2024 Notes

Click on the links below to jump to the notes:

         A New Western Soda: Bordwell & Company Attributed
         Early Weiss Beer Bottle of Henry Brenkmeyer (Brinkmeyer)
         Maverick Lang Beer Bottle Identified to a Victor Colorado Bottler
         McCormack Bottles Decoded
         Wisconsin's First Soda Bottle

 

8/10/2025

Wisconsin's First Soda Bottle

Cunningham BottleRecently a beautiful green torpedo soda water was found and attributed to a Milwaukee druggist who was bottling soda water in the late 1840s.  The bottle is embossed "WM M. CUNNINGHAM" on one side and "SODA WATER" on the reverse side. 

William M. Cunningham was reportedly born in Lockport, New York about 1821 according to his daughter's death certificate and his obituary notice1.  This is supported by an advertisement in the The Niagara Democrat and Lockport Balance on September 1, 1841, where he is listed as the secretary of the "Young Men's Association."

According to James S. Buck, in his book Milwaukee Under The Charter From 1847 To 1853 Inclusive. Volume III, Cunningham

 came here from Waukesha, I think in 1846 (sic 1843), and who became quite famous as a druggist. He was a man of great energy of character. In person, he was above the medium height, slightly built, had a thin face, (beardless), dark brown hair, and dark blue eyes. He was of a nervous temperament, walked quick and erect, and had a soft pleasant voice. Had a great love for books, was fond of music, cultivated a taste for the fine arts, and was of morals unimpeachable. Careful of what he said or did, he built up a large business

In the September 20, 1848 Wisconsin Weekly Free Democrat Cunningham claimed to have 15 years' experience "in the legitimate wholesale and retail drug trade," indicating he started in the business at 12 or 13 years of age.  Maybe he was a druggist in Lockport or maybe he apprenticed and worked for George W. Merchant, a leading druggist in that city and then worked a short time in Waukesha before relocating to Milwaukee.  In the German Newspaper Der Volksfreund during the spring of 1848, Cunningham claimed to have operated since February 1843 in Milwaukee.  The same was stated in the edition of the Free Democrat mentioned above.  He would have been 22 at that time he established the Milwaukee business.

Cunninghams Store 1848Cunningham announced the opening2 of "Cunningham's New Drug Store" on "East Water Street, Milwaukie [sic], W. T. (Wisconsin Territory) directly opposite Dewey's Commercial Block" and "one door south of the Milwaukee Iron Store," in the Milwaukee Commercial Herald on June 24, 1844.  This advertisement also states that he had purchased goods in New York and Boston during the spring of that year.  He was a prolific advertiser and it was common for him to have ten or more ads in a newspaper.  Later he had his own newspaper column titled "Cunningham's Column."  In 1844, he was selling a laundry list of products including all sorts of drugs, paints, varnishes, and oils, Shaker herbs and extracts, druggist and physician glassware, port and choice wines, for medical purposes, and was listed as the Wisconsin agent for many popular Eastern medicines, including "Moffat's Pills and Phoenix Bitters" and "Merchant's Gargling Oil," but there is no mention of soda water for sale.

In July 19, 1845 edition of the Milwaukee Daily Sentinel, Cunningham advertised he was manufacturing and bottling of soda water for the first time. 

A NEW THING!--SODA WATER PUT UP IN BOTTLES!!! -- This article possesses all the properties of that drawn from the Font.  Those who prefer different syrups, can be accommodated.  The convenient form that this is put in, will admit of being transported to almost any distance, and its flavor unimpaired.  By this arrangement, Hotels can serve up Soda Water to their guests, not inferior in quality to that drank at the Fountain.  Families who are fond of this pleasant, as well as healthy beverage, can have BOTTLED SODA WATER at their residences.
  It is offered at the low price of 75 cents per dozen bottles..

In the same newspaper, he advertised that he was selling "Lemon Syrup in bottles or by the gallon; Sarsaparilla do. do.; Sarsaparilla Mead in bottles."

