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Bottle-Digging and Collecting

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the Magic of…

01 Schweppes Flask 17C

 “Old bottles are beautiful. The glass is flecked with air bubbles and tears; the stoneware burned to a fine gritty texture never seen on modern pottery… And were are these bottles to be found? The fact is that they are all around us – in rivers, in ponds and in long-forgotten rubbish dumps…. Millions of 19th-century bottles were exported from Britain as food and drink containers and as ships´ballast… Dig any 19th-century dump in North America or Australia – and you will find British bottles of that period….” Edward Fletcher, Bottle Collecting, 1972

Terry Matz

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the Canadian is every year “The Torpedo Bottle King” of the Toronto Bottle Show. Specializes in all manner items relating to torpedo bottles including molds and pressure guages. He has a lot of coloured glass on his table, pontiled glass and early stoneware and other Canada West trade merchandise. His reference-site for eggbottles is a must seen: http://www.torpedobottle.com

Mike Sheridan

03 Schweppes BB

this is the UK’s and Europe’s oldest and longest established old bottle, potlid and advertising site. Online since March 1997. Have a look at some amazing old bottle related labels and advertising ephemera.Find out more about the great hobby of bottle digging. Find a UK Bottle Club near to where you live ! Use our FAQ link to see if you really do have an old bottl. Searching for information about a particular bottle or company ? Do you want some help and advice with ages and dates of your items. Do you need to know the value ? Do you want to find out about bottle clubs and shows in your area? If so please navigate on through our links page and try one of the quality links:  http://mikesheridan.tripod.com/index.htm

Bottles Heaven

02 Schweppes Antique Bottle C

Antique Bottle Collector’s Haven – welcome to the leading educational Internet site for finding, buying, selling and learning about Antique Bottles! If you want to learn more about a particular category of bottle, or simply find out “how much is my old bottle worth?”, then you’ve come to the right place: http://www.antiquebottles.com/

Dooly Bottleking

07-schweppes-blue-digger

finally after thousands of hours and many broken ones he got one of these north east classic bottles: bottle-digger Dooly Bottleking and the 30 year mission to hand dig a local blue

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OoyQpZP8sqk

Must seen: Digger Kilroy

DIGGER KILROY

hardcore british bottle digging – a tough site, taken on by diggerkilroy, an 1880s Victorian rubbish dump on the outskirts of a large industrial town is the venue. “Most enjoyable bottle digging vids on Youtube, thanks and keep them coming!”DrummondsPoint “Main reason for broken codd bottles is because the kids of the day would smash the bottle to get to the marble,there were no health and safety in those days so kids would be waitng for a cart to turn up at the dump and break our hearts years later..” tony74jsy VIDEOS:

https://www.youtube.com/user/diggerkilroy

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3Pf9SZ5UiA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJzdlB3j_d0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JcdyZFmQXz8

Australian Diggers

06 Schweppes AUS Diggers

is a website designed for services associated with metal detecting BUT it also has an easy to use and ever expanding price guide database of antique bottles from Australia and around the world.We are collectors just about anything but primary bottles and coins. To support other collectors we have added an auction results guide to help other collectors assess the value of there bottle or coin they just found: http://www.australiandiggers.com.au/ 

a digging action…

ACTIONDIGGING

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yATVVecuQM

Boston Backhoe Bottle Dump Dig. Bill Ladd, Tylor & John, head North of Boston to meet a landowner with a bottled dump on private property, & a backhoe. Yeaaah! In a just few hours, several hundred bottles from the turn of the century & a jug come to light. Thanks for watching!

…two as a contrast

BOTTLES

http://vimeo.com/58562199

Digger Kilroy burrows into the earth for Victorian bottles. Alan Klein makes bottles in his spare time. Glass, surfaces, topology, history – all have the potential to melt together in this short documentary.Ian Digger Kilroy: Heres a vid made by luke moody,i did with him a while back to help spread the word, it was entered into a number of film festivals with a bit of success, im sure there is scope to do something much more commercial if the right site came up. Bottle Digging and Bottle Blowing – Ian Digger Kilroy resume the pure quality aspects of consistency with a secret of the snails. must seen between! spiritschweppes.com

Renovation

Paul Flynn

Paul in GB is Digger, expert, cleaner, renovator: with very best recommendations !

