Surname-Oriented Antique Bottle Collecting

The Link between Genealogy and Antique Bottles

Surnames on Antique Bottles ~  The interest in family history (genealogy) has greatly increased in recent years, as evidenced by popular sites such as Ancestry.com and Findagrave.com  that offer information and available data for researchers.    Some information is from cemetery records, or early census forms, city directories, old telephone directories, obscure books, newspapers, magazines, etc.

Within the field of glass, in recent years it’s become increasingly popular to search for and collect antique and vintage bottles (whether hand-blown or machine-made) that bear an embossed surname (last name), especially a name of particular interest or relevance to the collector, antique buff, bottle digger, amateur historian, genealogist, teacher, researcher, or just a curious family member.

Note:  Although this website is geared toward information on glass containers, there are, of course, many, many older pottery and ceramic bottles, jugs, jars, crocks, and related ware in existence that carry surnames, either incised, stamped, embossed, or painted on the surface.

"Dr. J. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters" dark amber remedy bottle. This bottle bears heavy iridescence from long burial in the ground.  This particular brand of bitters was very popular for many years in the late 1800s and early 1900s, and bottles were produced by a number of different bottle manufacturers.  
“Dr. J. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters” dark amber remedy bottle. This bottle bears heavy iridescence from long burial in the ground.  This particular brand of bitters was very popular for many years in the late 1800s and early 1900s, and bottles were produced by a number of different bottle manufacturers.

 


The field of antique glass bottles is an often-overlooked potential source of interest to genealogy buffs.  Information from old bottles may be useful when combined with data that can be gleaned from period city and business directories, newspaper and magazine ads, government census data and other contemporary sources.

The interested collector may search for any glass containers that bear his or her own family name, regardless of whether there is or was any relationship to the owner or proprietor of the business that issued or used the bottles with that embossing.    These can form an interesting collection in and of themselves, and spur more involved study about the history of the companies and the people involved with them, and of the bottles produced for those business ventures.

Surnames on antique bottles ~ Surname-Oriented bottle collecting, Antique J. M. Clark & Company (possibly a pickle bottle)
Antique light aqua glass J. M. Clark & Co. / Louisville, KY. bottle (possibly a pickle bottle). This dates from the 1890s or very early 1900s.

A tremendous variety of surnames have been embossed on glass bottles, extending back for a period of 200 years or more.  Tens of thousands, even a hundred thousand or more individually distinct surnames probably exist as an integral part of the embossed (raised) markings on bottles made just in the United States alone.  Counting bottles manufactured the world over, the number of surnames in existence would be much, much higher.

The possibilities are virtually unlimited for finding glass containers marked with rare, uncommon, obscure, or unusual surnames.


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Here is a list of just some of the many types of bottles which can be found that commonly carry a surname  (typically, the company name, usually derived from the owner, operator or manager) . The name may be embossed in raised lettering on the front, sides, or base of a container.

1) Dairies (milk bottles). This is a huge field, with thousands of obscure dairies that once operated across the US.  Most of these types of bottles date (in general) from the 1910s to the 1950s.
2) Beer brewers (beer, ale bottles).  Another vast field. Many of the larger cities across the US, especially in the East and Midwest, including Milwaukee, Philadelphia, New York, Chicago, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Boston, Baltimore, and others, were home to large numbers of breweries and/or beer bottlers. Many of these bottles carry the full name of the owner (or firm name) as well as city and state.
3) Soda manufacturers (soda, root beer, mineral water, tonic water bottles).
4) Spirits manufacturers/distillers (whiskey, gin, tequila, vodka, vermouth and other liquor bottles).
5) Chemical companies (chlorine bleach, hydrogen peroxide, ammonia, alcohol, cleaning agents, acids, bluing, fertilizers, farm products, and other chemical bottles).
6) Druggists/Pharmacies (drug, prescription bottles). There were tens of thousands of druggists located in towns and cities across the US that had their own customized bottles manufactured for them (many of them are called “slug plate” bottles) to use for customer prescriptions. The heyday for this type of embossed bottle would be circa 1875-1920. Many of those kinds of bottles were produced by Whitall Tatum & Company with base marks “W T & Co” and later “W T Co”.


"Eugene J. Endris" glass druggist bottle, probably from the 1910s.  Although the city and state is not included on the bottle, this was a druggist located in New Albany, Indiana.  This is just one example of the many thousands of druggists who had customized prescription bottles produced for their business - this practice was most common in the 1870s-1920s period.  This particular bottle is not marked with a glassmaker mark on the base, so the actual glass manufacturer is unknown. 
“Eugene J. Endris” glass druggist bottle, probably from the 1910s.  Although the city and state is not included on the bottle, this was a druggist located in New Albany, Indiana.  This is just one example of the many thousands of druggists in the United States who had customized prescription bottles produced for their businesses – this practice was most common in the 1870s-1920s period.  This particular bottle is not marked with a glassmaker mark on the base, so the actual glass manufacturer is unknown.