His continued connection to his home town of Lockport is reinforced in 1846 when he was buying notes for the Canal Bank of Lockport, at a discount, and selling Lockport Glass Works' pint and half pint flasks on consignment3.  Cunningham did not advertise his soda bottling business during 1846, but there was another manufacturer, Isaac G. Goodrich, selling bottled soda water in Milwaukee as advertised in the Milwaukee Daily Sentinel on June 16, 1846:

Bottle     SOMETHING NEW _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Carbonic Mineral, or Soda Water, put up in bottles.  A superior article to the fountain Soda.
The subscriber is now prepared to furnish the citizens with this delicious beverage at a very moderate rate.  Price per single bottle, 6c; 50c Per doz. for families; 37 1/2 per doz. to dealers.                   ISAAC G. GOODRICH,
                                                                  Fruit dealer
Pointing FingerAt he old stand of Mr. J. B. Allen, nearly opposite Uncle Ben's Hat and Cap Store.

It is interesting that a cut or molded decanter was used to represent Goodrich's soda bottles.  This was a "stock" image for the paper and was also used in advertisements for wine and liquor dealers. The following year, in the Milwaukee Daily Sentinel & Gazette, on June 9, 1847, Cunningham was again advertising bottled soda water:

Pointing FingerBOTTLED SODA WATER.-- By this arrangement persons can have the delightful beverage served up to them anywhere they choose.  SODA WATER prepared in this manner is equal if not superior to that drawn from the fountain.
  Put up in half pint egg shaped bottles.  Price 50c per doz. bottles, or 6d each (and the bottles subject to be returned when empty.)  Prepared and sold by
              Wm. M. CUNNINGHAM, Apothecary and Druggist,
                                                                            Martins' Buildings.

What is notable is the use of the description of "egg shaped bottles" and the statement that "the bottles subject to be returned when empty."  This indicates that he had a standardized container for his product and had a sizable investment in these bottles that required reuse to cover their cost.  Competition appears to driven the price of a dozen bottles form 75 cents in 1845 to 50 cents in 1847.  Further requiring the return of bottles to make the business profitable.

The following year, 1848, Cunningham is advertising the sale "Sarsaparilla and Lemon Syrup purchased expressly for Soda Fountain use and for sale by the gallon or less quantity" in the June 9, 1848 Milwaukee Sentinel & Gazette.  This would seen to indicate that he was no longer selling soda water on a retail basis.

In August of 1848, Cunningham traveled to Baltimore, Maryland and was married in Christ Church on August 16 to Anna R. Martin, daughter of John Martin, Esq., of Baltimore, Maryland and sister of James B. Martin of Milwaukee.  Her brother was a wealthy Milwaukee landowner with $225,000 of real estate holdings as listed in the 1850 Census and who listed was as a banker in the 1860 Census with real estate holdings of $350,000.  Cunningham made good use of his time on the East Coast buying 74 tons (1808 packages) of goods "at Auction sales, or directly from manufactures and importers, and principally for CASH" according to the September 20, 1848 Wisconsin Weekly Free Democrat.

 Cunningham took ill in 1848, and that illness took a turn for the worse about October of the same year.  Cunningham, at an age of 28, was compelled to sell his business, at 151 East Water Street, to to Seth Johnson Jr. on March 29, 1849.  Johnson never advertised soda water for sale so that branch of the business appears to have been defunct by that time. He returned to Lockport, New York with his wife, where he died a short time later on May 18, 1849, reportedly of overwork by Buck in his above book in 1884.  His wife Anna returned to Milwaukee, where a daughter, Kate Le Roy Cunningham, was born just a month later on June 15, 1849.  Anna in turn died on Oct. 22, 1850, leaving Kate an orphan.  Both William and Anna are buried at Cold Springs Cemetery in Lockport.  Their daughter Kate was adopted by her wealthy uncle James B. Martin and enjoyed a privileged upbringing.  Kate ended up marring Henry Niedecken, Jr., a successful stationer and lived a long life.

This bottle is no doubt a product of the Lockport Glass Works of Lockport New York.  Being on the Erie Canal, shipping by boat to Milwaukee would have been more convenient than from Pittsburgh or Cincinnati glass factories.  Cunningham, being a native son of Lockport and a young leader there, would have had the necessary business connections in that city.  As seen, he was selling bottles from this works in 1846 and as this glass factory burned to the ground in September of 18464, perhaps Cunningham's order for soda water bottles was an effort to help old friends in that city get back on their feet.