Father and Son

Digging Neighborhood

They are putting in a a few more houses in my neighborhood where an old home site was. They scraped the dirt to put the new road in, and I noticed that there was some glass and junk on the surface. Jake and I started digging and this is what we found.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TVU-uHCsBAI&feature=youtu.be

Wow – heavy  load :-)

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Funny action with Teesside Digger!

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1401294416785460&set=pcb.1401294483452120&type=1&theater

The Schweppes Bottle in the World Collection:

10446429_10152252473614825_2074685350_n

https://www.facebook.com/groups/233837880159091/?fref=ts

Support in private partnership

SUPPORT SPIRITSCHWEPPES

You are welcome! As a private author I will do my best to answer your questions ref. the “story of Schweppes since 1783″. Please contact hjk@hjktext.de

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Spirits and Contemporaries

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Walter James Hawksford, US export manager 

01 SCHWEPPES TITANIC

“Schweppes – the table waters of Kings – supplied to the royal households, leading clubs, hotels & steamship lines” was claimed into the beginning 20th Century. One of these steamship lines was White Star…

02 SCHWEPPES TITANIC03 SCHWEPPES TTANIC04 SCHWEPPES TITANIC05 SCHWEPPES TITANIC06 SCHWEPPES TITANIC

Bridget Penney with a photograph of her grandfather Walter James Hawksford. More than one hundred years since RMS Titanic sank, a Weymouth woman will be remembering a survivor of the tragedy. Bridget Penney, from Southill, will be among families gathering at Southampton today to remember all those who took the fateful voyage across the Atlantic. Her grandfather Walter James Hawksford, only survived the sinking because he was asked to row in one of the lifeboats. The passenger liner sank on April 15, 1912, after hitting an iceberg off Newfoundland.The ship had been on its maiden voyage from South-ampton to New York, her passengers included some of the wealthiest people in the world as well as people emigrating to America to start a new life. Of the 2,224 people on board only 710 survived. Mrs Penney said she had known very little of her grandfather’s story, as he never spoke of it, until the family found a letter he had written after the tragedy and she did some investigating. She said: “He was working for drinks company Schweppes and was to be their first export manager in America. They paid for a first class ticket for him and his wife Edith. Luckily she couldn’t go.” On the night of April 14-15 he was awoken to a ‘bump and a long grinding sound’. The message was soon passed to passengers that an iceberg had damaged the ship and they went on to the deck. Women and children were put into the lifeboats first. Mrs Penney said: “I just keep thinking he must have been watching people get into the boats and knowing that he wasn’t going to be saved.” By a lucky stroke of fate it was his love of rowing and time spent in Kingston Rowing Club that saved his life.She said: “He was standing near lifeboat number three and they were a rower short. First officer William Murdoch turned and said ‘Is there anyone here who can row?’ “He put his hand up. “They rowed about half a mile out. “When the boat went down they all took their hats off and bowed their heads.” The 710 survivors were picked up by the ship Carpathia and taken to New York. Mr Hawksford was then able to write to his wife to let her know he was safe. In his letter he said: “Here I am you see, still alive and kicking, we have had a pretty rough time of it. I daresay you know almost as much by now as I do from the papers, so I won’t enlarge upon the horrors of it all.” He added: “The thing that has troubled me most is the anxiety you must all have had.” Mr Hawksford returned to England and the story that passed down through the family was that his brown hair turned white soon after his return. Mrs Penney said she would be in Southampton to pay her respects to all Titanic’s passengers and to remember her grandfather.She said: “I want to go and be where the boat was as a mark of respect for him.” THE DORSET ECHO, first published Saturday 14 April 2012 in News by the author Catherine Bolado, Senior Reporter

SSSCHWEPPESSS & Elvis 1961

Schweppes Elvis 1961

 

1961 London Bus with “SSSCHWEPPESSS” advert. Headline “Elvis Presley, the full story by Hedda Hopper”. HH (May 2, 1885 – February 1, 1966) was one of America’s best-known gossip columnists. Hopper continued to write gossip to the end, her work appearing in many magazines and later on radio.

