Steve/sewell
Posts: 3621
Joined: 1/23/2010 Status: online
|
The last set of notes are from a factory not discussed that often in bottle circles.The Salem Glass works were located in the town of Salem New Jersey the second oldest established town next to Burlington city.The works were in operation by 1862 and in 1870 script notes were being offered brining evidence to the fact the works were now much larger then when they came into existence.Shown here are two note's one for ten cents and the other for fifty. The most famous bottle associated with these works were the Poland mineral water bottles or as they were referred to the Moses bottles.For the grand opening of the new Poland Spring House, in 1876, the Rickers introduced the unusual Moses Bottle, which continued to be the symbol of Poland Spring beverages well into the 1970's. The Salem Glass Works is now located on Griffith Street along the water front. It started in 1862, when Henry Hall, Joseph Pancoast, and John V. Craven formed a partnership and built a single furnace on Third Street in the City of Salem. They made mold blown bottles, including squat mineral waters and porters for John P. Robinson, and John C. Brown of Salem, blue porter squats and squat ales for John Ryan of Savannah Ga., squat porters and mineral waters for Wm. Morton of Trenton, and squat porters for Twitchel of Phila. This information comes from a company mould book for the years 1865, 1866, and 1867. They made the Banner, Worcester, Wm. Pogue, W.W. Lyman, and Willoughby fruit jars and the U.H. Dudley Fruit bottle. They also made Attwoods bitters, Carter’s inks, Lea & Perkins Worcestershire Sauce, cone inks, Sachem Barrel bitters, Jenny Linds, Poland Springs “Moses” bottle, Paine’s Celery Compound, Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, Turlington Balsam, Drakes Plantation Bitters to name a few from the mould book.
Attachment (1)
_____________________________
Auf Wiedersehen
|