Merchant Bottle Lockport Glass Works also manufactured bottles for George W. Merchant.  These included bottles for his "Gargling Oil" and later on for his Oak Orchard Acid Springs mineral waters.  In 1845, they also manufactured an egg bottle for Merchant's Carbonic Mineral Water.  This product seems to have only been marketed during 1845, which nicely dates this bottle.  This bottle is of a stubbier form and has a different lip than the Cunningham bottle.

The Cunningham bottle itself is a distinctive green associated with Merchant's and other bottles known to have been manufactured by this works.  There are two nearly identical bottles that are attributed to the Lockport factory.  One is marked "Soda Water" on one side and appears to be of identical embossing to the Cunningham bottle.  The second has no embossing, but is of an identical shape.  One of these later bottles has a label for "Instant Cure Of Pain" which is also marked as being manufactured by "THE FAR EAST MEDICAL LABORATORY - Establishment Maumee City, Ohio."  This was an early imitation by J. S. Gregory of that place to copy Perry Davis' Vegetable Pain Killer.  Gregory was an agent for Davis, but went rogue.  In 1850, Perry was warning the public of Gregory's inferior product as advertised in the Freemont Weekly Freeman on November 9, 1850

                                         Beware of Counterfeits!--Caution
ALL persons are hereby cautioned against making applications for or purchasing DAVIS' PAIN KILLER of J. SANFORD GREGORY, of Maumee City.
  He was formerly an agent for the sale of the genuine medicines but recently it has come to the knowledge of the proprietors that he is manufacturing and vending a SPURIOUS ARTICLE, putting it up in nearly the same style as the genuine, publishing a pamphlet copying our directions nearly verbatim, and using one of the heads of our advertisements, ("INSTANT CURE OF PAIN") as a name for his spurious compound.

Gregory went on to have a successful business with embossed bottles of his own.

Since:
    - Cunningham advertised his egg bottles in 1847,
    - Apparently abandoned the retail sale of soda water in 1848,
    - Due to poor health sold the business in early 1849,
    - His bottles do not resemble egg bottles made at Lockport in 1845,
    - Similar bottles, with the embossing removed and with labels date 1849-1850,
it seems probable that these bottles date to 1847 only.  As Wisconsin was admitted to the Union as a state on May 29, 1848, this should be considered a Territorial bottle.

Cunningham Bottle Cunningham Reverse Soda Water Bottle Plain Bottle Gregory Bottle
Cunningham Bottle Reverse of the Cunningham Bottle Lockport Bottle Marked "Soda Water" only Unmarked Lockport Bottle Unmarked Lockport Bottle with Gregory Label

Photos Courtesy of American Glass Gallery, Glass Works Auctions and Peter Maas.


   
 

12/5/2024

McCormack Bottles Decoded

McCormack bottles are confusing.  It is well known that McCormack was in Richmond, Virginia and Nashville, Tennessee, but his early bottles are not marked with a city.  Some of his later bottles are marked Nashville, but some of these bottles have A. M. L and E. O. on the shoulder.  What does that mean.  It is a held belief that he moved from Nashville to Louisville at some point and when you start to research him, it gets even more confusing.  The fact that there are two brothers named "M. McCormack" and "four" firms named McCormack & Company over the years and partnerships with no known bottles only adds to this mangled mess.  Lets try and figure this out.

Michael McCormack was born to Malachi and Catherine (nee Brady) McCormack in County Roscommon, Ireland about 1825.  He married Mary Tiernan some time before 1850.  She was born about 1830 also in Roscommon County, Ireland.  He clamed that he started in the mineral water business in 18471.  He did, but he was working for the firm of Tucker & Canfield in Richmond, Virginia, who took over the firm of A. L. Rapp & Company in 1848.  In the 1850 Census2, Michael McCormack was living with Isaac M. Tucker, one of the partners of Tucker & Canfield, with his wife, Mary, and brothers Lawrence (aged 21) and Malachi (aged 12).  The partnership of Tucker & Canfield went into receivership and their business and personal property was sold at auction on June 23, 1851 on the property of the firm near the corner of Broad & Second streets3.