The legend of the “Hamilton” Bottle

HAMILTON PATENT

Torpedo bottles, egg bottles, pointy enders, ovates, ballast bottles or bombs are often called mistakenly HAMILTON bottles. Named after William Francis Hamiltons embossed “Patent-Bottle” 1809 ff. He lived in Lower Mount Street in the City of Dublin and granted a Patent in 1809  “for a new Method of preparing Soda and other Mineral Waters…” – but definitly not for the special type of bottles, who could not stand up on their own. It is generally accepted, that JACOB SCHWEPPE was the industrial inventor of soda water and the first mass producer of Torpedo Bottles. He moved to London in 1792 and used egg shaped bottles until the turn of the century 1910. His earliest Torpedo Bottle was a pottery or stoneware bottle, the SCHWEPPES NO 1, followed from the pointilled Glass-Bottle “Margaret Street” from 1795 – 1831. Thank you David Walker Barker, Leeds/GB, for your example of the authentic Hamilton Patent Bottle, “Hamiltons Patent Aerated Waters” circa 1825 – 1830.

Bottle Club 1890

Schweppes Kilner

 

Vintage Schweppes skittle bottle 180mm tall with a base diameter of 45mm.
It has embossed on the front ‘SCHWEPPES’ and on the back the Royal Crest and underneath ‘ BY APPOINTMENT’. On the base is embossed the bottle’s manufacturer ‘K.B.LTD G 143′. This was Kilner Bros Ltd and they manufactured bottles from around 1870 until 1922, based in Thornhill Lee’s West Yorkshire.
This article was published by the Dewsbury Reporter in their Men of Science supplement: …Some idea of the magnitude of the operations carried out can be gathered from the fact that the firm employed seven commercial travelers and 600 workers. By this time the Kilners had also opened another extensive works in Conisborough which employed a further 500 workers. For many years Kilners held a leading position in the trade, and were patentees of a system for making the rims of bottles and jars one uniform size so they could be fitted with tin caps..

RMS Rhone 1865 – 1867

15 Schweppes RMS RHONE

The R.M.S. Rhone was part of the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company which provided services between England, Caribbean and South America. It was a high-class vessel with a short career. In 1867 she was one of about 75 vessels damaged or lost in a hurricane. Hundred years later, Bert Kilbride, a diver known as “The last Priate of the Carribbean”, lifted a treasure of egg bottles, filled with genuine (Schweppes?) mineral water. Today, the wreck is one of the most popular dives in the British Virgin Islands.

http://www.divebvi.com/dive-sites/rms-rhone/

Working Class Heroes

03 Schweppes Industry

the term “soft drinks” was originated to distinguish the flavoured drinks from hard liquor or spirits. Soft drinks were recommended as a substitute in the effort to change the hard-drinking habits of the English and early Americans.

Commander Whitehead

Whithead
on board the liner Queen Elizabeth where British fashions were shown to American buyers, are COMMANDER WHITEHEAD of Schweppes U.S.A. on left and LORD DUNMORE. 10.11.1965. wikipedia: Walter Edward WhiteheadCBE (20 May 1908 – 16 April 1978) was a British Royal Navy officer, a veteran of the South Pacific campaign, better known as the advertising representative of Schweppes Tonic Water. The first campaign was created by Ogilvy & Mather Agency in 1955 and ran through the 1960s. Born in Aldershot, England, Commander Whitehead was at one time the President of Schweppes (USA) and General Manager (Overseas). He died in Petersfield.[1

Oscar Wilde

05 Schweppes O.Wilde

in full Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde   (born Oct. 16, 1854, Dublin, Ire.—died Nov. 30, 1900, ParisFrance), Irish wit, poet, and dramatist whose reputation rests on his only novelThe Picture of Dorian Gray (1891), and on his comic masterpieces Lady Windermere’s Fan (1892) and The Importance of Being Earnest (1895). He was a spokesman for the late 19th-century Aesthetic movement in England, which advocated art for art’s sake, and he was the object of celebrated civil and criminal suits involving homosexuality and ending in his imprisonment (1895–97).

Jane Austen

04-schweppes-austen

(born Dec. 16, 1775, Steventon, Hampshire, Eng.—died July 18, 1817, Winchester, Hampshire), English writer who first gave the novel its distinctly modern character through her treatment of ordinary people in everyday life. Austen created the comedy of manners of middle-class life in the England of her time in her novels, Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814),Emma (1815), and Northanger Abbey and Persuasion (published posthumously, 1817)….

