Years ago, Wilson made mention of a product of the Crown
Distilleries Co. which has baffled me ever since. It's an amber cylinder
embossed simply " Crown Cocktails / Ready to Drink". It was listed as
an amber fifth, (no mention of whether it was glopped or tooled) #52-4 and he
stated that it was common.
Well, if it's so common, why have I only seen a scant
handful in the ensuing fifty or so years?
Later, Bob Barnett, in his Western Whiskey Bottles series,
listed it as coming both with a glop and a tooled top. Bob dated it to ca. 1890
- 1910.
The history of Crown Distilleries has been well documented
by Russel Umbraco, a descendent of Ernest Reuben Lilienthal, who owned the
company of which Crown Distilleries was spun off from. Russ stated that
Lilienthal & Co.'s interests were so large and diverse, that the Crown
Distilleries Co. was created in 1895 to handle Lilienthal's liquor interests.
He further states that Crown Distilleries liquidated it's assets in 1917, due
to the passage of the Volstead Act, and impending national prohibition.
That narrows down the window for Crown Cocktails
considerably. In as much as the bottle is scarce and that bottles were produced
with both applied and tooled tops, I date it to the emergence of the CD Co., ca.
1895, as opposed to later. Extensive searches of newspaper archives and brand registrations were fruitless. It was never advertised and Crown Cocktails simply didn't make the cut. Based on the scarcity of the bottle, I'd say the
brand flopped and was abandoned the same year it was introduced.
Not mentioned in the Wilson or Barnett books is the presence
of a sample (mini). Crown Distilleries marketed railroad sample bottles which
were used by the Southern Pacific Railroad; much like today's airline single
serving bottles. They were embossed on one side, and had a paper label on the
reverse. The brands were named after the passenger trains of the line;
including Daylight, Flyer, Seashore Express, Shasta Express and a number of
others. Fellow collector Mike Menze obtained a cache of these a number of years
ago, which he liquidated at the Morro Bay Show.
A number of different "sample" variants were
produced including squats about 4 1/2" tall, larger examples around 5
3/4" tall, and a scarce shorter one with the embossing in a rectangular
slug plate. All are tooled; either having a cork or a Riley patent inside
thread closure which utilized an ebonite threaded stopper.
A number of years ago, I was contacted by a digger in
Burlington Vt. He and a friend had excavated a railroad depot outhouse, and had
recovered a clear mini embossed "Crown Cocktails". It had a five
point crown embossed on it with jewels on the tip of each crown point. I'd not
heard of it before but when he sent me a photo of it, and I compared the photo to
the Crown Distilleries label and the embossing on a Crown fifth, it became
immediately evident that it was indeed was a Crown Distilleries product, and
was a "mini me" version of the amber Crown Cocktails fifth.
Wow, not
only had a "new" western whiskey made its appearance, but it was a mini "picture"
as well!
I can just imagine someone boarding a Southern Pacific train
in Oakland, making the transcontinental trip to the eastern seaboard, toasting his arrival home with a Crown Cocktail and unceremoniously pitching
the empty under the seat as he disembarks the train in Vermont.
Thanks, whoever you were!
Thanks, whoever you were!
2 comments:
Another excellent and informative post Bruce. Looks like you broke the writers block!
Go information Bruce had a chance t uy one from Ralph Halibuagh for 1200 it was applied top extremely whittled think it was a German made one so maybe they were in business for a couple of years
Bill C.
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