McCormack purchased the bottles, but not at the initial auction4, of his former employers and possibly some of the equipment and appears to have launched his business In the Spring of 1852 when McCormack advertised his business and that bottles marked "T & C" and "McCormack" were his property5.  To publicize his products with the launch of his business, McCormack supplied the local paper's staff with free products6.

During the next couple of years, McCormack's business appeared to be healthy.  He continued normal and healthy business activities including advertising his bottled goods7, the by products of their manufacture8, traveling to purchase equipment and supplies9, and faced normal issues including the return of his bottles10, and external competition from firms in Baltimore11.

The return of bottles must have been such an issue to his business, that in January 1854, McCormack started charging fifty cents per dozen for his bottles.  The half-pint bottles were more expensive than the product they contained12.  The charge was refunded to his clients with the return of the bottles.

McCormack wanted to expand his business, but he needed an influx of capital  to do so.  So on February 15, 1855, he partnered with William P. Ladd, a Richmond druggist, to form the firm of M. McCormack & Company13.  Ladd continued to run his drug business up the street at 319 Broad Street.  M. McCormack & Company continued to employ Warren Canfield, McCormack's former boss, as the superintendent of their Richmond Soda Water & Bottling Establishment14.

With Michael McCormack's health declining15, he was compelled to leave Richmond and as part of this move, the firm of M. McCormick & Company was dissolved on July 12th, 1855, with partner William P. Ladd the successor16.  Ladd continued to operate the Richmond Soda Water & Bottling Establishment at the old stand at 308 Broad Street.  At this same time, Ladd bought out the soda water business of A. O. Brummel17, a Richmond competitor and the surviving partner of Brummel & Byrne.  William Canfield left Ladd and went into business on his own in December 185518.

During 1856, McCormack spent the greater part of the year traveling thru the Northern States, England and Ireland visiting local breweries and bottling establishments with "a view to still greater improvements in the manufacture of the said articles19."

After returning from his travels thru the United States and Europe and by July of 1856, McCormack went to work for Ladd at the is old establishment at 308 Broad Street20.  Later, he purchased his old business back from William P. Ladd in March of 185721.

McCormack products included soda water, lemon and sarsaparilla pop, Philadelphia porter and ale, champagne cider, brown stout, and starting in late 1857, lager beer22.

In 1857, McCormack was shipping his product to Tennessee and North Carolina in addition to Virginia23.  He must have been doing a good business in Tennessee, and decided to move his operations to Nashville.  In November of 1858, McCormack was selling his home and property in Richmond, as listed in The Richmond Dispatch starting on November 5, 1858.  The property did not sell, so it was auctioned as announced in the same paper on February 10th, 1859.  In early March of 1859, McCormack sold the Richmond Soda Water & Bottling Establishment to Francis Dusch and recommended him as his successor in Richmond24.  He also appointed Michael Keane, his bookkeeper as the person to settle his finances in Richmond25.  Keane was continuing to work for Francis Dusch in Richmond, but is part of the Tennessee story after the Civil War.

McCormack must have been planning and moving from Richmond to Nashville during the first quarter of 1859.  Early records announcing McCormack's business in Nashville include an entry in the 1859 Tennessee Directory and a small notice regarding his manufactory that appeared in the July 1st, 1859 edition of the Nashville Union & American:

MINERAL WATER.--We received yesterday a quantity of Mineral Water manufactured by M. M'CORMACK, Broad street.  Persons fond of this delightful beverage will find the water sold by Mr. M'CORMACK equal to any in the city.

An advertisement in The Tennessean for the same date listed Smith's Kennet ale, from Wheeling, Virginia, and Philadelphia XXX porter as products in addition to mineral water as products.  The business was located at 70 South Cherry Street26

With the outbreak of the Civil War and the "Lincoln" blockade, supplies needed by McCormick to run his business were scarce as was coinage needed for making change for his customers27.  McCormack asked his clients to save their corks and accept tickets for additional product instead of change,  During the summer of 1863, McCormack was producing about 500 dozen bottles of mineral water daily28 and the demand was increasing.