Seltzer Man

SELTZER MAN

when water was worth. Take 12 minutes of your time for this impressive slow-beverage documentation. A man and his baby, surviving in NY. In my opinion: oscar-award :-)

http://photoblog.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/05/11/11604855-seltzer-delivery-man-practices-bygone-craft-in-new-york-city?lite

John Cleese

11-schweppes-cleese

in full John Marwood Cleese  (born October 27, 1939, Weston-super-MareSomerset,England), British comic actor best known for his television work on Monty Python’s Flying Circus and Fawlty Towers. Famous is John Cleese’s first advert for Schweppes 1988, that was shown exclusively on VHS tapes of A Fish Called Wanda. Here on youtube, he expresses his thoughts on subliminal advertising. VIDEO:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W05zZm4JMGA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g9TRTsAiNAE

Bert Kilbride

bert

“I have been a treasure seeker around the British Virgin Islands for over 5 decades where I resided from the 1950´s through 2005. I have charted (in my head) 138 ship wrecks. My mom taught me to swim before I could walk and I hhave been a diver for almost a century now. ” On January 8, 2008, his heart and kidneys were 94 years old and just couldn´t support him any longer. Berts life:

http://www.bertkilbride.com

The Queen Victorian Aera,

Schweppe´s boomtime

02 Schweppes Victoria

in full Alexandrina Victoria   (born May 24, 1819, Kensington Palace, London,England—died January 22, 1901, Osborne, near CowesIsle of Wight), queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1837–1901) and empress of India (1876–1901). She was the last of the House of Hanover and gave her name to an era, theVictorian Age. During her reign the English monarchy took on its modern ceremonial character.

Willliam IV

14 Schweppes William

also called Prince William Henry, Duke Of Clarence (1789–1830), GermanWilhelm Heinrich, byname The Sailor King   (born Aug. 21, 1765,  London—died June 20, 1837, Windsor Castle, near London), king of Great Britain and Ireland and king of Hanover from June 26, 1830. In 1831, the Post Office Directory recorded J.Schweppe & Co. as “Soda and Mineral Water Manufacturers to Their Majesties and the Royal Family”. In the British Imperial Calendar for 1833, J.Schweppe is listed as purveyor of soda water to His Majesty´s Household.

Artur Kozlowski

12-schweppes-diver1

the bottle-diver at a secret lake in a foreign language: “Bardzo ciekawe podwodne znalezisko. Butelka po wodzie sodowej z najstarszej na swiecie manufaktury Schweppe, produkujacej wodę sodowa. Zakłady te produkowały taką wode w latach 1834-1883 w Dublinie na Berner Street. Oryginalna inskrypcja na butelce brzmi: J. SCHWEPPE & Co. 51 BERNER STREET OXFORD STREET GENUINE SUPERIOR AERATED WATERS.” VIDEOS: 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovztGLUwQvA

Rebirthing of an egg bottle in Valparaiso by Ramon Martinez/Recolecta Antiguedades Botteleros

Charles Dickens

01 Schweppes Dickens

in full Charles John Huffam Dickens    (born February 7, 1812, PortsmouthHampshireEngland—died June 9, 1870, Gad’s Hill, near Chatham, Kent), English novelist, generally considered the greatest of the Victorian era. His many volumes include such works as A Christmas Carol, David Copperfield, Bleak House,A Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations, and Our Mutual Friend.Dickens enjoyed a wider popularity than had any previous author during his lifetime. Much in his work could appeal to simple and sophisticated, to the poor and to the queen, and technological developments as well as the qualities of his work enabled his fame to spread worldwide very quickly.

Al Capone

06 Schweppes Prohibition

byname of Alphonse Capone, also called Scarface   (born Jan. 17, 1899, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.—died Jan. 25, 1947, Palm Island, Fla.), the most famous American gangster, who dominated  organized crime in Chicago from 1925 to 1931. In the prohibition-year 1927, Capone and his gang were pulling in approximately $60 million per year- most of it from beer. Capone not only controlled the sale of liquor to over 10,000 speakeasies, but he also controlled the supply from Canada to Florida.

07 Schweppes Capone

the period of the US-prohibition (1920-1933) pushed the popularity  of long- and softdrinks. Coke´s arrow pointed to the refreshment of soda-fountains, Schweppes established his career as multi-talented mixer. I do not know exactly the components of Capones drinks, (his gang shown above), but for sure Schweppes was part of the Chicago lifestyle …

08 Schweppes Chicago 30

Dr. Emery

09 Schweppes Dr.Emerys Flask

this bottle is unique and one of the most storytelling items of my collection. A rare leather and glass flask from the prohibition era. It is signed on the bottom Dr. Thy M Emery and has the date August 1929. It also has an inscription by Dr. Emery that reads: “The Shot How Big I say. How I meant it then. I know now.” The front of the flask reads: Shasta Springs, Cal./You can’t Fool Nature!/Prohibitionists have Red Noses and Will Tell you Where to fill Flask./August 1929. The other side reads: Drink Meter/Directions/Take Internally/One Drink Freezing/Two Drinks Moderating/Three Drinks Fair and Warmer/Four Drinks Hot and Sultry/Empty Cyclone/Thunder and Lightning. Measures 5 1/2″ x 1 1/2″ x 3 1/2″. A great piece of history, which has survived Dr. Emery.

