Saturday, June 30, 2018

2020 shot out

For the 2020 shoot out three bottles needed . Should be bottles that a number of people have. Could be a soda , whiskey or bitters or ??? Post your choices .

Monday, June 11, 2018

The Neustadter Brothers

San Francisco Gold Rush Merchants
 
 
The firm of Neustadters Brothers was established in 1852 by the brothers Louis W. and Henry Neustadter. The company was one of the earliest men’s clothing manufacturer in San Francisco.

Louis Neustadter is listed in the 1847-48 New York City Directory selling or manufacturing fancy goods. He most likely left New York for the California gold rush sometime after 1847.

New York City directory 1847-48

The California gold rush was the largest mass migration in American history and brought about 300,00 people to California. Louis Neustadter saw the need for goods and services in the emerging and soon to become state of California and opened a business in San Francisco 
 
The first mention of the Neustadter's in San Francisco was in the January 1850 edition of the Daily Alta California newspaper advertising the dissolution of the partnership of the business of Adelsdorfer and Louis W. Neustadter located on Sacramento Street in San Francisco.
 

Daily Alta California January 1850   
 
The 1852-53 San Francisco directory lists Neustadter & Company as dealers in clothing at 132 California Street. The directory also lists Louis and Henry Neustadter as commission merchants at 113 Sacramento Street  A commission merchant is someone who buys or sells products for a percentage of the sales price. During the early period of the California gold rush ship loads of all sort of products were sold right off of the wharfs or ships by commission merchants. The directory also lists N. Neustadter at 132 California Street as selling clothing.
 

San Francisco City directory 1852-53
 
The 1854 LeCount & Strong San Francisco directory lists N. Neustadter & Co. at 132 California selling clothing.
 
LeCount & Strong 1854 San Francisco directory
 
The September 1857 edition of the Daily California lists the copartnership of  Henry and Louis Neustadter
 
1857 Daily Alta California
 
San Francisco directory 1859
 
The firm of Neustadter Brothers continued to grow and expand in the 1860's and became known for their Standard Shirt brand and Boss of the Road overalls. They were in direct competition with the well known San Francisco firm of Levi Strauss & Co. 
 
 
 
As successful as the Neustadter Brothers were in the clothing business gold rush history buffs and collectors of gold rush clasps will always remember them as the manufacturers of the rare stamped belt clasp marked:
 
 NEUSTADTER BROTHERS / SAN FRANCISCO
 
 
Thanks to Max Bell for the image  - rs -
 
 
 
 
 
 

 


Reno 2020


RENO announced for the 2020 National Antique Bottle Show & Expo

After an extensive search, negotiations, presentations and FOHBC board approval, Reno has be selected as the location for the FOHBC 2020 National Antique Bottle Show & Expo. The event will be held at the Grand Sierra Resort & Casino. Richard Siri will act as Show Chair. Team Reno at this point will also include Warren Friedrich, Eric McGuire and Ferdinand Meyer V. Essentially the same team as the very successful 2016 Sacramento National.

Stay tuned for more information!

https://www.fohbc.org/2018/06/reno-announced-for-the-2020-national-antique-bottle-show-expo/

Wednesday, June 6, 2018

I have been getting into the Western Whiskey bottles, my latest acquisition, Old Judge. Applied top, red amber, whittled.

Sunday, June 3, 2018

Reno Show 2020

Signed a contract with the Grand Sierra Resort in Reno for the FOHBC show in 2020 . The dates are July 30 to August 2 start making your plans now

Friday, June 1, 2018

Alex Von Humbolt & Roger Terry


While visiting the Peachridge Glass site I stumbled across a link to an old post that my amigo Roger Terry wrote for this here Western Bottle News back in 2010. It was so well written and interesting that I though I would bring it back for those that missed it when it was published:



HISTORICALLY SPEAKING

A new record price for a flask!     What a flask it is..  the famous "Firecracker Flask".   A flask that honors  two of the great men in U.S. history,   framers of the Constitution,  former presidents of these United States.   They both died on July 4, 1826,  within hours of each other.  Exactly 50 years from the signing of the Declaration!

Can it possibly get more "historical" than that?   I don't think so.

Pikes Peak flasks,  Civil War flasks,  Success to the Railroad,  Tippecanoe Cabin,  all of the pictorial flasks,  whew!!    They are beautiful,  and historical!    They are out of my league... and out of my limited realm of knowledge..  and for the most part out of my pocket book capacity.