Likely in need of capital to restart his business at the end of the Civil War, McCormack appears to have partnered with an unknown party or parties to form the second iteration of McCormack & Company.  The partners advertised that they were increasing the price of a dozen bottles of their mineral water, porter and ale to 75 cents, double the pre-war price29, in October of 1865.  They hoped to be able to half that price at the start of the Spring Season.

However, by the Spring Season, McCormack took Michael Keane and Malachi McCormack in as partners under the firm name of McCormack, Keane & Company30.  Malachi was Michael's younger brother and Michael Keane, was the elder McCormack's former bookkeeper in Richmond.  This partnership likely provided the capital needed after the Civil War. With the new partners, two branch locations were opened, one operated by Michael Keane in Louisville, Kentucky and a second in Chattanooga, Tennessee located at the corner of Market & Fourth Streets31. Which partner operated the Chattanooga branch is not known.  In November of 1867, the firm was offering for sale one or two of its operations32.  It appears that the Chattanooga operation was sold some time during the Spring of 1868 to R. Reed, who was listed at the Market & Fourth address operating a mineral water manufactory in directory listing for 1868 and 1869.  The Firm of McCormack, Keane & Company was dissolved on June 1, 1868.  Michael Keane took control of the Louisville operations and the third iteration of M. McCormack & Company was formed to take control of the Nashville operations33.

In 1869, the firm had a capacity of 400 dozen bottles of mineral water and 100 dozen bottles of ale and porter a day and used Putnam's Cork Fasteners34.  In 1870, they were reported to be the only bottlers of beer and soda water in Nashville and employing between fifteen to twenty workmen35.  However, by the end of the year, Diehl & Lord were to become competitors with their purchase of the beer bottling business of Alex Hemphill and quickly added the bottling of soda and mineral waters to their product line in 187136.

The firm of M. McCormack & Company was apparently dissolved on February 15, 1871, but was not publicly announced until June 20, 1872.  Michael McCormack sold his interest in the firm to Eugene Ottenville.  Malachi McCormack retained his share in the partnership and with Ottenville formed the successor firm of McCormack & Company37, the fourth iteration.  Note that there is no "M" initial in the new firm.  This is an unusually long time to not publicly announce a change, but it is supported by articles on the Industrial Exhibition during May of 1871, where the firm of M. McCormack & Company38 was officially registered, but colloquially it was reported as the partnership between Malachi McCormack and Eugene Ottenville39.

McCormack & Company was dissolved on October 26, 187440Eugene Ottenville was the surviving partner and remained at the old address of 105 South Cherry Street.  However, in January of 1875, he moved the business to 67 South College Street41.

Pluto Bottle Goodrich Bottle C & M side Bottle C & M round Bottle C & M round Bottle
Michael McCormack
Richmond, VA
(1852-1859)
Michael McCormack
Nashville, TN(1859-1864)
Michael McCormack & Company
Nashville, TN(1868-1871)
McCormack & McKee
Nashville, TN(1875-1876)
Malachi McCormack
Nashville, TN(1876-1879)

With Ottenville leaving the old established location, Malachi McCormack got the itch to get back into the bottling business.  He formed a partnership with Michael J. McKee, his former bookkeeper, early in 1875.  This firm was short lived and McCormack & McKee was dissolved on January 31, 187642 with Malachi McCormack the surviving partner who continued the business at 105 South Cherry Street.  McKee picked up his interest in the grocery business with his brother P. J. McKee as P. J. McKee & Brother.  It is interesting that the number of bottles this firm produced exceeds all know bottles from the predecessor and successor firms in Nashville.

Malachi McCormack remained in the soda water business until early in 1879, when he retired.  Eugene Ottenville took over the 105 South Cherry Street business at this about at the start of February that same year43.

Photos courtesy of Glass Works Auctions

 

   
 

11/18/2024

Maverick Lang Beer Bottle Identified to a Victor Colorado Bottler

While looking at beer bottle listings on an online auction site, I saw a beer bottle marked "Lang's Extra Pale St. Louis Beer" with a monogram in the center that was hard to distinguish other than a letter "M."  I stated to add it to this web site as a Lang bottle, when it occurred to me that it did not say "Mo." or "Missouri" and therefore I thought it must belonged to a bottler, but who and where were they from?

