Bitters And Midwestern Bottles And Glass Propel Glass Works Auctions To A $354,600 Payday
H. P. Herb Wild Cherry Bitters Bottle, Ca. 1885-93, Made In Reading, Pa., Brings $9,000
November 06, 2020
An American Life Bitters bottle, made in Ohio, ca. 1865-75, sold for $42,000; a Constitution Bitters bottle made in New York, ca. 1865-75, brought $23,000; a St. Drakes Plantation Bitters bottle patented in New York in 1862 fetched $14,000; and a pattern globular bottle made by Zanesville Glass Works in Ohio, ca. 1815-35, hit $7,500 in Premier Auction #143, held by Glass Works Auction. The online-only sale opened for bidding Sept. 21 and closed Sept. 28. The auction was headlined by two outstanding collections, the Paul and Mary Ballentine bitters bottle collection and the Don Spangler Midwestern bottles and glass collection. Of the 275 total lots in the auction, 140 found winning bidders, grossing $354,600. All traffic was driven through the website, www.glswrk-auction.com. All prices quoted include the buyers premium. The Ballentines were pioneer collectors from Ohio who started collecting in the early 1960s, said Jim Hagenbuch, the owner of Glass Works Auctions. Paul passed away, but Mary retained the collection until her recent passing. Don Spangler is probably the last of the early collectors of early Ohio glass. At age 90, he reluctantly decided it was time to pass it on to other collectors. The American Life Bitters bottle (P.E. Iler, Mfg., Tiffin, Ohio) was from the Ballentine collection and was the top achiever of the auction. The 9.25-inch tall bottle (Ring/Ham, A-49) had a light to medium yellow color with an olive tone cabin and featured a smooth base and applied tapered mouth. This bottle was about perfect, save for a tiny spot of roughness on the tip of a lower log, said Hagenbuch. Its rare in amber, but only a few exist in this yellow coloration. The Constitution Bitters bottle (Seward & Bentley, Buffalo, N.Y.), also from the Ballentine collection, was medium pink amethyst in color and was in perfect condition. The bottle (Ring/Ham, C-223), 9.25 inches tall, featured a smooth base and applied tapered collar mouth. Only two or three are known to exist in amethyst. The others are so dark, a strong light is needed just to see the color. That is not the case here. The color in this one explodes in normal lighting and is consistent throughout. Many bitters collectors had been waiting for this bottle. Some called it the Holy Grail of the Ballantine collection, added Hagenbuch. The St. Drakes 1860 Plantation X Bitters bottle (Ring/Ham, D-105), just shy of 10 inches tall and manufactured in New York around 1862, boasted a medium moss green cabin, a smooth base and applied tapered collar mouth. A small chip off the inside edge of the lip and some light external staining on the front panel were its only flaws. The St. Drakes bottle was recently picked at the Elephant Trunk flea market in Connecticut, a favored venue of the Flea Market Flip reality TV show, stated Hagenbuch. Its possibly only the second known example in this unusual moss green color. In 1993, we auctioned the collection of Elmer Smith of Shelton, Wash. Lot #20 in that collection was at that time the only moss green Drakes Plantation Bitters known, and it sold for $10,000. This one brought $4,000 more. The pattern molded globular bottle made by the Zanesville Glass Works in Ohio was medium yellow olive in color and had a 24-rib pattern swirled to the right. The 8-inch tall bottle (McK/Wil, color plate V), (Barrett, pg. 54) had a pontil scarred base and outward rolled lip. This classic Zanesville swirl was in a very rare and absolutely gorgeous color that remained constant throughout, and the pattern remained bold even to the pontil. With the exception of a very few scratches, it was in pristine perfect condition. The bottle came out of the Don Spangler collection and had been acquired from Jim Vitners in 1973, said Hagenbuch. An H. P. Herb Wild Cherry Bitters bottle (ca. 1885-93, made in Reading, Pa.), in the motif of a cherry tree, changed hands for $9,000. The 10.25-inch-tall bottle (Ring/Ham, H-93) had an olive yellow cabin, a smooth base and a tooled double collar mouth. The bottle was quite rare in this pleasing coloration, and a very minor base flaw was non-offensive, Hagenbuch pointed out. How rare is the color? Only two have been sold at auction in the last 25 years, thats how rare. A John Moffat (N.Y.) Phoenix Bitters bottle (Price 1 Dollar), made between 1835 and 1850 and with a medium emerald green coloration, finished at $8,000. The 5.7-inch bottle (Ring/Ham, M-113) had a pontil scarred base, an outward rolled lip and was in perfect condition. This bottle was in an extremely rare pure green color that is not recorded in Bitters Bottles by Ring/Ham. Its one of the best. No Moffat Bitters collection would be complete without it, according to Hagenbuch. A double font teakettle ink bottle (Mathews, M427U), made in America between 1875 and 1890, opaque milk glass with applied mother of pearl panes, each segmented by a thin amethyst colored band, changed hands for $3,250. The 2.5-inch tall, 8-sided bottle had a smooth base and ground lips. Both fonts had the original fancy embossed brass neck rings and hinged lids. Double font teakettles are extremely rare, as few were ever made, and this one was near perfect, Hagenbuch said. The right font contained the traditional black ink, while the left contained a red. This was evident by traces of each color being on the inside of the lips. We auctioned this teakettle in 2002 when we sold the Bob Mebane collection. At the time it was the only known example, and we believe it remains so today. Glass Works Auctions maintains offices in East Greenville, Pa., and a gallery in nearby Pennsburg. For more information, call 215-679-5849 or email info@glswrk-auction.com.
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