We western digger/collectors just have bottles.   Good old bottles!    Crazy names,  funny shapes,  beautiful colors.   I guess we have a few that have a historical theme...  the beautiful Chalmer's Catawba Wine Bitters... Sutter' Mill,  or the Old Pioneer Whiskey...the California Bear   (can you hear the scoffs and hoots raining down from east of the Mississippi)  ha, ha!

Ok,  we have what we have... but we do have a name on a bottle that is tied to Mr. Jefferson.  His name is tied to Lewis & Clark,  tied to John C. Fremont,  to Charles Darwin,  tied to half the western U.S.


HUMBOLDT

If you live in N. California, or N. Nevada  how often do you say that name,  as compared to John Adams, or maybe even T. Jefferson.
 
 
 






"Alexander von Humboldt was the reigning scientific mind of the early nineteenth century, a unique combination of naturalist and adventurer.  With his companion, Aime Bonpland,  Humboldt cut a six thousand mile swath across the New World, through what is now Venezuela, Columbia, Ecuador, Peru, Mexico, and Cuba.  Risking his life in treacherous terrain, he conducted the first extensive scientific explorations of the Andes and the Amazon, literally redrawing the map of the Americas and dramatically expanding our knowledge of the natural world.  He brought back to Europe more than 60,000 plant specimens and a multitude of exotic New World animals, set an altitude record while climbing the volcano Chimborazo, made revolutionary discoveries regarding volcanoes and the Earth's magnetic field,  and introduced millions of Americans and Europeans to the astonishing cultures of the Aztecs and the Incas. 
At the completion of his epic journey, Humboldt became one of the most celebrated men in the world,  feted by Thomas Jefferson in Washington and  invited to Napoleon's coronation in Paris.  His ideas revolutionized scientific research,  laid the ground work for entire new fields of study, such as climatology, oceanography, and several branch's of geography.  His adventures profoundly influenced followers and students such as Charles Darwin.  Today,  more places and geographical features are named after Humboldt than any other historical figure,  and scientists continue to build on the foundations he established."  -  Gerard Helferich
 
Alex von Humboldt,  incredible traveler, author,  and father figure of science,  was perhaps the most admired man of the 19th century.  Fourteen towns in the United States and one in Canada are named for him.  Mountains in Antarctica, North and South America, Australia, New Zealand.  An ocean current off of Peru,  the largest glacier in Greenland.  A bay, a county, a university, a redwood forest in California.   Streams, parks, city streets,  even a "sea" on the moon carry his name. 


The map of Northern Nevada is covered with Humboldts name;  the county, a town, a canyon, a mountain range,  a huge national forest.  Most of the California and Nevada naming was due to the little "Pathfinder".  John C. Fremont.   Fremont was an ardent Humboldt admirer,  naming the river that marked the westward expansion and later the gold rush trail.  

Fremont's diary- Nov. 8th, 1845.  " Crane's Branch led into a larger stream that was one of the two forks forming a river to which I gave the name of Humboldt.  I am given by Himself the honor of being the first to place his great name on the map of the continent.  Both the river and mountain to which I gave his name are conspicuous;  the river stretching across the Basin to the foot of the Sierra Nevada."
Ok, Ok... it looks like I know way too much about Humboldt.   I put together a display for the Reno Show a few years ago...  this is just some of that material.   I always loved the photos of the Alex von Humboldts Stomach Bitters bottle in Wilson's Western Bitters.    The two bottles,  one plain-jane,  the other whittled, crooked,  crude.. the epitome of what we want in a western bitters.  If there was a picture that I went back to over and over and helped to form my fascination with Western Bitters,  that's it.   I thought I knew I little about the bottles when I put together that display.   Warren F.'s research will change much of the previous written information about the manufacturers,  even the date of distribution.  I thought for sure the beginning had to be 1869,  the hundred year centenary of  Humboldts birth.   Nope!  
Wilson had one thing right about Alex von Humboldt;  he "isolated the deadly native poison 'curare'."   That he did,  but it's kinda like condensing Abe Lincoln's accomplishments down to "being tall".
 
 





So,  if your not buying the "Historical of the West" thing...  don't confuse our bottle with the lame looking Eastern aqua bitters.   Our   ALEX VON HUMBOLDTS / STOMACH BITTERS  was blown in San Francisco.
 
Well done Roger - Well done!
rs
 
(Thanks to Dale Mlasko & Ferdinand Meyer for the pictures)