictures surface!

11 April 2013

Hi Ferd,

Back in 1982, when I was pretty new to bottle collecting, I had the priviledge to visit Elvin Moody and see his fantastic bottle collection. What a pleasure it was to visit with Elvin and his wife Cherie. Seeing his amazing collection is something that I will never forget. He was very gracious and let me take as many pictures as as wanted. The lighting wasn’t the best, but you can see some great bottles lining the shelves of his bottle room.

He told us that the day before our visit the cleaning lady decided to do a little dusting in the bottle room. Elvin had a couple boxes on the floor from the last bottle show he attended. Rather than pick up the boxes to move them, she just gently kicked them accross the floor. Six bottles in the boxes got damaged/broken! Elvin, laughing as he told us, said he really didn’t get mad at her, but he told her she did not have to dust in the bottle room any more!!!

I’m sure glad I went to see Elvins bottles when I did as he sold off his collection in 1983. Here are some of the better photos, I hope you can use them.

PS – I wish I took a better photo of Elvins’ cobalt fish and I included on photo of his flask collection too. Thanks for the great bottle site you have for all of us to enjoy.

Marty Kuzmic

Apple-Touch-IconAMarty: Thank you so very much! These pictures are stunning and a real missing link in my photo archives of the great collections. This is just spectacular. I recognize so many of the bottles. Some in my collection and many in others. A truly valuable resource. I will refer to these pictures often.


Moody1


Moody2


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Moody8


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Moody11


Posted in Bitters, Collectors & Collections, Color Runs, Figural Bottles, Historical Flasks, Photography | Tagged , , , , , | 6 Comments

Old Dr. Townsend’s Daisy Vases, more common than you think

TownsendsDaisy

OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS

11 April 2013 (R•052914)

“The wife said they had gotten it out of a rural school in Alabama, where it was being used as a flower vase”

TomPhillipsMugFerdinand: About a month and a half ago, a person contacted me and told me she had a very valuable Dr. Townsend’s bottle, like one that sold for $10,000 at auction about 10 years ago. I told her that a Dr. Townsend’s sarsaparilla is a good bottle but not exceptionally valuable. She said it wasn’t a sarsaparilla but rather, a bitters bottle. I asked if it was amber with a glass handle, and she said yes.

We made arrangements for her to bring the bottle to my office. She was a no show and didn’t call to cancel. This wasn’t surprising to me, since I wasn’t convinced she had this extremely rare bottle. She called back a couple of weeks later and told me she had had car trouble and had lost my number. She made a new appointment to come the next day.

“She also told me she had washed it in the dishwasher”

When she arrived at my office, her husband brought in a box of bottles and unwrapped them for me to examine. The first four or five were junkers, but then he unwrapped the prize: a left handled Old Dr. Townsend’s Stomach Bitters. I couldn’t believe they really had one. I looked it over carefully and discovered a small crack at the base of the neck on the back side and a tiny lip flake. Other than that, the bottle was in excellent condition. The wife said they had gotten it out of a rural school in Alabama, where it was being used as a flower vase. She also told me she had washed it in the dishwasher. I pointed out the damage and made them my offer. They thanked me and said they would get back to me with their decision.

A couple of weeks went by, and then I got a call from the wife. She asked me if I could raise my price. I said no, that was the most I could pay. She and her husband accepted my offer and brought the bottle to me that afternoon.

Tom (Phillips) FOHBC Conventions Director

TownsendsEmbossingSlug

Look beneath the word BITTERS and you can see old graphics for BITTERS, specifically the letters ‘ITTE’ in an odd position and with a low arc – photo Ferdinand Meyer V – Meyer Collection

OldDrTownsends_Ham

A left handled and a right handled OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS – Ham Collection

OldDrTownsends_Feldmann

A left handled and a right handled OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS – Feldmann Collection around 2010

Handle on Right side – Very rare

Handle on Left side – Extremely rare

Apple-Touch-IconAWhat I find fascinating with Tom’s e-mail is that the bottle was being used as a flower vase. It even sat on a thin shelf apparently. Now here is the fun part, my example too was used to hold flowers, or so the story goes. It was not cleaned in a dishwasher, I hope. Folks, the Old Dr. Townsend’s has to be one of the most fragile and fragile looking bitters bottles out there with the chestnut form and decorative handle.

The Old Dr. Townsend’s are exceptional bottles. The left handled versions are double pontiled and have remnants of a slug plate and graphics beneath the word ‘Bitters’. I am unsure if this applies to the right handled versions.

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Enjoy the pictures. It’s springtime, so if you have an example, fill it with lukewarm water, drop in a teaspoon of Dr. Townsend’s Magic Gro and put some fresh cut flowers in it. Preferably daisy’s. Put it on the mantle and have a talk with you kids, grand-kids and cat. Also if you put it in the dishwasher, use old Dr. Townsend’s Magic Essence of Spring dishwasher soap. Put it on gentle cycle. No don’t!

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows. At some later point I will develop a special post on this bottle and some of the related brands and artifacts.

T 51  OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS
OLD / DR / TOWNSEND’S / CELEBRATED / STOMACH / BITTERS // c //
L… Old Dr. Townsend’s Celebrated Magic Stomach Bitters
Ralph Pomeroy & Company Proprietors, 41 Jay Street, New York, and London
8 3/4 x 4 1/4 x 2 3/4
Handled chestnut, Amber, ARM, Applied mouth, Rough pontil mark, Handle
on right side – Very rare; Handle on Left side – Extremely rare
Label: The great renovator of the gastric juices. A sure remedy for weak, sour and irritable stomachs, dyspepsia, liver complaint, coughs, colds, asthma, bronchial affections, pains in the bowels. These bitters meet with universal success in all parts of the world.
Patent No. 100, dated November 21, 1862
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OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS – Phillips Example

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OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS – Phillips Example

DrTownsendsPontil_Phillips

OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS – Phillips Example

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OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS – Phillips Example

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Double pontil on OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS – Meyer Example

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OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS (left handled) – Meyer Example

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OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS (left handled) – Meyer Example

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OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS (left handled) – Meyer Example

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OLD DR. TOWNSEND’S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS (right handled) – Bitters Bottles Supplement

Posted in Bitters, Digging and Finding, Humor - Lighter Side, Vases | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

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

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DR. HARTER’S WILD CHERRY BITTERS

Lemon | Lime Juicer

10 April 2013

Apple-Touch-IconANow here is an item that you do not see too often. A Dr. Harter’s Wild Cherry Bitters juice squeezer. Like I have never seen one before for a bitters product. Kind of medieval. It is pretty cool though. Looks like a mechanical bank. I cleaned up the pictures a little bit. Always amazes me where and how these types of products were advertised. Reminds me of the Reed’s Gilt Edge Tonic Clocks.

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Ladystark (the ebay seller), medieval, I think we have A Game of Thrones thing going on here.

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[eBay Listing] RARE 8″ cast iron mechanical lemon or lime juicer advertising Dr. Harter’s Wild Cherry Bitters. Milton George Harter was a medical physician. He established ‘Dr. Harter & Company’ around 1868 and in 1873 a factory was built to produce his medicines including Harter’s Iron Tonic, Harter’s Smoothing Drops, Harter’s Lung Balsam and Harter’s Improved Liniment. In 1885 they marketed Dr. Harter’s Wild Cherry Bitters. This Bitters would become very popular. Base and shaft are nickel plated iron. Black painted wooden handle on crank. The drip bowl of the juicer is iron with a gray baked enamel (granite ware). Excellent working condition and no damage or defects, but about 1/3 of the original nickel plating is gone.- ladystark (100% positive feedback)

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H 050 (Dr Harters)X

Labeled with cork DR. HARTER’S WILD CHERRY BITTERS (H 50) – Meyer Collection

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

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DR. HARTER’S WILD CHERRY BITTERS juicer– ebay

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DR. HARTER’S WILD CHERRY BITTERS juicer– ebay

Posted in Advertising, Advice, Barber Bottles, eBay, Ephemera, Humor - Lighter Side | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Jacob’s Cholera Dysentery and Diarrhea Cordial ensemble

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JACOB’S CORDIAL

Savannah, Georgia

“recommended to females, children, travelers, ships captains and voyagers, laborers, planters as well as the general public.”

