Leadville is a town
that is significant to both aficionados of western mining history, and antique
bottle collectors.
According to www.visitleadvilleco.com/history;
" Leadville has played an
important role in Colorado
history for more than 150 years. Leadville's mining history began in 1860 with
the discovery of gold south of town, which made 2010 the 150th anniversary of
the Gold Rush.
Roughly 8,000 prospectors arrived in "Oro City ,"
their name for the makeshift town of tents and cabins. During the next five
years, more than $4 million worth of gold was discovered using sluice and pan —
more than at any other Colorado
site. Within five years, however, the gold was playing out. The next boom would
be silver. By 1880, Leadville had more than 30,000 residents, innumerable
stores, hotels, boarding houses and, of course, more than 100 saloons, dance
halls, gambling joints and brothels."
Roughly 8,000 prospectors arrived in "
Today Leadville features a remarkably well preserved
cross section of buildings dating back to the days of it's zenith.
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30,000 residents generated a lot of garbage. Old garbage. And the Leadville dump was famous for both the quantity and quality of it's pre-1900 trash.
As one would expect, a town (city) with 30,000 residents
and abundant wealth would have bottles embossed with the name of businesses and
their location on them. Because Leadville has been extensively dug for bottles,
both by hand and with heavy equipment, since the late 1950's, one would expect
every variant to have been documented by now.
Imagine my surprise when I received an email from a
friend of a young man who had a whiskey that neither could identify. It read;
"Do
you know how much about a knife edged clear flask embossed E.
Keppler in an arch at front shoulder. Liquors & cigars two
lines in the center front. 603 Harrison ave
Leadville colo embossed across bottom front"
I
had to plead ignorance. I've had a few Colorado
whiskies over the years, all scarce to rare cylinders, including the Old Nectar
and Windsor from Denver , and Kellenberger from Durango, to name a few .
But flasks are even tougher than the cylinders and I'd never seen or even heard
of one of these.
After a bit of scratching around, I was able to locate some
particulars about E. Keppler.
Inquiring minds want to know, so I asked for a photo of the bottle. Sure enough, the next day a
photo of it appeared in my inbox.
A
couple of days later, I ran across a copy of a check that was endorsed by...
none other than E. Keppler! It was dated Dec. 1, 1884. Proof positive of Keppler's presence in Leadville close to the time that the photo was taken. And the
knife edge style of flask would fit conveniently into that era.
Why
the discrepancy in time between the photo and the positive proof of Kepplers
presence in 1884? Quite probably, he purchased the business from whomever was
the startup proprietor.
And
so it would appear that we have a newly discovered flask from Leadville Colorado . A significant
piece of Colorado
and early western mining history that the owner should be proud to own.
Update
An old pal of mine, who has access to additional resources, just sent in the following information;
1881 - First Leadville Directory (Colorado
directories for 1878 "New Mining Town - population 2000 and rapidly
increasing" and 1879 do not list any proprietors.)
1881 - 1883 Leadville Directories do not have
listings for him
1884 - First listing. E. Keppler wholesale and retail liquor and cigars 603 Harrison
1888 - Last directory with entry for Earnest Keppler at 603 Harrison
1889 - 1892 at 606 Harrison
1893 and 1894 at 618 Harrison Avenue
Glen Preble, in Impressed In Time, notes him at
603 Harrison from 1882 through 1889. Not sure if he has directories he called upon
that I did not have available to me.
Starting in 1890, 603 Harrison is the address for
Carl Nollenberger (2 different flat flasks).
From 1893 to 1906, Carl is in business with Mrs.
Ed Nollenberger and from 1907 - 1915,
Carl is again the sole proprietor at 603 Harrison
Avenue.
Thanks Ralph!
Photo credits; Keppler endorsed check from sanjuanslim - ebay, digging scenes AB&GC, Leadville street scenes internet.
2 comments:
Bruce,
Great post on Leadville and the unique Keppler flask.
Keep these informative and enjoyable posts coming!
rs
That's nice I love the pictures of the club dig. Here in nutty California all those participants would be viewed by the media as urban terrorist and looters.
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