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Antique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New York

Description: AntiqueCirca 1880s - 19005.5" TBright, clean, shiny, lovely conditionNo chips, no cracks, no ghosting.Lovely light green-teal color... The G. W. Merchant name is a favorite with antique bottle collectors. The round and rectangular bottles can be found in various sizes and molds and in pleasing glass colors representing Lockport Glass Works, in New York. Merchant’s Gargling Oil Co. of Lockport, New York, was founded by Dr. George W. Merchant, a druggist, and chemist, in 1833. The first incarnation of Dr. Merchant’s Gargling Oil was a liniment intended to cure almost any illness that could befall a domestic animal. Merchant initially sold his medicine to drivers of horses and mules alongside the Erie Canal, who apparently needed frequent doses to soothe their animal’s aches and pains. Dr. Merchant started in “Lower Town” and moved to “Upper Town” Lockport in 1836, where he sold his product locally. Demand for his medicine grew, so he took on a partner, Morris H. Tucker, and the two built a two-story frame building at Cottage and Walnut streets for their business. Unfortunately, Dr. Merchant’s health began to suffer. He sold his share of Dr. Merchant’s Gargling Oil to a three-member corporation composed of Tucker, B. L. Delano, and Henry Walbridge. The corporation claimed Lockport’s own Washington Hunt, governor of New York, as a director. Walbridge was Hunt’s father-in-law, and the two were very successful in their commerce. They had purchased 32,000 acres of land along the Erie Canal and proceeded to ride the canal to riches. As a teenager, John Hodge joined the company and was elected Secretary when M. H. Tucker & Company was incorporated in 1858. Dr. Merchant’s Gargling Oil thrived under the marketing expertise of Tucker. He seemed to be far ahead of his time in terms of promotion and marketing. One scheme involved sending a dozen bottles of Dr. Merchant’s Gargling Oil in a satin-lined oak box to the Sultan of Turkey. The Sultan never acknowledged the gift, but American newspapers picked up on it, and sales of gargling oil shot up. Tucker also developed the marketing slogan “Good for Man and Beast!” Over time, different specialized products were developed for animals and humans. The product for beasts was packaged in a yellow wrapper, and the human variety used white packaging. In recognition of the special status of the Sultan of Turkey, the gargling oil for animals had a drawing of an Arabian Stallion having his legs massaged by a turbaned groomsman. The oil for human application had a picture of a man and wife and a table with liniment bottles upon it. John Hodge advanced to company president in 1886, taking over the reins from Tucker. He also had the good sense to marry Tucker’s daughter. Hodge, too, was a promotional wizard. He had a keen insight into the world of advertising. He began a program of painting billboards on anything stationary along the route of the Erie Canal. Barns served as his favorite canvas. He even convinced the owners of the youthful Maid of the Mist company to allow a gargling oil advertisement on the side of their boat. His grand achievement has to be a reported advertisement painted on the Rock of Gibraltar. By the time of Hodge’s death in 1895, Dr. Merchant’s Gargling Oil was sold worldwide and was one of Lockport’s principal industries. The product lasted almost 100 years, going out of business in 1928 when the factory burned down. The American glass industry expanded in the colonies after the American Revolution, and by the 1800s, considerable glass was made in New York State. Two prominent glasshouses were established in Western New York during the nineteenth century. One began in 1840 in Lockport in Niagara County, about twenty miles northeast of Buffalo; the other started in 1849 in Lancaster in Erie County, south of Lockport and about ten miles east of Buffalo. Both glass factories operated until shortly after 1900. Both Lockport and Lancaster produced a specific blue glass familiar to collectors. It was a clear, light, delicate blue, with the Lancaster color tending to be a bit lighter than the Lockport blue. Both Lockport and Lancaster made other blues, rich deep greens, yellow­-greens, olive-greens, blue-greens, and ambers or browns, which sometimes appeared black. The first glass factory, known as the Lockport Glass Works, operated out of a rented building at Gooding and Grand Streets in Lockport, New York. It was opened in the spring of 1840 by Twogood and Company of Mt. Morris, New York. After about a year, the firm failed because of insufficient capital and was taken over by Parson and Moss, who controlled it for a year before giving it up to Silas H. Marks. Marks entered a partnership with William Keep, A. J. Webber and G. W. Hildredth, and the plant operated under the name of Hildredth and Company beginning in 1845. Hildredth and Company employed 50 to 55 men, of whom about 18 were blowers. The average wage was $2 a day, a good salary. In the spring of 1846, the firm built a modern plant at Green and Transit Streets. In 1850, Webber died, and his heirs sold his interest to Francis Hitchins, who bought out the firm in 1853 and managed it until 1866, when it became known as the Lockport Glass Manufacturing Company. Five trustees managed it: James Maroney, Patrick Glynn, Edward Batten, Joseph Batten, and Andrew Garfield. In 1869, S. B. Rowley purchased the plant and made the “Gem Butter jar,” “The Hero jar,” and “All Right” fruit jars. Joseph Batten held a controlling interest. In 1872, the business was sold to Alonzo J. Mansfield, who enlarged the factory, which burned in 1878 but was rebuilt. The company was reorganized in 1904 with Alonzo J. Mansfield, president, S. J. Clark, vice-president, and George E. Emerson, secretary-treasurer. In 1908, the company went out of business. In 1900 another glass factory was established on Michigan Street and called the Lockport Glass Company, so from 1900 to 1908, Lockport had two glass factories. Officers of the new company were W. W. Storrs, president; C. G. Sutliff, vice-president; and J. Milton Woodward, secretary-treasurer. They made fruit jars, pickle bottles, and other small containers. In 1919, the Thatcher Manufacturing Company, which owned plants in Elmira, Olean, Long Island City, New York, and Streeter, Illinois, bought the plant and concentrated on milk bottles. The introduction of paper milk containers forced them to switch to jelly, pickle, and coffee jars, and they closed the factory in 1942.

Price: 63.72 USD

Location: Freeport, Maine

End Time: 2024-10-01T00:18:39.000Z

Shipping Cost: 6.99 USD

Product Images

Antique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New YorkAntique Medicine Bottle Gargling Oil LOCKPORT (Niagara falls) (Buffalo) New York

Item Specifics

Return shipping will be paid by: Seller

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Color: teal

Bottle Type: Medicines & Cures

Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

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