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Jacob’s Cordial Advertisement 1859

Apple-Touch-IconAIf you remember a few days back, I did a post on some eye-catching typography and typesetting for Jacobs Cordial. Read: Jacob’s Cordial – Some great typesetting and typography. In that post, near the end, I specifically said “I can not find a picture of this bottle. Can someone help me out? Who was Jacob and where was this cordial made?

Well, let me tell you, not only did I receive an answer but rather a treasure trove and wealth of information came in from none other than Jack Stecher (Rochester, NY). Wait until you read his email and look at his pictures that he so graciously provided. My hat is off Jack. You continually amaze me with your knowledge and your bottle collection.

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Good morning, Ferd:

After viewing and enjoying your recent post on Jacob’s Cordial typesetting and typography, I can add to your inquiry of where and when this product most likely originated. In fact, as you can see by the attached photos, it was manufactured and sold in the 1850s by Dr. Wm. W. Bliss & Co. of Savannah, Georgia, who, it so states, graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

My bottle has sealed contents, wrapper, advertising pamphlet and a broadside expounding its many virtues. As advertised profoundly in the ad circular, it’s recommended to females, children, travelers, ships captains and voyagers, laborers, planters as well as the general public. Most all testimonials are dated 1853-54 and identify locales in both Georgia and Newark, New Jersey. It is also interesting to note it prescribes dosages all the way from the aged down to the newborn. Please feel free to use any or all the attached photos.

In closing, please also note that the Rochester, New York Bottle Show will be held Sunday, April,21, with dealer set up on Saturday, April 20. Anyone can access more information by going to the GVBCA website. View Show Ad

Jack


Jacks – JACOB’S CORDIAL ensemble

“my bottle has sealed contents, wrapper, advertising pamphlet and a broadside expounding its many virtues.”

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Read more about Jack an his bottles…

Jack Stecher and his John Moffat Phoenix Bitters

Some of Jacks labeled Upstate New York Bitters

Posted in Advertising, Collectors & Collections, Cordial, Ephemera, History, Medicines & Cures, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Strong clues as to depth and location of Baltimore privies

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Ferdinand,

James (Campiglia) suggested this may be of interest to you and others. Strong clues as to depth and location of privies in some Baltimore neighborhoods. Excerpts from report, and link provided on word doc. Many privies were attached or very close.

Thanks, Reg (Shoeman)

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[Update 18 April] Ferdinand, Ran across this 1886 set of ordinances from the Baltimore Mayor and City Council. Six years after the Sanitary Survey showed deplorable conditions in some neighborhoods they finally acted.

Ordinance number 79, An Ordinance to better protect the public health and improve the sanitary condition of tenement and lodging houses is covered on pages 101-104 of the ordinance book. It says, in part, No privy well shall be allowed in or under or connected with any such house…

So, under the floors, in the cellars, and along the the outer walls… of tenements and boarding house.. an unknown number of Baltimore privies, abandoned in 1886, are waiting to be found.

Thanks, Reg Shoeman

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Sanitary Conditions in Baltimore
from Annual Report of the National Board of Health – 1880

Strong clues as to depth and location of Baltimore privies

Sanitary survey of sections of the city of Baltimore, Maryland

See pages 515 – 526

Second Ward embracing portions of Broadway, Thames, Ann, Fell, Wolf, Block, Philpot, Lancaster, Bond, Dallas, Caroline, Register, Durham, and Aliceanna streets. 547 houses were inspected containing a total of 3,553 inmates ….

In the case of 8 houses inspected on South Bond, South Dallas, South Caroline, Lancaster and Thames streets the greatest depth of privies was found to be 40 feet while the minimum and ordinary depth was only feet, the maximum liquid contents polluting foundations and occasionally flooding with stagnant and offensive fluids. The maximum distance from the house is 90 feet while in many cases the privies are attached to the sides of the houses or within 2 or 3 feet of them …..and discharge their offensive effluvia through open windows or doors into the sleeping or sitting apartments.

Some of the lots have at different times had as many as five privy vaults which after becoming full have been successively abandoned for a new vault or rather for another hogshead it being found cheaper to cover over the full cess pool and sink a fresh pit or hogshead…..

Sixth Ward embracing portions of Orleans, Broadway, Bethel, Bond, Jefferson, Central Avenue, North Caroline, North Dallas, McEldry, North Eden and North Spring streets. In this district 452 houses were inspected containing a total of 2,223 inmates or an average of about five persons to a house … One hundred and eight privies were found in bad condition many of them overflowing and completely saturating the surrounding soil Twenty five of the entire number are self draining and all the rest require frequent cleaning their usual depth being about 4 feet In many cases they are close to or actually attached to the sides of the houses.

Sixth and Seventh Wards embracing 350 houses on Central Avenue, Monument, (Milli man), Spring, Caroline, Dallas, Walker, Boundary Avenue, McEldry, Joppa and North Bethel streets with a total population of about 2,500 human beings Ninety percent of the houses inspected in this district were shallow privy vaults not more than 5 feet in depth. Some located in proximity and others 1 to 10 feet away from the house.

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Small fragment of a huge 1880 drawing of Baltimore – Image Library of Congress

Read More: Leading up to Baltimore Glass Works

Read More: Woods’ Baltimore City Directory – 1864

Read More: Privy Digging – The Hole Story

Posted in Advice, Article Publications, Digging and Finding, History, Questions, Regulations | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Could this be the Nathan’s Celebrated Union Bitters?

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M. NATHAN & CO. 31 VINE ST. CINCINNATI – Beatty Collection

M. NATHAN & CO. – 31 VINE ST. – CINCINNATI

Could this be the Nathan’s Celebrated Union Bitters?

09 April 2013 (R•04July2014) (R•24October2014)

Dear Ferd,

I know you really love Bitters and so do I. I have a beautiful yellow amber square with lot’s of whittle and bubbles embossed M. NATHAN & CO. on one side. On the reverse, 31 VINE ST. CINCINNATI With no O. Or Ohio.

I bought it at Mansfield, Ohio 20 years ago. I have never seen nor heard of another. I bought it off of a privy digger who dug it in Cincinnati. Here’s what I think? On page 83 of “Bitters Bottles Supplement” there is a very small note that reads this, ‘NATHAN’S CELEBRATED UNION BITTERS, Cincinnati, Ohio Feb. 11th 1864‘ on a Letterhead (PRG: N.7 in Bitters Bottle Supplement). I think my bottle is probably that bottle with a paper label plus the embossed info I gave you above. The book does not list any known examples? Just thought I would share that with you.

Best Regards,

Gary (Beatty)

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M. NATHAN & CO. 31 VINE ST. CINCINNATI – Beatty Collection

Apple-Touch-IconAGary, It would seem like M. Nathan & Co. stood for Max and Moritz Nathan who were the business owners who sold Wholesale Wines, Liquors and Cigars in Cincinnati around 1862. They were listed at 25 Vine Street in the directory listing below. It looks like sixteen years later they were listed as Nathan Brothers. Possibly their children carried on the business (Max, Isador, Emil and Julius).

By the way, your bottle is a stunning example. Nice photography too. Thanks for sharing. Let’s see what the readers can add to this post.

