The big bottle that led me to the pretty sweet dump

Welcome to our Antique Bottle community

Be a part of something great, join today!

CCB420

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 22, 2022
Messages
194
Reaction score
198
Points
43
So I'd already posted the pics of this big guy, at the end of that last post, but thought, maybe it wasn't getting enough views?! I'm trying to find some info on duraglass, or at least something that mentions, gal jugs?? Are these common? I did see where one article mentioned that twin finger holds were desirable, but haven't found much on this one, during a very brief search

This one I'd seen laying on its side, in the river, or at least where the river should've been, last month, while at this "camp"!! Since it was still there this month, I put some different shoes on and hopped retaining wall to have a closer look! This one's about 10-15 ft off bank, where the sweet dump site was found from earlier post. Is this a pickle jar? Wine? IMG_20231230_160840_922.jpgIMG_20231230_160924_973.jpgIMG_20231230_161129_692.jpg
 

UncleBruce

BEER DUDE
Joined
Aug 22, 2012
Messages
1,726
Reaction score
2,077
Points
113
Location
Show Me State (Missouri)
So I'd already posted the pics of this big guy, at the end of that last post, but thought, maybe it wasn't getting enough views?! I'm trying to find some info on duraglass, or at least something that mentions, gal jugs?? Are these common? I did see where one article mentioned that twin finger holds were desirable, but haven't found much on this one, during a very brief search

This one I'd seen laying on its side, in the river, or at least where the river should've been, last month, while at this "camp"!! Since it was still there this month, I put some different shoes on and hopped retaining wall to have a closer look! This one's about 10-15 ft off bank, where the sweet dump site was found from earlier post. Is this a pickle jar? Wine?
I'd say it is a cider or vinegar jug.
 

Sitcoms

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 16, 2023
Messages
173
Reaction score
189
Points
43
Location
ME
I'd agree with Bruce and say probably cider, juice, or vinegar - mouth looks small for a pickle jar at that size.

Duraglas was trademarked by Owens-Illinois Glass Co. on Sept. 23 1941, and they used the term throughout the 40s, 50s, and 60s. It's name was meant to indicate the glass' increased strength while minimizing weight after years of testing. Here's more info on the "Duraglas" branding: https://glassbottlemarks.com/duraglas-trademark-glass-bottles/

Another special thing that Owens-Illinois did was provide a date code on the bottom of most of their bottles, though sometimes they are difficult to determine exactly. It is the number to the right of the makers mark, in your case the "2". Given the single number and the presence of the "Diamond and O with I center" makers mark this bottle is probably from 1942 or 1952. If there is a period to the right of the 2 it's almost certainly the earlier date. More on O-I's markings: https://glassbottlemarks.com/owens-illinois-glass-company/
 

Members online

Latest threads

Forum statistics

Threads
83,370
Messages
743,881
Members
24,393
Latest member
lichen
Top