GIBB
Except for the Virginia City
embossed ink bottles, for some strange reason the only other ‘early’ western
ink with the proprietors name embossed is the Gibb umbrella. I know that there
has been no documented evidence that this bottle is western made but I would
put a hefty wager on the odds of it being blown in San Francisco . Regardless, let’s look at Mr.
Gibb himself.
The earliest listing
found for Gavin Gibb was in the 1863 San
Francisco Directory.
Born in Philadelphia in 1843
Gavin J. W. Gibb was in San Francisco by about
1863 when he was first listed in the San
Francisco city directory selling paints and offering
his services as a painter. During the
first few years he named his business the Pacific Color Works. Known for
obtaining his own color sources from minerals found throughout California and Nevada ,
he invested in a mill and necessary equipment for producing paints. In June
1866 Gibb was forced to file for bankruptcy. After opening his paint mill in
January 1866 his expenses put him in the red by about $5,500.
The first of two bankruptcies that Gibb had to endure was
documented in the Daily Alta California on
June 19, 1866.
After a hiatus of a few years Gibb is noted in the 1868 San
Francisco Directory as a sign painter at 633 Market Street . He then took a partner
in 1869, then known as Gibb & Koch – sign painters. By 1871 Gibb worked
alone as a sign and ornamental painter. By 1872 he was in partnership with
Hiram B. Melendy as sign painters and importers and manufacturers of paints,
oils and varnishes. The following year the partnership was reorganized and
called Gavin J. W. Gibb and Co. By 1874 Melendy had left Gibb and his company
was simply called Gibb & Co.
While maintaining the same company name of Gibb & Co.,
in 1875 he acquired another partner named Albert M. Shields and Gibb no longer
advertised sign painting. As in the previous several years this partnership did
not last very long. In December 1875 Shields left the company. The end of his business was just around the
corner when he was forced to sell nearly all of his stock in January 1876 and he
was adjudged bankrupt in December of 1876.
Gibb never recovered from the assigned sale of most of his business in
1876. Daily Alta
California , January 26,
1876
In his last few years Gibb hired out as a sign painter and
even tried his hand at manufacturing window shades. The final chapter in the life of Gavin Jarden
Watson Gibb closed on March 22, 1879, when he died in San Francisco , of “apoplexy”. His grave
marker at Woodlawn
Memorial Park in Colma
notes he was born in 1843.
Gibb’s wife, Emma Josephine Holt, lived on until 1930, and
died in Alameda County . The last of their five children
died in 1966 in Berkeley .
To think that I was collecting and researching bottles in the early sixties and
could have interviewed her – if I had known of her existence – is somewhat
disconcerting.
Following the upturns and downturns of Gibb’s business life
it is very difficult to insert a logical time for when he produced his umbrella
ink style bottle. One observation is that the bottle may not have held ink but
was used for paint. This is not unusual for there is precedent for labeled
examples of the same style of bottle used for paints by other merchants. It is
certainly safe to determine that the bottle was produced some time between 1863
and 1875. Any tighter time assignment would be speculation unless more
information comes to light.
Another great article with stellar photography. Great job!
ReplyDeleteGreat article Eric. I always speculated this was an Oakland business, and these inks were possibly OGW. Now it appears they are SF and earlier. Thanks for the research!
ReplyDelete