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Nathan’s Celebrated Tonic Bitters advertisement – Nashville Daily Union, 30 October 1863

I also contacted Bill Ham. His response:

Ferdinand:

The N 4.7 listing was a letterhead that I saw on ebay. I have no information on a bottle that goes with it, but just the letterhead information.

Bill

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Nathan M. & Co. Wholesale Wines, Liquors and Cigars listing for a Max Nathan and a Moritz Nathan – Cincinnati, Ohio City Directory, 1862

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Nathan Brothers liquors listing (Julius, Isadore Emil & Max at 221 Walnut – William’s Cincinnati Directory 1878

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What is interesting about this Nathan Brothers liquor listing is that Julius Nathan is living in Columbus, Mississippi and Max Nathan lives in Aberdeen, Mississippi. Emil and Isador still live in Cincinnati. Address still listed at 221 Walnut for the business – William’s Cincinnati Directory 1877

Meet Gary Beatty, FOHBC Treasurer

Gary a former FOHBC treasurer, Midwest Regional Director and First Vice President. Gary also served three terms as Ohio Bottle Club President and was instrumental in getting Harry Hall White, Richard Watson, and Doc Ford inducted into the FOHBC Hall of Fame. Gary and wife Betty are Life Members of the FOHBC. Gary is a graduate with a Bachelors degree from Midwestern Baptist College, Michigan, Trinity Baptist University Toledo, and a Doctorate of Divinity from Heritage Baptist College, Hopewell, IN. Gary and Betty collect square bitters, gins, schnapps, beers and Ohio. Gary has been digging, collecting and writing about bottles for 45 years.

NEW EXAMPLE

Here is a variant of the bottle above. It is embossed “MORITZ NATHAN” /  “CINCINNATI O”. This Moritz Nathan only has what you see embossed. There is no address, no comma after “Cincinnati”, or period after the “O”. The other three panels are blank.

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MORITZ NATHAN CINCINNATI O. This Moritz Nathan only has what you see embossed. There is no address, no comma after Cincinnati, or period after O. The other three panels are blank.- image Chris Eib

Posted in Bitters, Digging and Finding, History, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Who is I & L. M. Hellman of St. Louis, Missouri?


Who is I. & L. M. Hellman of St. Louis, Missouri?

09 April 2013 (R•011319) (R•110719)

I received the following email and pictures from Matthew Levanti about a bottle embossed I & L. M. Hellman, St. Louis, Mo. This really looks like a bitters bottle that I bet I can shed some light on. The image at the top of the post is from a past Glass Works Auction.

Hi Ferd, I was wondering if you have seen this square before? I am not seeing any others online although I do seem to remember seeing one before. This showed up for ‘show and tell’ at our first meeting of the newly resurrected Hangtown Bottle Necks bottle club last night (we had a total of 6 collectors show up, hopefully the number will grow!). It’s quite a beautiful bottle, such a shame its not embossed (with the word) bitters, although my hunch is it contained alcohol and that the company bottled different spirits and that’s why the bottle is not marked with a certain content.

It is embossed I & L. M. HELLMAN – ST. LOUIS. MO

A listing in the St Louis city directory for them in 1868 –

Hellman I. & L.M. (Louis M. Hellman), importers of wines, brandies and gins, and rectifiers for whisky. 112 Pine st

I also found a reference to L. M. Hellman swearing and allegiance to the U.S. Government and the state of Missouri in 1865, so he must of been a Confederate solider.

Thanks,

Matt

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Matt, what a gorgeous square! I love the shoulder form and pattern. This sure rings a bell with me too. Though I have not seen this square before, I am familiar with the Hellman name. Various Hellman’s are listed in early St. Louis directories including Hellman & Myers (1863) and I & L Hellman (1864-1881) who marketed rye, bourbon and other spirits. They also had embossed bitters.

Below: Advertising cover from the Ben Swanson collection.

HELLMAN’S CONGRESS BITTERS

"Examples found during the excavation of the riverboat Twilight which sank near Orrick, Missouri in 1865.

The Carlyn Ring and Bill Ham listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement is as follows:

H 79  HELLMAN’S CONGRESS BITTERS
HELLMAN’S // CONGRESS BITTERS // ST LOUIS. MO // f //
8 3/4 x 2 5/8 (6 7/8) 5/16
Square, Amber, LTC, Applied mouth, 3 sp, Rare
There are two dots under the T of ST and the O of MO.
I. & L.M. Hellman
Similar bottle to I & L. M. HELLMAN, ST. LOUIS MO. (subject bottle above)
Daily Missouri Democrat: July 11, 1865
Example was dug in Denver, Colorado. Examples found during the excavation of the riverboat Twilight which sank near Orrick, Missouri in 1865.
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Illustration St. Louis – 1860

Isaac and Lewis M. Hellman – St. Louis

As early as 1862, the firm of I. & L. M. Hellman, composed of brothers Isaac Hellman and Louis M. Hellman, were engaged in the wholesale liquor business on Pine Street, in the city of St. Louis, Missouri. Their trade was confined principally to states down the Mississippi river and southwest. Both brothers were born in Germany in the early 1830s and made their way to America with the attraction of land, opportunity and religious freedom, and pushed out of Germany by economic conditions and religious or political oppression.

Their whiskey barrels employed in their trade, had a bird with wings spread, in imitation of a crow, burnt into the head of the barrel, and the word “Crow,” or the words “Old Crow,” were burnt beneath the image.

Hellman is a name associated with liquor dealing St. Louis for many decades. We first see listings for Hellman & Myers. The name changes to I. & L. M. Hellman from 1863 to 1881. This would be Isaac Hellman and Louis M. Hellman. From 1882 to 1900, it is A. M. Hellman & Co. (Moritz and Abraham Moses) and finally the Hellman Distilling Company (Charles Hellman) up to 1918. They were orginially located at 6 Pine Street from 1863-1866, then at 112 Pine from 1867-1887, and finally they were located at 508 N 2nd. The company used the brand names Arlington Club Bourbon, Arlington Club Rye, Arnold’s Bourbon, Arnold’s Rye, Elk Spring Bourbon, Elk Spring Rye, Gold Seal Rye, Hellman’s Congress Bitters, Hellman’s Cedar Grove Bourbon, Home Place B’b’n, Home Place Rye, O. V. F. Bourbon, Porter Bourbon, and Silver Spring Rye.

The Hellman clan was sued for trademark infringement by W.A. Gaines and Company, a Kentucky liquor company which had produced a very famous brand of “Old Crow” whiskey since 1835. Their Old Crow Whiskey was named for Dr. James C. Crow, a Scottish medical doctor who moved to Kentucky and in the 1830s used his knowledge of chemistry to invent the sour mash process for creating bourbon. The aged runs became known as “Old Crow” and were massively popular. After Dr. Crow’s death in 1856, W.A. Gaines and Co. continued to sell his original stock for as long as they could. When they ran out, they made a replica, although Crow’s exact formula was lost.

Read More: The Hellmans of St. Louis and the Battle Over “Old Crow”

“Old Crow” was the favorite brand of many notable 19th and 20th century figures like President Andrew Jackson, Kentucky Senator Henry Clay, Confederate general John Hunt Morgan, Walt Whitman, Mark Twain and Hunter S. Thompson. It had a huge reputation, a reputation W.A. Gaines and Company was keen not be sullied by the St. Louis blend the Hellman Distilling Company had been selling as “Celebrated Old Crow” since 1863 when the Civil War choked off liquor shipments from the South. Hellman’s countered that they owned the trademark to the name and the case dragged on in the courts for almost a decade until in 1918 the Supreme Court of these United States ruled decisively in Gaines’ favor. Read Court document further below.

Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint must yield,
Hellman’s Congress Bitters is in the field.
Pleasant to the taste, a stimulant healthy,
Hellman’s Congress Bitters for poor and wealthy;
As a Tonic, it will certain cure;
Use Congress Bitters take it pure.
As the Standard Bitters of the land,
Congress Bitters wields it’s magic wand.
If debilitated by disease of any kind,
In Congress Bitters a cure you find.
Old maids, bachelors and the widows,
All use Hellman’s Congress Bitters.
The sick, the suffering and the dying,
All are for Congress Bitters sighing.
To old and young whoever are in grief,
Hellman’s Congress Bitters gives relief.
So don’t delay, procure the sickness shield,
Hellman’s Congress Bitters is in the field.

Hellman’s Congress Bitters was patented as a tonic bitters on April 11, 1865. The invention consisted of cologne spirits, sugar, syrup, water, orange peel, mace, cinnamon, calamus root, cloves, galanza root, and anise. Interesting that bourbon is not mentioned, which you can bet, was a major ingredient. The brand was only advertised for five years so it was a reasonably short run, explaining the rarity of the bottle. I suspect the example of the Hellman’s at the top of this post was a label-only bitters.

In August 1867, Isaac Hellman died and brother Louis continued the business until his death in 1901. Another relative, Moritz, joined the business with Abraham Moses Hellman (A.M. Hellman & Co.) who would die in 1904. Moritz would continue and change the name to Hellmann Distilling Company.

Charles Hellman ran things next and was the son of Isaac Hellman. He was educated in military academies in the United States and Germany. He went into mercantile business first and became the head of Hellmann Distilling Company in 1905. Eventually, it became one of the largest distilling houses west of the Mississippi River. When prohibition came, he moved into the insurance business with his son Isaac H. Hellman as Hellman & Hellman who had offices in the Pierce Building in St. Louis. He died in 1932.

Hellman’s Congress Bitters

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The pictures above are from my collection.

One of the greater mysteries to me is a listing in Bitters Bottles by Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham under P 100 PINEAPPLE, L….The best tonic Brown’s Iron Bitters. There is the side note, “Also known is a paneled bottle embossed I. & L. M. Helman.” What did Carlyn and Bill mean? I have sent an email to Bill.

Read: Pineapple Bitters – The Different Variants

Advertising: 

Fifty cases more of Hellman’;s celebrated Congress Bitters advertisement – The Vicksburg Herald, Saturday, October 28, 1865

I. & L. M. Hellman advertisement for Hellman’s Congress Bitters, No. 6 Pine Street, St. Louis, Missouri – The Leavenworth Times, Wednesday November 29, 1865

Hellman’s Congress Bitters! advertisement for I. & L. M. Hellman, No. 6 Pine Street, St. Louis, Missouri – The Vicksburg Herald, Saturday, January 6, 1866

Hellman’s Congress Bitters! advertisement for I. & L. M. Hellman, No. 6 Pine Street, St. Louis, Missouri – Natchez Daily Courier, Saturday, March 3, 1866

Rumbel & Wensel “Try Hellman’s Congress Bitters” –  The Natchez Bulletin, Wednesday, February 16, 1870

Legal:

The Federal Reporter: With Key-number Annotations, Volume 155, Robert Desty, James Wells Goodwin, Peyton Boyle, West Publishing Co., 1907
W. A. GAINES & CO. v. KAHN et al.
(Circuit Court, E. D. Missouri, E. D. June 13, 1907.)
No. 5,096.
1. TRADE-MARKS And TRADE-NAMES—RIGHT TO TRADE-MARK —”OLD CROW” WHISKY
The words “Old Crow” were first used to designate a whisky made according to a secret formula by one James Crow, who was employed as distiller at a distillery in Kentucky, commencing in 1835. After his death In 1855, the manufacture was continued for a time at the same distillery by one who had learned the formula from him. During the latter part of such time, the distillery was leased by complainant’s predecessors in business, who employed such person as distiller, and continued to use the names “Crow” and “Old Crow” to designate their product. Later they built a distillery of their own near by, and since that time they and complainant have continued to use the same process and the same name, which has become well known In the trade as designating complainant’s goods exclusively. Shortly after complainant’s predecessors built their distillery, the original distillery where the Crow whisky was first made was torn down and another built in its place, which has never used the Crow formula nor the name. Held, that complainant was entitled to protection in the exclusive use of the name -“Old Crow” as designating its goods.
[Ed. Note.—For cases in point, see Cent. Dig. vol. 46, Trade-Marks and Trade-Names, §§ 29-41.]
2. SAME–FRAUDULENT USE OF NAME
The fact that defendants prior to the leasing by complainant’s predecessors of the distillery where the “Old Crow” whisky was originally made put upon the market a blended whisky of their own make under the name of “P. Crow” and “J. W. Crow,” for the purpose of deceiving purchasers as to its quality and origin, gave them no right to claim such names as a trade-mark, as against complainant.
[Ed. Note.—For cases in point, see Cent. Dig. vol. 46, Trade-Marks and Trade-Names, § 76.]
In Equity. Suit for infringement of trade-mark.
James L. Hopkins and Daniel W. Lindsey, for complainant.
Klein & Hough, for respondents.
DYER, District Judge. The bill in this case is, in substance, as follows: The plaintiff is a Kentucky corporation, engaged in the manufacture and sale of whisky in Woodford county, Ky.; that at the time this suit was commenced Moritz Hellman and Abraham M. Hellman were copartners in the liquor business in the city of St. Louis under the firm name of A. M. Hellman & Co.; that since the original bill in this case was filed Abraham Hellman has died, and the respondent Max Kahn has been duly appointed administrator of his estate.
The complainant claims that it is the sole and exclusive owner of a certain trade-mark for whisky, consisting of the words “Old Crow,” and that this mark has been used by it and its predecessors in business for about 40 years, and that this mark has been applied by it and its predecessors to packages by marking, branding, stamping, and labeling. It is further averred in the bill that the plaintiff corporation is the successor in business of W. A. Gaines & Co., copartnership, and that W. A. Gaines & Co. was the successor of Gaines, Berry & Co., a copartnership. It is further charged that in the year 1867 Gaines, Berry & Co. adopted and commercially applied the words “Old Crow” as a trade-mark for whisky distilled by them; that the name was so used by them until 1870, when they were succeeded in business by W. A. Gaines & Co., to whom the same with all other assets were transferred; that the firm of W. A. Gaines & Co. (the copartnership) continued the use in the same way of the mark until 1887, when they were succeeded by the complainant corporation; that after this succession the complainant continued to use and is now using the mark in the same way as its predecessor. It is further averred in the bill that in the year 1835 one James Crow became domiciled upon Glenn’s Creek, in Woodford county, Ky., and there began the manufacture of a whisky of superior excellence and quality, which became designated about that time as “Crow” or “Old Crow”; that James Crow was continually from 1835 to the time of his death in 1855 engaged in the distillation of said whisky which was known and designated as “Crow” or “Old Crow” whisky, and that during his lifetime this whisky acquired a wide and extensive sale and reputation; that upon the death of the said James Crow there was upon the market a considerable quantity of that kind of whisky, and that it was known commercially and sold and dealt in continuously by various persons until the year 1867, when die copartnership of Gaines, Berry & Co. began the production of whisky, using the same process and material that had theretofore been used by James Crow, and conducting the distillation of whisky upon Glenn’s Creek, in Woodford county, Ky.; that from the time of the death of Crow until 1857 there was no whisky produced upon the said Glenn’s Creek or elsewhere to which the said words “Crow” or “Old Crow” were applied as a trade-mark.
It is further stated in the bill that the words “Crow” or “Old Crow” had been left open for adoption, by the death of the said James Crow and the cessation of the distillation of the whisky designated by the said words, so that the same were lawfully appropriated and used by Gaines, Berry & Co. in the year 1867. It is further “averred in the bill that from the time when the process of making of said whisky was first devised and put into use by Crow in 1835 down to the present time the words “Old Crow” have been applied continuously to the whisky produced by the said process, and to no other whisky whatsoever, and that the distillation and production of said whisky made by said process has always been made at Glenn’s Creek, Woodford county, Ky., and in no other place in the United States, or anywhere else in the world; that the words “Old Crow” have continuously since the year 1835 down to the present time indicated to the public and particularly to all consumers of and dealers in whisky throughout the world that the whisky to which they were applied was made by the said process devised and invented by the said James Crow, and to no other whisky whatsoever; that the words “Old Crow” have continually since the year 1835 down to the present time indicated to the public and particularly to consumers of and dealers in whisky throughout the world that the whisky to which these words were applied is and was distilled at Glenn’s Creek, Woodford county, Ky. It is further averred that the said whisky to which the words “Old Crow” are applied is sold at a higher price than any other whisky of equal age produced in the United States, and this by reason of its uniform excellence and the skill and care devoted by complainants to the selection of the materials used, and to the process of distillation, together with the natural advantages of the locality in which the complainant’s distillery is situated. It is further averred in the bill that the complainant and its predecessors have expended large sums of money in and about the advertising of said whisky throughout the United States. It is further averred that the said mark “Old Crow” is a lawful and valid subsisting trade-mark, and that complainant has been universally recognized as the sole and exclusive owner thereof; that complainants have, by reason of the uniform excellence of the whisky distilled and sold by them under the trade-mark “Old Crow,” established a large and continuously increasing trade and demand for said whisky, so distinguished by said trade-mark. It is then charged that the rights of the complainant being well known, the defendants have unlawfully disregarded the same, and have from the 1st of January, 1903, and thence continuously and from day to day until the filing of the bill of complaint herein made or caused to be made, sold or caused to be sold in the city of St. Louis, and state of Missouri, and elsewhere, a compounded liquor or liquid to which they applied the trade-mark “Old Crow,” and that this was done against the consent of the complainants and in violation of their trade-mark rights. It is further averred that, by the fraudulent acts of the defendants, they have sold a spurious compounded liquor as and for complainant’s whisky, and have diverted to themselves trade to which the complainant was entitled, and which it would have otherwise received; that the whisky so sold by the respondents was purchased by the public and the consumers thereof in the false belief that it was complainant’s whisky; and that, by reason of the inferior quality of the liquor so sold by respondents, the reputation of complainant’s whisky has been greatly damaged. It is further claimed that the said unlawful and wrongful acts of the respondents constitute unfair competition in trade; that the said acts are now continued and are imperiling and jeopardizing the complainant’s established trade and good will.
The answer of the defendants makes specific denials of each and every allegation in the complainant’s bill contained, except that they admit that at the time of the filing the bill of complaint Moritz Hellman and the late Abraham M. Hellman were copartners doing business under the name and style of A. M. Hellman & Co., and that said Abraham M. Hellman is dead and Max Kahn has been appointed his administrator.
The respondents in their answer affirmatively set up and state that in 1863 the firm of I. & L. M. Hellman, a copartnership composed of Isaac and Louis M. Hellman, were the predecessors in business of Moritz Hellman, and the late Abraham M. Hellman; that they did a general wholesale liquor business in the city of St. Louis, Mo., and made and produced according to their own formula a blended whisky, which said firm of I. & L. M. Hellman & Co. designated as “Crow” or “Old Crow” whisky, and branded and stamped upon barrels, kegs, boxes, and bottles containing the said whisky the figure of a crow and the words “Crow,” “Old Crow,” and “Celebrated Old Crow,” and “J. W. . Crow’s Bourbon,” together with the firm name and the word “Hellman’s,” and continuously sold and dealt in whisky in packages so stamped, branded, and labeled, and continuously designated the said whisky to the trade by the said names and each of them, until the year 1867, when Isaac Hellman, one of the members of the firm of I. & L. M. Hellman, departed this life; that, after the death of Isaac Hellman, Louis M. Hellman acquired all the rights and property of said Isaac Hellman in the firm of I. & L. M. Hellman, including the right to make and produce whisky according to the formula of said firm and sell the same, and to use and apply to such whisky the said names of “Crow,” “Old Crow,” and “Celebrated Old Crow,” and “J. W. Crow’s Bourbon,” together with the brands, labels, marks, and figures used in connection therewith.
It is claimed by the respondents that they and their predecessors are rightfully entitled to the use of the said words “Crow,” “Old Crow,” “Celebrated Old Crow,” and “J. W. Crow’s Bourbon,” and the figure of a crow, as a trade-mark for and upon the whisky made and produced by them, and that this was well known to the complainant herein ever since the year 1896, and acquiesced in by the complainant since that time. The respondents then aver that the whisky produced by the complainant and sold by it under the firm name of “Crow,” “Old Crow,” and represented by them to be whisky of superior excellence, is in point of fact a whisky containing a large and dangerous percentage of fusel oil, a deadly poison, and a large percentage of other dangerous and deleterious impurities, and that the same is unwholesome and impure, and that the same has not been subjected to any process of rectification, blending, or vatting for the purpose of removing such dangerous and deleterious impurities, and that in representing said whisky to be pure and of superior excellence the complainant is guilty of fraud upon the public, and especially upon purchasers and consumers of whisky.
The replication to this answer on the part of the complainant is a general denial.
Respondents to the bill in this cause have filed a cross-bill, in which they themselves are complainants and the W. A. Gaines & Co. (corporation) is made respondent. In this cross-bill the averments are along the lines marked out in their answer to the original bill in this cause. In this cross-bill complainants ask for affirmative relief against the corporation, W. A. Gaines & Co. There is an answer filed to this cross-bill by W. A. Gaines & Co., and a replication to the answer by Hellman and Kahn. The bill and cross-bill practically present the same question.
The questions for my consideration have been in a great measure passed upon by courts of competent jurisdiction in the states of Missouri and New York.
In the Missouri case the facts relied on by the complainant are substantially the same as those appearing in the record now before the court. The recital of the facts by Judge Smith of the Kansas City Court of Appeals I find to be substantially the facts disclosed in the testimony of the witnesses for the complainant here. Judge Smith, in his recital of the facts in the case before him, says:
“It is disclosed by the evidence that one James Crow, a distiller, had a secret formula for the making of whisky. He was employed in 1833 by Oscar Pepper, the owner and operator of a distillery, for whom he made whisky according to his formula until 1855. He died a year later. The whisky made by him was of excellent quality. One Mitchell, who had worked with Crow and had learned his formula, took Crow’s place, and continued to make whisky at the Pepper distillery until the latter’s death in 1S65. After the death of Pepper one Edwards leased the distillery, and carried it on for about a year. In February, 1867, Gaines, Berry & Co. leased it and carried it on until July, 1809. In the last-named year this copartnership built and moved into a new distillery, located about three miles away from the Oscar Pepper distillery. Prom 1800 to 1871 the latter was not operated. In 1S70 the copartnership was succeeded by that of W. A. Gaines & Co., which later in 18S7 was succeeded by the plaintiff. When Gaines, Berry & Co. leased the Pepper distillery, they employed Mitchell, already referred to as Crow’s pupil, as their distiller, and be remained in their employment and that of their immediate successor, W. A. Gaines & Co., until 1872, and during all that time the whisky output of the distillery of these firms was made according to the Crow formula. One Van Johnson, who worked with Mitchell for several years, succeeded Mitchell as distiller in the employment of W. A. Gaines & Co., and used the Crow formula in the production of whisky by the latter and its successor, the plaintiff, so that the Crow formula has been continuously used in the production of whisky by the several parties named for nearly three-quarters of a century. It is true that, after the expiration of the second lease of the Pepper distillery in 1873, James E. Pepper (son of Oscar Pepper) and E. H. Taylor operated it for a year or so, and then tore it down, erecting a new distillery in its place. This last-named copartnership was succeeded in the ownership of the new distillery by Labrot & Graham, ‘who have operated it ever since its acquisition by thein.’ It does not appear that after Gaines, Berry & Co. left the old Osear Pepper distillery any one operating it or the new one erected in its place ever used the Crow process in the making of whisky, or that they or any of them ever applied the words ‘Old Crow’ to any whisky of their production. It does not appear that Oscar Pepper ever used the words ‘Old Crow’ to designate the whisky produced at his distillery after James Crow left his employment . From 1855 to 1865, he operated his distillery, and designated its production as ‘Old Oscar Pepper’ whisky. Edwards, who next operated the Oscar Pepper distillery, as previously stated, designated the whisky produced by him ‘Edwards’ Whisky,’ and did not apply the words ‘Old Crow’ to it. From 1855 to 1867, when Gaines, Berry & Co. took charge of the old Oscar Pepper distillery, no ona used the words ‘Old Crow’ or ‘Crow’ to designate his whisky. They began in the last-named year f1867] to apply the words ‘Old Crow* to whisky of their production, and they and their successors down to the present time have continued to do so. It does not clearly appear that Oscar Pepper used the words ‘Old Crow’ or ‘Crow’ to designate the whisky produced by him while Crow was in his employment; but, if he did, it is certain that he discontinued their use after Crow left his service.” Smith, P. J., In W. A. Gaines & Co. v. Whyte Grocery. Fruit & Wine Co., 107 Mo. App. 507, 81 S. W. 048-ttaii.
It was intimated by counsel for the defendants in this case upon the oral argument that the case above referred to should have but little weight in determining the case before this court, for the reason that that case was not properly tried for the defendants, and that it savored somewhat of collusion. I have examined the record in that case, and I am satisfied that the suspicion indulged in by counsel is not well founded.
The evidence in this case shows beyond question, as I think, that James Crow began distilling a certain kind of whisky, on Glenn’s Creek, in Woodford county, Ky., in the year 1835. This whisky was made according to a formula known only at that time to Crow himself. Crow gave the name of “Crow” or “Old Crow” to the whisky made by him from 1835 to 1855, in which latter year he died. During all of that time he was the distiller for Oscar Pepper at the distillery of the latter on Glenn’s Creek, in Woodford county, Ky. After the death of Crow, one Mitchell, who had worked in the same distillery with him, and who, during the time, became acquainted with Crow’s formula, continued to make the same kind of whisky. The whisky was known to the trade by the name of “Crow” or “Old Crow,” and was of superior quality, and was easily sold at a good price.
The evidence in this case satisfies me that in the year 1863 the defendants or their immediate predecessors were engaged in the whisky business in the city of St. Louis, and that during that year they offered a whisky of their own make for sale and called it “Crow” whisky. I am satisfied that this was done by them for the purpose of deceiving their customers as to the character of the whisky offered by them. They marked the barrels “Crow,” and also used a picture of the bird on some of the packages. It was an attempt to palm off on the trade an inferior whisky, made under the name of “Crow”; they well knowing at the time the superior quality of the whisky manufactured on Glenn’s Creek, in Woodford county, Ky. It was unfair competition, in that they sought to make others believe that they were selling the genuine “Old Crow” whisky, when, in fact, they were offering an inferior production of their own.
The claim that is made by the defendants in their answer, as well as in their cross-bill, that they adopted the trade-mark of “Old Crow” long before 1867, cannot be allowed.
A case involving the same question as that here presented was before the Supreme Court of New York in Gaines v. Leslie, 54 N. Y. Supp. 421, 25 Misc. Rep. 20. In that case the court said:
“It appears that these words have been used for many years by the plaintiff, and its predecessors In business, as the mark of their brand of whisky, purporting to be the brand originally taking its name from one James Crow, a distiller, employed some 60 years ago In a distillery located near to or upon the site of the plaintiff’s present ‘Old Crow’ distillery in the state of Kentucky. Certain evidence received without objection upon the trial would tend to show that the plaintiff has succeeded directly to the rights of the original distillers of this ‘Crow’ whisky, and, In any event, 1 think that the prima facie case, as to title, is supported by the reasonable inference to be drawn from the evidence, that, If the original distillers had a right to a trade-mark Iu the word ‘Crow,’ the right was abandoned to this plaintiff, or to its predecessors, and that their privilege to use the word became fixed, through general acceptance, In the course of succeeding years.” Bischoff, J., In W. A. Gaines & Co. v. Leslie, 54 N. Y. Supp. 421-423, 25 Misc. Rep. 20.
The evidence in the record in this case abundantly supports the opinions in the Missouri and New York cases above referred to.
The defendants have shown by some evidence in the case that they used the words “P. Crow” and “J. W. Crow” on packages put up by them. Why were they so used? No one by the name of “P. Crow” or “J. W. Crow” was ever in the employ of the defendants, and no satisfactory reason is given for the employment of the name or names. The evidence, on the other hand, is overwhelming, and is practically uncontradicted, that James Crow began distilling whisky in Kentucky as far back as 1835, and so continued until his death in 1855, that during all of that time he used on the packages containing whisky made by him the words “Crow” or “Old Crow,” and that from 1867 until the present time the complainant and its predecessors have used the words “Old Crow” in designating the whisky made by them. •
I do not deem it necessary to pursue this matter further. The motion heretofore filed by the defendants to expunge certain exhibits filed by complainant will be overruled.
The cross-bill filed by the defendants will be dismissed, and a decree entered in favor of the complainant according to the prayer of the bill.