7) Medicine manufacturers  and pharmaceutical companies (bottles containing “quack” patent medicines as well as “reputable” medicines, including “remedies”, “cures” “elixirs”, “liniments”, “vermifuges”, bitters, etc.).   A major sub-category of antique bottle collecting, the “Patent Medicines” were sold in tremendous quantities especially throughout the 1840s-1910s.  Many of the very oldest bottles of this type, bearing pontil marks on the bottoms, are extremely rare and seldom seen by collectors.
8) Food products manufacturers/distributors (food containers of a very wide range of types).
9) Pickle and condiment manufacturing/ distributing companies (containers for pickles, olives, chutney, chow chow, ketchup, vinegar, pepper sauces, relishes, etc.).
10) Ink and shoe polish manufacturers. (many types, sizes, designs of shoe dressing, stove blacking, ink, glue and related product bottles).
11) Bitters manufacturers (bitters bottles).
12) Coffee distributors (coffee jars).
13) Cosmetic manufacturers (cologne and perfume bottles, lotions, oils, salves, cold cream, makeup, aftershave).
14) Fruit jar manufacturers (well-known examples include Ball and Kerr, but dozens if not hundreds of other lesser-known names have been embossed on glass canning jars over the years).


"F. STUMPS LEATHER DRESSING" antique aqua shoe/leather dressing bottle - circa 1880s - 1890s - from Philadelphia PA.
“F. STUMPS / LEATHER DRESSING” antique aqua shoe/leather dressing bottle – circa 1880s – 1890s – believed to be from Philadelphia PA.   This bottle is very scarce – and the surname itself isn’t very common either!

Probably the most common embossed names found on antique and vintage glass bottles would be SMITH, JONES, WILLIAMS, THOMAS, JOHNSON, BROWN, ADAMS, MILLER, and others of that genre. The less common the surname, the harder it may be to find unusual examples or variants of bottles.


"W. A. FISCHBECK / PEOPLE'S DRUG STORE / BLOOMINGTON, ILL" - colorless one-ounce druggist bottle. This bears an "M inside a diamond" on the base (standing for John M. Maris, a pharmaceutical products distributor).   This probably dates from the 1890s-1910s era.
“W. A. FISCHBECK / PEOPLE’S DRUG STORE / BLOOMINGTON, ILL” – colorless one-ounce druggist bottle. This bears an “M inside a diamond” on the base (standing for John M. Maris, a pharmaceutical products distributor).   This probably dates from the 1890s-1910s era.

Some surnames are not that common to begin with, but are frequently found in “the bottle collecting world” simply because the companies were so successful.  “WHITTEMORE” comes to mind, a prolific manufacturer of shoe polish.  “HOSTETTER” is another, as shown by the bitters bottle shown on this page.

Dark Amber Whittemore Bros bottle - rectangular five ounce size, mold # 12 on the base. Tooled lip, this may date from the 1880s-1890s.
Dark Amber Whittemore Bros bottle – rectangular five ounce size, mold # 12 on the base. Tooled lip, this may date from the 1880s-1890s.

Kutnow's Powder old aqua glass bottle - London, England
“KUTNOW’S POWDER” bottle – circa 1890 – patent medicine that held a salts product promoted for stomach upset, headache and other maladies. “KUTNOW” is a fairly unusual surname. These bottles were made in England, and the product promoted by Herman Kutnow.

 


Many names, by their very nature, give strong clues concerning the ethnic or country origins of the proprietors of a particular business firm.  For instance, a very large proportion of early beer brewers and bottlers were of German origin.  A large influx of German immigrants occurred throughout much of the mid and late 19th century in the United States, many of them accomplished tradesmen and businessmen in a wide variety of fields.

The eBay.com auction site can be of great help in finding bottles with a particular surname on them.

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"Geo. Zubrod & Co. / Druggist / Louisville, KY. " antique glass prescription bottle - this probably dates from the 1880s or 1890s.
“Geo. Zubrod & Co. / Druggist / Louisville, KY. ” antique glass prescription bottle – this example probably dates from the 1880s or 1890s.

 

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One thought on “Surname-Oriented Antique Bottle Collecting”

  1. I am looking for information about a bottle I found. The bottom says S. C. Johnson and son Racine WI. I haven’t been able to find anything about it.
    Thanks
    Suzanne

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