It had to be a Western bottle as Lang's beer was not sold on the East Coast.  I recalled that there where some Lang bottles from Colorado.  A quick search of the Impressed In Time book on Colorado beverage bottles found some similar looking bottles, but JLM Monogramno match.  I was convinced it was a Colorado bottle, but whose?

Those initials were going to be key.  They were cryptic.  The "M" was easy, but the other letters were hard to make out.  I eventually suspected the they were a "J" and "L."  See image to the right.

I searched this web site's directory listings to no avail.  I also checked online sources for directory listings and no luck.  I then searched the 1900 and 1910 Census Records for all of Colorado to see who was a bottler that matched any of the letters I identified.  Again no luck.  I then searched for "Extra Pale" and "Lemp" in several newspaper sites to see if I could find out who was selling this product.  I got one hit in a 1900 Newspaper from Victor, Colorado.  Great, but not.  The ad was just a simple "Drink Lemp's Extra Pale Beer" with no proprietor and could have been from the home office in Saint Louis.

My next search was for all men who were living in Victor, Colorado in the 1900 Census and after reviewing hundreds of entries I saw a listing for a John L. Muelhausen which matched my suspected initials of "J" and "L" and "M."  Opening the record, I saw he was listed as a "Beer Agent."  I think I found my guy.

Interestingly there is a Colorado beer bottle marked S. L. Muehlhausen and Lemp's beer from the Cripple Creek District.

Searching the newspapers I was able to piece together the following story. 

C. A. Vernon, was an agent for the Union Brewing Company of Denver.  In January of 1897, he acquired the agency for the Lemp Brewing Company of Saint Louis for the Cripple Creek District1.  Sometime after, Charles E. Thomsen, had the agency for both these breweries in Victor and on his death, John L. Muehlhausen, of Denver, took over the Victor agency in February of 18982.

In 1899, Muehlhausen put out a contract to build a two-story brick building fronting 25 feet with a depth of 75 feet in Victor3.

During the summer of 1900, the following advertisement ran, like this one in the Victor Daily Record on August 19th, 1900:

Drink Lemp's Extra Pale.  It is refreshing and invigorating.  J. L. Muehlhausen, agent Union Brewing company.

In Lemp's BottleMarch of 1901, Muehlhausen survived a law suit over cigars4, so he was still in Victor, but the following May, he was in Cripple Creek setting up a liquor business there5.

So this business was controlled by Muehlhausen from 1898 into 1901.

We can gather from the 1900 Victor Census record that John L. Muehlhausen was born in October, 1869 in Illinois of German parents.  He was living at 411 Fourth Street with his Swedish born wife, of five years, Emma G., and children Marie aged four and Gladys at just under a year.  By 1910, he was back in Victor and was a salesman for a brewery.  Another daughter, Octavia, aged six had joined the flock.  With Prohibition becoming the law of the land, in 1920, he had relocated to Los Angeles and was a a salesman for a bond company.  In the 1930 Census, he is listed a Captain of Police for a motion picture studio, and from an industry magazine in 1935, we learn that it was the Fox Studio and that he was a colorful character who at one time was the Sheriff of the Cripple Creek District6.

So there you go, another Maverick identified and a new Colorado bottle to boot.

Photos courtesy of Boyer Brothers.

   

11/12/2024

Early Weiss Beer Bottle Of Henry Brenkmeyer (Brinkmeyer)

I was adding an entry for a H. C. Breimeyer bottle I saw a picture of from Saint Louis, but was not sure of the exact embossing.  So I broke out my copy of Johnnie Fletcher's Missouri Bottles, Crock Jugs & Dose Glasses to identify the exact embossing.  I noticed an early looking Saint Louis style Weiss Beer bottle on the opposite page marked H. Brenkmeyer.

I think these early Saint Louis Weiss Beer Bottles are really neat.  They are tall and thin and mark the introduction of Weiss Beer to the American market.  Some of these bottles date to 1860 and it is possible that some date to the late 1850s and bottles of this shape were used up until just before Prohibition in 1919.

The Brenkmeyer bottle was listed as unique and as these bottles peak my interest, I thought that I would try and do some research to see find the age of this bottle.

