Help with unknown Log Cabin bottle, variant?

Welcome to our Antique Bottle community

Be a part of something great, join today!

BrotherBo

Member
Joined
May 30, 2019
Messages
21
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Location
Southwest Virginia
Hello, new to the forum with somewhat of a mystery bottle that I found recently in an obscure antique shop in Asheville, NC. I've searched rather exhaustively and cannot find another example so I'm hoping the knowledgeable folks on here will have an answer. The bottle is colorless and stands 10 1/2 inches tall. Bubbles throughout.
Any ideas?
 

Attachments

  • logbottle8.jpg
    logbottle8.jpg
    54.1 KB · Views: 330
  • logbottle9.jpg
    logbottle9.jpg
    31.5 KB · Views: 264
  • logbottle7.jpg
    logbottle7.jpg
    49.3 KB · Views: 276
  • logbottle6.jpg
    logbottle6.jpg
    70.2 KB · Views: 328
  • logbottle5.jpg
    logbottle5.jpg
    51.9 KB · Views: 268
  • logbottle4.jpg
    logbottle4.jpg
    75.5 KB · Views: 276
  • logbottle3.jpg
    logbottle3.jpg
    63.8 KB · Views: 318
  • logbottle2.jpg
    logbottle2.jpg
    43.8 KB · Views: 314
  • logbottle1.jpg
    logbottle1.jpg
    50.8 KB · Views: 258
  • logbottle10.jpg
    logbottle10.jpg
    53.8 KB · Views: 267
Last edited:

sandchip

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 1, 2008
Messages
5,295
Reaction score
1,161
Points
113
Location
Georgia
I'm no help whatsoever, but it would sure look good in a run of different cabin molds. Looks 1890ish to me. Never seen one like it in my 45 years of collecting. Maybe someone more knowledgeable will be able to help out.
 

BrotherBo

Member
Joined
May 30, 2019
Messages
21
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Location
Southwest Virginia
Thanks for your reply, Sandchip. We usually collect and display a lot of cut glass and flint glass such as the early 3 ring decanters and this bottle really appealed to me because it has that look and feel of early flint glass. I was surprised when I found it but it was just pure dumb luck on my part by being in the right place at the right time as it had literally just been brought in. The woman at the front desk told me that the seller took a booth in that shop so she could start selling off some of her late father's antique collection and that he had been an avid bottle collector for years, but the daughter really didn't know anything about bottles or even how to price them. I'm definitely going to keep a watch on that booth!
 

BrotherBo

Member
Joined
May 30, 2019
Messages
21
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Location
Southwest Virginia
The closest log bottle to this one that I can find anywhere is the "American Life Bitters" bottle. The American Life bottle features a top window(however embossed) above a cathedral-esque door. The bottle I have features basically the same arrangement. Could this bottle possibly be an obscure variant of Peter Iler's American Life Bitters?
 

Attachments

  • logbottle12 (2).jpg
    logbottle12 (2).jpg
    29.3 KB · Views: 261
  • logbottle13.jpg
    logbottle13.jpg
    51 KB · Views: 284
  • logbottle1 (2).jpg
    logbottle1 (2).jpg
    59.8 KB · Views: 261
Last edited:

sandchip

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 1, 2008
Messages
5,295
Reaction score
1,161
Points
113
Location
Georgia
Anything's possible, but I have to doubt it. Judging from the rarity of the American Life, I tend to think that Iler probably didn't stay in business long, and his bottle being earlier with an applied top, I doubt that he would've been in business long enough to have changed his bottle design in later years to one blown in a full-height mold with a tooled top, if my reasoning makes any sense. Whoever made your bottle, if indeed it was used to bottle a proprietor's product like bitters, whiskey, etc., then I would also suspect that he, too was unsuccessful. It's fascinating to consider that the ones that were such huge successes for so many years like Hostetter, Davis, Townsend, Emerson (Bromo-Seltzer), etc. left behind so many bottles that theirs are relatively common and hence, less valuable. The poor entrepreneurs who failed left behind bottles that bring huge money nowadays. If only they could've cashed in back then, what their bottles bring today, they would've been rich men. Oh, the irony of life at times! With that said, one thing that would suppress the value of your bottle, even if it's the only example known, is the lack of embossing. The other is its age which appears to be late 1800s. An applied top and maybe even a pontil scar would undoubtably drive the desirability/value higher. With all my blathering on, it's still a beautiful bottle that would look fantastic in a run of different cabin molds.
 
Last edited:

BrotherBo

Member
Joined
May 30, 2019
Messages
21
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Location
Southwest Virginia
Thanks Sandchip, I knew it was a shot in the dark but it's just so hard to find any comparables anywhere. I was hoping someone would recognize it and say "Oh that's a ________ bottle made by _____" lol but I guess it may actually be one of a kind and never seen before, which is actually pretty exciting in of itself. It would be nice if I could find an early advertisement with an example of this bottle on it but I've not had any luck so far. The only other comparable I can find is a variation of a Drake's Plantation bottle with a similar top. I'll post a pic of it. I've read that the Drake's bottles were being made up until about 1890. Not saying it's a variation of a Drake's by any means, just has a similar top to a one of a kind(as far as I know) Drake variant.
 

Attachments

  • logbottle14.jpg
    logbottle14.jpg
    73.6 KB · Views: 232

BrotherBo

Member
Joined
May 30, 2019
Messages
21
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Location
Southwest Virginia
This round indentation is located on the back of the bottle toward the bottom. Any ideas why this is there?
 

Attachments

  • logbottle15.jpg
    logbottle15.jpg
    47 KB · Views: 285

sandchip

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 1, 2008
Messages
5,295
Reaction score
1,161
Points
113
Location
Georgia
My first thought was "bung hole". You see it on some barrel figurals to represent where the spigot would be inserted, but I've never seen one on a cabin. Probably not what it is, just what popped into my mind.
 

Huntindog

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 14, 2012
Messages
170
Reaction score
90
Points
28
Is the indent thin?
This could have been made as a lamp base and never converted to a lamp.
Just a thought and direction to look.
 

NC btl-dvr

Active Member
Joined
Feb 13, 2017
Messages
44
Reaction score
18
Points
8
Something screams "new" to me but that's just first impression.
 

Staff online

Members online

Latest threads

Forum statistics

Threads
83,217
Messages
742,901
Members
24,231
Latest member
rrenzi
Top