Select Listings:

1833: Isaac M. Hellman, Birth: 8 October 1833, Birth Place: Bavaria (Bayern), Germany – U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current
1865: I. & L. M. Hellman (Isaac Hellman and Louis M. Hellman), commission merchants and dealers in wines and liquors, 6 Pine – St Louis, Missouri, City Directory, 1865
I. & L. M. Hellman, (Successors to Hellman & Myers) Commission Merchants, Importers of Wines, Branndies & Gins, Manufacturers Of Domestic Liquors & Champagne Cider. Rectifiers of Whisky. 6 Pine Street, Between Main and Second, St. Louis, Mo.
1865: Listing (below) for Isaac Hellman and his Tonic Bitters April 11, 1865 – House Documents by United States Congress. – 1865 & 1866

1865: Newspaper advertisement (above) I. & L. M. Hellman advertisement for Hellman’s Congress Bitters, No. 6 Pine Street, St. Louis Missouri – The Leavenworth Times, Wednesday November 29, 1865
1866-67: I. & L. M. Hellman (Isaac Hellman and Louis M. Hellman), liquors, wholesale, 6 Pine – St Louis, Missouri, City Directory, 1866
1867: Isaac M. Hellman, Death: 3 August  1867, Cemetery: New Mount Sinai Cemetery & Mausoleum, Affton, St. Louis County, Missouri, Spouse: Bertha Hellman, Children: Pauline Sayers, Hattie Heller, Charles Hellman, Mathilde Hellman – U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current
1868: Hellman I. & L.M. (Louis M. Hellman), importers of wines, brandies and gins, and rectifiers for whisky. 112 Pine Street – St. Louis City Directory
1881: I. & L.M. Hellman (Louis M. and Abraham M. Hellman, and Myer Harris), Moritz Hellman, traveling salesman, importers wines, brandies, etc., 112 Pine – St Louis, Missouri, City Directory, 1866
1887: A.M. Hellman & Co. (Abraham M. Hellman and Myer Harris), liquors, Wholesale, 112 Pine – St Louis, Missouri, City Directory, 1887
1891: Advertisement (above) A.M. Hellman & Co., Wholesale Dealers in Bourbon and Rye Whiskies, 508 North Second Street
1932: Newspaper Obituary (below) Charles Hellman, Insurance Man and Ex-Distiller, DiesSt Louis Post Dispatch, Monday, September 19, 1932