Apparently there were several Henry Brenkmeyer in and around Saint Louis during this period and the various misspelling of Brenkmeyer makes it difficult to do research.  I can find no Census records for Henry.  A key record is the 1863 draft registration record for Henry Brinkmeier (sic).  It lists some key pieces of information including his residence at 1092 Broadway; his age of 25 years; his marital status being single; his birth country being the United States; and his occupation as a brewer.  Interestingly, John Bernniter is in the entry right above and is listed as 26 years old German born "baker" residing at 1088 Broadway.

Since brewers were taxed during the Civil War, a search of those records provides additional information.  Henry was listed in the first tax assessment in September of 1862 as brewing at the intersection of Broadway and Destrehan and being taxed on four (4) barrels of beer.  This location was in North Saint Louis and today the address would be at 3500 North Broadway.  North Saint Louis was a separate village founded about 1816.  It was annexed by the City of Saint Louis in 1841.

Brinkmeyer was listed in most of these tax record at this location thru February of 1863, producing between one (1) and three (3) barrels of beer each month.  The next record was in May of 1863 and the location was listed as 1084 Broadway and upping his production to five (5) barrels.  Entries between May and August 1863, list Broadway & Destrehan, 1084 and 1096 Broadway and between (5) and eight (8) barrels of beer.  August of 1863 was the last IRS tax record that could be found.  This indicates that he was in business at least in September of that year. A single directory listing for 1863 stated "Brinkmyer (sic), Henry, brewery, 1084 Broadway."

In 1864, Brinkmeyer was listed as a baker residing at Destrehan & Broadway. He was listed as a bricklayer or laborer from 1868 to 1876 at 813 or 815 Destrehan and 3503 Broadway.  He appears to have saved enough money to reopen a grocery business from 1877 thru 1887 where he is listed as a grocer at 3501 or 3503 or 3505 Broadway.  During the years 1891 thru 1899, he is listed as the vice-president of the St. Louis Washing Tea Company and residing at 3501 North Broadway and starting in 1899, at 8107 Florissant avenue.

An interesting notice appeared an April, 18631, where "H Brinkmeyer" was shipped "5" boxes of glassware aboard the James R. Gilmore from Pittsburgh.  This is no doubt a shipment of the very bottle listed.  This same notice lists many firms receiving glassware, some of which were Saint Louis bottlers.

These records seem to indicate that Henry Brinkmeyer was a very small brewer in operation during 1862 and 1863.

 As seen below later Weiss Beer bottles from Saint Louis can in a wide variety of colors.

American Bottle Columbia Bottle Schroeder Bottle St. Louis Bottle Schroeder Bottle Wittemman Post Bottle
American Weiss Beer Company Columbia Weiss Beer Brewery Schroder Berliner Weiss Bier Company (German Made) St. Louis Weiss Beer Brewing Company Schroder Berliner Weiss Bier Company (American Made) Wittemman Post Brewing Company

Pictures courtesy of J. Cress and Glass Works Auctions.

 

 

1/4/2023

A New Western Soda: Bordwell & Company Attributed

Ryan Soda BottleThe Bordwell & Company bottle has been a bit of a mystery for sixty years.  It showed up in early soda bottle listings that were written in the west, but had not been identified as an Eastern or Western bottle.  What is known is that it is of a classic Dyottville Glass Works form matching up against bottles produced for other bottlers during the period 1851 to 1856 and mainly in Pennsylvania.  See the list below of similar styled bottles.

One of these bottles was sold at auction by Holabird Americana in August of 2024 and thru some excellent research was determined by Fred Holabird to be from Oroville, California and dated 1856-1858.

Reading thru the research, which was compelling, it seemed to have nailed this bottle down as to the original location of the firm and how the bottles traveled with the successors to the location where some were found in Grass Valley, California, but one thing bothered me and that was the dates of the firm in Oroville.  My experience told me that the bottle was from the earlier years of the 1850s and not the second half of the decade.  So I embarked on some additional research to see if I could find to support my hunch or prove that the bottle was of a later vintage.

The earliest mention of the business in Oroville was in the Northern California form the same city, dated April 25, 1856.  This was the traditional start of the soda water business, which generally when idle during the winter months.

