Can anybody read (or more likely recognize) this? The middle of the mark is Glasgow and I believe the bottom says Pottery works, but I can't read the name, McBundy's maybe?
Sean
Thanks Jeff. Unfortunately I feel obligated to shut down this site as a bottle diving destination because nearby there is a sunken ship put together with these:
Can anyone tell me about the bottle on the right? It's an early smooth base with Albany and then either an infiniti symbol or two chain links like a sideways 8. They look more like chain links. Found these yesterday, the Steven Sweet's Infallible Liniment is really early.
Thanks,
Sean
Not dug, just found. It was in the Connecticut River near Northampton, MA. It's a very old area that has been settled since the 1650s. This thing was in an area that had probably recently been exposed because it was downstream of a big tree snag that had caused a current eddy and cleared off all...
That shinyness is from me hacking at the rust with a screwdriver. When found it was a complete mass of black rust, what you see here is what emerged after I attacked it. My damn hands are still as black as they used to be back when I still fixed my own cars :)
Thanks for all of the replies. I'm tending to agree that it's probably not a cannonball. I took some better measurements and pictures and they seem to rule out a 32 pounder, which is really all it could be if it was a US cannonball. The hole is weird because it expands inside but not very much...
It's Satterlee and Mory, Fort Edward NY. There's a crock with the same design on fleabay right now with some information about the maker:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Satterlee-Mory-Fort-Edward-Stoneware-Preserve-Jar-/140405665377
Quoting from the auction: "This is the stamp of George A. Satterlee...
I came across an old Anheuser-Busch bottle today (along with a pontiled SS Fitch and a beautiful jug my buddy found). Is this one worth anything? It's probably about 1910 I'm guessing, early tooled crown top.