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Ordinances Regulating Location, Depth, etc. of Urban Privies

Ferdinand,

I have put together a list of privy ordinances from Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and more than 2 dozen other cities.Some of these ordinances will show why it is tough to find bottles in some cities privies, especially when they mandated the cleaning and filling with ashes.Other ordinances mandated that privies be back from the street a minimum of 40 feet. All of the Utah ordinance I found were almost exactly the same on this requirement. Perhaps the most striking ordinance was in Savannah, Georgia. From 1831 until 1871 it was MANDATED that all privies be ATTACHED TO THE HOUSE! Hope you find this informative, Thanks –

Reg Shoeman

Outhouse patrol

Ordinances Regulating Location, Depth, etc. of Urban Privies

Compiled by Reg Shoeman

outhousepatrol.com

Outhouse patrol

Reggie Shoeman (left) and his partner James Campiglia

Within the past few years Google Books has scanned many books in the public domain. I have searched the city council proceedings, boards of health, and other reports to cobble together this, a limited in scope, but very revealing bunch of ordinances.

Bottle diggers are often frustrated, when, after going down 15 feet they find nothing but ashes. This digest of ordinances will show the diggers of Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and Philadelphia and other cities that had similar ordinances why, at times, there was absolutely NOTHING in that 15 footer!

Some ordinances dictated privies be at least 30 feet from the building, Savannah mandated privies be ATTACHED to the houses for a 40 years span, from 1831 until 1871!  Permits were required to clean privies and transport the contents.

MunicipalSanitation

The primary resource located was,Municipal Sanitation in the United States970 pages, published in 1900, authored by Charles Value Chapin. Dates are provided for most ordinances, a handful are undated.

Depth Regulations

Brooklyn, New York, 1850 – No sink, privy, or cesspool in the first seven wards of the city unless made of brick or stone and 10 feet deep.

Chicago, Illinois, 1873 – They must be six feet deep if within forty feet of a street, dwelling house or well, but in such cases they must be water tight.

Cincinnati, Ohio, 1884 – Privies must be ten feet deep, lined with brick or stone, and watertight.

Jersey City, New Jersey, no date – Vaults must not be less than eight feet deep.

Louisville, Kentucky, 1851 – No privy shall be built without a vault at least twelve,  nor’more than thirty feet deep, and walled with hard brick, nor shall any part of the contents of any privy vault be removed except by its being taken out of the city, or into the current of the river, in the night time.

Memphis, Tennessee, 1857, 1873 – It shall be a misdemeanor to construct a vault or privy less than fifteen feet deep.

Muscatine, Iowa, 1878 – Privy vaults shall be not less than four feet in depth, and shall be securely and substantially walled; and if the depth of such vault be six feet or more, it shall be walled with brick or stone.

Nashville, Tennessee, 1875 – Vault mandatory 1 ½ feet wide x 3 feet long, 3 feet deep MINIMUM, made of brick or rock and cemented, hook to sewer when available.

New Orleans, Louisiana, 1877 – None deeper than 2 feet

Ottawa, Illinois, 1883 – No person or persons shall construct on his or her premises any privy or privy vault within less than twenty feet of any dwelling, store, or business, unless the vault be at least five feet deep from the surface of the ground, and walled from bottom to top with stones, bricks, or wood

Patterson, New Jersey, no date – They must not be more than four feet deep.

Pennsylvania, no dates – Cities of the second class, (all cities except Philadelphia) vaults must be at least 6 feet deep.

Peoria, Illinois, 1869 – TENEMENTS…privy, the vault of which shall be sunk under ground at least ten feet deep, and shall be walled up with brick or stone, …

Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, 1856 – No Privy already set up in the Borough can be within 20 feet of any dwelling house, and dig a pit not less than 9 feet deep and securely wall up the same with stone or brick.

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1852 – …privy, shall call on the proper street commissioner and obtain, in writing, from him the depth which the same shall be sunk, and which in no instance shall be less than twelve feet; every privy shall be placed at least two feet from the line of the adjoining lot.

Quincy, Illinois, 1875 – No privy or privy vault within less than one hundred feet of any dwelling, store, office or place of work or business, unless the vault be at least ten feet deep from the surface of the ground, and walled from bottom to the top with stone or brick.

Reading, Pennsylvania, no date – Vaults must be twenty feet deep except as otherwise provided.

Richmond, Virginia, 1869 – No sink or cesspool shall be sunk unless the same be at least ten feet deep, and be lined at the sides and on the bottom with brick or stone; and the owner or occupant of premises to which any sink or cesspool belongs shall not permit the contents thereof to rise within two feet of the surface of the earth.

Rockford, Illinois, 1874 – Each and every house or tenement within said city, used as a residence, hotel, tavern or place of business, shall be furnished with a suitable privy, the vault of which shall be sunk under ground at least six feet deep, and walled up with stone, brick or plank.

Sacramento, California, 1874 – Each and every house or tenement within said city, used as a residence, hotel, tavern or place of business, shall be furnished with a suitable privy, the vault of which shall be sunk under ground at least six feet deep, and walled up with stone, brick or plank.

Saint Joseph, Missouri, 1869, 1897 – No person shall erect or continue any privy  within twenty feet from any street, or the dwelling, shop or  well of other persons, in said city, unless the same be furnished with a substantial vault at least six feet deep, and  so the contents cannot escape, Penalty for violation…ten dollars.

Savannah, Georgia, 1871 – That the ordinance of September 22, 1831, requiring every dwelling in said city to have an excavated privy attached thereto, and all ordinances prescribing the manner in which said privies shall be constructed, are hereby repealed…..shall be supplied with a water closet, an earth closet or a movable and water tight surface drawer

Either the Georgia diggers knew of this ordinance years ago, OR, if you hear someone digging outside of your Savannah bedroom, you will immediately know what’s going on after this entry!

Saint Louis, Missouri, 1843, 1852, 1870, 1881 – Must be ten feet deep. 

Sedalia, Missouri, 1894 – All privies shall be not less than four feet deep below the surface of the ground and securely walled or lined up with brick, stone or other substantial material, at least eight inches above the surface of the ground;

Wheeling, West Virginia, 1891 – Privy vaults or cesspools shall he not less than ten (10) feet deep, and shall he built with walls of brick or stone;

Wilmington, Delaware – Vaults must be twenty feet deep except as otherwise provided:

Location Requirements

Augusta, Georgia, 1900 – No surface privy shall exist within thirty feet of any dwelling house.

Davenport Iowa – Privy vaults shall not be located within two (2) feet of party lines or within twenty (20) feet from any building.

Fall River, Massachusetts – No privy shall open directly from any living or food storage room.

Ottawa, Illinois, 1883 – No person or persons shall construct on his or her premises any privy or privy vault within less than twenty feet of any dwelling, store, or business, unless the vault be at least five feet deep from the surface of the ground, and walled from bottom to top with stones, bricks, or wood.