PROTECT HOME INDUSTRY.--Messrs. DEAMER & BORDWELL, Soda Manufacturers, are always on hand, always on the square, have their families among us, make the best article of Soda, Ale, and Porter, (this we know for we have had a taste) drive a good team, and are good fellows generally, and should be patronized in preference to strangers.  Let our saloon keepers bear this in mind.

Another ad in the same paper was published about a week later on May 2, 1856:

New Advertisements.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
DEAMER & BORDWELL,

MANUFACTURERS OF
MINERAL WATER, ALE, AND
PORTER.
The patronage of the citizens of Butte County is respectfully solicited.
 Pointing FingerManufactory on the corner of Pine and Robinson streets, Oroville.

This clearly identifies that this firm was know as "Deamer" & Bordwell and that this firm was a new business to Oroville at the corner of Pine and Robinson Streets.  The firm was not Bordwell & Company and it does not appear that Bordwell was the senior partner.

In searching the newspapers form April 1856 to 1858.  found this firm going by the following names

NameCount of Unique Reverences
Deamer & Bordwell19
Bordwell & Deamer2
  

A search on W. E. Deamer reveals that he bought into the soda bottling establishment of Burdick & Monty by purchasing D. C. Monty's share of the business in January of 1856.  The new firm was to be known as Deamer & Burdick.

William H. Bordwell ended up San Francisco and filed for insolvency as recorded in the Sacramento Daily Union on June 26, 1858:

SAN FRANCISCO INSOLVENCY.--At San Francisco, June 23, William W. Bordwell petitioned for the benefit of the Insolvent Act.  He states that from August, 1852, to May, 1855, he was in business in the town of St. Louis, Sierra county, as one of the firm of Bordwell & Moore, which was dissolved at that time.  Petitioner has suffered from protracted sickness.  Liabilities, $3,000.

Bordwell seems to have skipped over the fact that he was in a successful business in Oroville in the years in between and the outcome of the case is not known.

The dates that Bordwell was reported in Saint Louis, California seem more in line with that dates that other bottles of this mold are dated to.  So my focus moved to Saint Louis.  The records are sparse, but there was a major fire at Saint Louis that destroyed much of the town and total losses were over $115,000 according to the Sacramento Daily Union in the August 22, 1854.  In the same paper, Bordwell & Moore were listed as having a $12,000 loss of their store and Bordwell & Co's. Saloon had a loss of $5,000.  Saloons were major consumers of soda water during this period and Bordwell had his hand in a few businesses.  So the pieces appeared to be falling into place

According to the San Francisco Call "William W. Bordwell, a native of New York/aged 64 years" died on April 25, 1895.

Based on this information, we are able to connect some dots.  William Wallace Bordwell was born about 1832 on the family farm in Champlain, New York in Clinton County.  He was the son of Luke Wolcott Bordwell and Lydia (nee Thomas) Bordwell, both from Scotland.  In 1850, he was listed as a twenty year old clerk in Champlain, New York.  According to Family history, he removed to California in 1852.  Arriving he settled in Saint Louis, California, he appears to have operated a store and Saloon and likely a soda bottling establishment. Being burned out in 1854, he moved to Oroville, California in 1856 and partnered with W. E. Deamer.  The business fell apart in 1858 and W. W. moved to San Francisco and filed for bankruptcy.  In 1861 he was with F. D. Conro & Co.'s Golden Age flour mills.  In 1864, he is listed in Gold Hill, Nevada.  In July 1866, William and his brothers George and Henry Wolcott registered to vote in San Francisco, they were all living at various locations on Bryant Street, and were listed as a miner, architect, and machinist respectfully.  In the 1870 Census, W. W. is listed as a 36 year old miner in Elko, Nevada.  In 1872 he appears to have moved to Carson City.  In 1876 he appears to have formed a partnership as a firm of Currie, Bordwell & Edmunds, accountants and collectors.  He also serve as the Engrossing Clerk.  In the 1880 Census, he is listed as a 38 year old accountant at the same location.  In 1881, he apparently became demented and was committed several times.  In 1888, he ended up back in San Francisco, where he died on April 25, 1895.

Photo courtesy American Bottle Auctions