I have a 1 pint dark amber, probably wine or beer bottle, that was my grandfather's since at least 1930s/early 1940s to possibly earlier. According to my mother the bottle was found in Westford, Ashford, CT in the vicinity of Westford Glass Factory. My maternal grandparents and back at least 5 more generations were of the town of Ashford and most from the Westford area of Ashford. Mother always said it was a Westford Glass bottle. As the above amounts to really only hearsay in my book, I'd like to know if it is or is not a Westford bottle. It is a purely generic bottle with none of the noted Westford embossing. [] Description as best I can tell:8" high, 2¾" diameter base; weight: 12 oz; holds 16 fluid oz. Two seams run from base up to the neck. I can't tell if the seams continue up the neck because of the tool marks on the neck. I think it can be described as "Blowing In Mold" (BIM) hand finished? Dark amber; shape: squat cylinder; top: applied blob; base: smooth deep push-up/indented with dimple; thick glass at neck. Tool marks on neck. No trade or marker's marks. Seems to be in fairly good condition for a bottle this old except for a ¼" diameter air bubble on the side that may have burst on the inside causing 2 small flakes on the exterior of the bubble; no cracks; minor scratches. Included pics:1. Combo pic of two views of the bottle in different light.2. Three part pic of neck, top and bottom.3. Combo pic of two views of the air bubble and surrounding surface. The closest Westford bottle I have found to it is in the 7/5/2010 posting of Bill Bixby "Westford Utility Bottles." The pic in the 1st message, front row far right.http://www.antique-bottle...y-Bottles-m322678.aspx TIA. --- Susan [attachment=AmberWestford-combo.jpg] [attachment=AmberWestford-NTB-combo.jpg]