Patterson, New Jersey, 1883 – No person or persons shall construct on his or her premises any privy or privy vault within less than twenty feet of any dwelling, store, or business, unless the vault be at least five feet deep from the surface of the ground, and walled from bottom to top with stones, bricks, or wood

Quincy, Illinois, 1875 – No privy or privy vault within less than one hundred feet of any dwelling, store, office or place of work or business, unless the vault be at least ten feet deep from the surface of the ground, and walled from bottom to the top with stone or brick.

Saint Joseph, Missouri, 1869, 1897 – No person shall erect or continue any privy within twenty feet from any street, or the dwelling, shop or well of other persons, in said city, unless the same be furnished with a substantial vault at least six feet deep, and so the contents cannot escape,Penalty for violation…ten dollars

Salt Lake City, Utah, 1860 – Any privy or pig-stye erected nearer than forty feet of the line of the streets of this city, is hereby declared to be a nuisance, and liable to be removed. (Several Utah cities with the same ordinance.)

Utica, New York – A vault must not be near enough to a house “to be detrimental.”

Privy Cleaning, Scavenger Licensing, and Transportation Requirements

Atlanta, Georgia, 1899 – Sanitary inspectors are required during the spring and summer months to inspect each privy weekly…

Augusta, Georgia, 1900 – Privies must be disinfected every two weeks.

Cincinnati, Ohio, 1884 – Whenever the use of any privy-vault is discontinued, such vault must be cleaned to the bottom and filled up with earth or other suitable material, such filling to be done under the supervision of a sanitary officer.

Indianapolis, Indiana, 1884 – Whenever the use of any privy-vault is discontinued, such vault must be cleaned to the bottom and filled up with earth or other suitable material, such filling to be done under the supervision of a sanitary officer.

Leadville, Colorado, 1881 – City Council or Mayor has the.power to direct the city scavenger, or others, at all times between the rising and setting of the sun, to enter any store, house, stable, or any building, and to cause the floors to be lifted up to examine cellars, vaults, sinks, and drains.

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1876 – Every person, persons, or company licensed to clean privywells, sinks, etc., shall have a pit for depositing the contents of said wells, sinks, etc., (the location to be approved by the Board) and said pit shall not be located within two hundred yards of any public road, lane, or street, and shall be screened from public view.

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1876 – Privy-wells ordered to be cleaned by the Board must be emptied to the bottom; the failure of the cleaners to obey this rule being of itself sufficient to suspend their licenses.

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1856 – No tavern license be granted or removed, in any part of the city, unless the lot has sufficient space outside of the house for a privy.

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  PERMITS FOR CLEANING PRIVIES ISSUED DURING THE YEAR 1860

January…….. 384

February…… 367

March……….. 699

April ………….637

May……………868

June …………..102

July ……………109

August ……….110

September….. 91

October…….. 343

November…. 271

December…. 167

Total 4,148

We find by this account that 4,148 permits for cleaning privies were granted during the year including those emptied by the Board on complaint allowing that under each permit four loads of filth were removed a moderate estimate each load containing 20 cwt it will be seen that 580,720 cubic feet equal to the extraordinary amount of 16,592 tons of human ordure have been removed

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1852 – …..privy, shall call on the proper street commissioner and obtain, in writing, from him the depth which the same shall be sunk, and which in no instance shall be less than twelve feet; every privy shall be placed at least two feet from the line of the adjoining lot.

Rochester, New York, 1875 – All owners and keepers of hotels, taverns, boarding houses, factories arcades, warehouses and establishments where more than ten persons are habitually gathered or employed, within the said city, shall cause to be constructed on their respective premises, one or more strong wooden boxes, slides or drawers, of suitable dimensions, provided with a convenient handle at each end, and with moveable lids, which may be fitted thereto perfectly tight; and shall cause such boxes to be placed under the seats of their respective privies,

San Francisco, California, 1872 – Permits for emptying privy vaults and cesspools for the year was two thousand and twenty-three (2,023).

Wheeling, West Virginia, 1891 – Privy vaults and cesspools that may be abandoned will not be allowed to be arched over, but cleaned out to the bottom and filled with earth.

Worcester, Massachusetts, 1854 – Any person may convey the contents of a Privy or Vault over the roads, highways and streets of the City, in the months of December, January, February and March, at any time, when the Mercury in the Thermometer is below twenty-five degrees of Fahrenheit’s scale; provided….

Additional sources, all Google ebooks

Savannah, Georgia, 1879 – Rebarer’s Digest: supplement to city code, 1871….ordinances

Salt Lake City, Utah, 1860 – Charter of Great Salt Lake City and ordinances….

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1885 – Journal of the common council of Philadelphia

Saint Joseph, Missouri, 1869 – Laws and ordinances governing the city of…

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1860 – A digest of the acts of assembly, the codified ordinances..

Memphis, Tennessee, 1867 – A digest of the charters and ordinances….1826-1867

Saint Louis, Missouri, 1870 – An ordinance in relation to the Health Department of

Peoria, Illinois, 1869 – The city charter and revised ordinances….

Logan City, Utah, 1877 – The revised ordinances of Logan City…

Ogden City, Utah, 1871 – The ordinances of Ogden City…

Quincy, Illinois, 1885 – The Quincy code: comprising the...

Leadville, Colorado, 1881 – The revised an general ordinance of the city of….

Savannah, Georgia, 1888 – The code of the city of Savannah…

Sacramento, California, 1896 – Charter and ordinances of the city of…….


Reggie Shoeman

reggie-1

Retired Navy veteran with background in historical research. Searches old town sites with high tech Electromagnetic imaging equipment manufactured by Accurate Locators.

This equipment, used in conjunction with aerial photos, old maps, and archival research, often leads us to bottles and other artifacts that were lost or tossed by our ancestors.

Reggie likes to cut deals with folks interested in our passion and a willingness to grant us permission to search for, and recover, artifacts on old their property. Properties such as ghost town, ranches, old mills, etc. in and around Montana, Nevada and other Western States are sought after.

Local treasure hunters dig up and sell loot they unearth in the most unusual places. – Click on a link below to read articles:

Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Montana Standard


James Campiglia

james_primleysJames started collecting bottles at age 10 due to the antique glass & bottles he would enjoy in his grandma’s house. His brother soon became interested as well and they joined the Las Vegas Antique Bottle Club. James was known for giving his speeches and showing off parts of his collection. (at that time mainly Nevada bottles). Reggie his partner in OuthousePatrol.com would supervise them when their parents couldn’t get away to take them on the club digs.

James moved to Bozeman and sought out the Montana Bottle Collectors Association where he serves as Vice President and Show Chairman. The clubs yearly show, the first week of June is a popular one for Western collectors to gather and he enjoys promoting it.

Actively collecting bottles through shows, digs, yard sales, etc and amassing bottles in many colors and styles with a yearning for Western Blob sodas and rare colored Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters (his first bottle given to him by his grandma). Recently getting back into Western Whiskeys and Nevada bottles.

His spouse Tammy enjoys her colored barber bottle collection and receives them for gifts on birthdays and holidays. Recently while in Nevada buying a collection James found some cathedral pickles and pepper sauce bottles which are now in her collection. The bug hasn’t bitten her as hard but we are happy displaying our collections in the house and showing them off to friends that come visit.

As a kid it was rocks and lizards and just playing in the dirt. Now its digging deep for artifacts. Collecting casino chips is another passion and James has authored 4 books, “The Official U.S. Casino Chip Price Guide”. Many chips were found while traveling the small back roads and towns of Nevada looking for bottles, etc.

It’s the hunt that keeps a person going. That elusive bottle buried 100+ years ago in an outhouse or dump. And the stories that can be told of the trials and tribulations of finding and rescuing these artifacts from the hold of the Earth. Traveling to see other collections, showing off his collection, and teaching others as well as photography is part of his varied past time.

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