10 Schweppes Prohib. Recipe

dr. Emery would have used “recipes” like this.  A original government issued Prohibition Prescription for Spirits Frumenti, the US pharmaceutical term for Whiskey, 2 fluid ounces every 3 times daily! From the days of Al Capone, flappers and moonshine this prescription was the only legal way to drink liquor in the US! The whiskey was prescribed for Mrs. Pilles, by Dr. Raub, on January 22, 1933, and was filled the same day by Pharmacist, Alvin H. Kern, of Easton, PA. It was issued by the Treasury Department and is printed on, beautiful pink paper. In the center is the old Treasury Seal with the Latin inscription, “Thesaur. Amer. Septent. Sigil.”. When you hold this prescription up to the light PROHIBITION is watermarked, as with the metal strips that are used in U.S. bills today. This was the pharmacist’s duplicate copy, printed on the back are the “Instructions”, one of which is: “This duplicate prescription must be retained by the druggist as permanent record, open to inspection by Federal Officers”, the top copy was sent to the government. The prescription measures 5 1/2″ x 4 1/2″. Thank you Grace from New Jersey for your great research!

Big Beards

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the australian pub with no beer, Episode 3: Old Hepburn Hotel turns the beer taps off for the first time in 100 years, and the Black Widow Bikie Gang are not too impressed… until they have their first taste of a Fluffy Duck! See more at youtube VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBuR39ubakg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uBd61YR7JS0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v_WMQAl6Aa8

Sir Adrian Cadbury

01 Schweppes Book 83

02 Adrian Schweppes

Winds of change. In 1983, Schweppes marked his 200th bicentenary with “Schweppes – the first 200 years”. Here is one of 1130 copies worldwide, signed by the author Douglas A.Simmons and Basil E.S.Collins of Cadbury-Schweppes. Accompanied by product-milestones on australian beermats.

Chairman for 24 years was Sir George Adrian Hayhurst Cadbury (born 1929), a former British Olympic rower. He managed Cadbury/Schweppes (established 1969) as a central operated global brand. Since 2006, the brand is managed nationwide by concessionary companies.

(will continue)

13 Coke Schweppes

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Digging & Diving

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Wordless: worldwide impressions of private digging and collecting, downloaded to inspire… “bottle diving” is under construction.

00 Schweppes Digger01 Schweppes Digger02 Schweppes Digger 03 Schweppes Digger 04 Schweppes Digger 05 Schweppes Digger 06 Schweppes Digger 07 Schweppes Digger 08 Schweppes Digger09 Schweppes Digger 10 Schweppes Digger 12 Schweppes Digger 13 Schweppes Digger 14 Schweppes Digger 15 Schweppes Digger 16 Schweppes Digger 17 Schweppes Digger 18 Schweppes Digger 19 Schweppes Digger 20 Schweppes Digger 21 Schweppes Digger 22 Schweppes Digger 23 Schweppes Digger 24 Schweppes Digger 25 Schweppes Digger 26 Schweppes Digger 27 Schweppes Digger 28 Schweppes Digger 29 Schweppes Digger 30 Schweppes Digger 31 Schweppes Digger 32 Schweppes Digger 33 Schweppes Digger 34 Schweppes Digger 35 Schweppes Digger 36 Schweppes Digger 37 Schweppes Digger 38 Schweppes Digger 39 Schweppes Digger 40 Schweppes Digger 41 Schweppes Digger 42 Schweppes Digger 43 Schweppes Digger 44 Schweppes Digger 45 Schweppes Digger 46 Schweppes Digger 47 Schweppes Digger MYDC0169.JPG 49 Schweppes Digger 50 Schweppes Digger 51 Schweppes Digger 52 Schweppes Digger 53 Schweppes Digger 54 Schweppes Digger 55 Schweppes Digger58 Schweppes Digger56 SChweppes Digger57 Schweppes Digger59 Schweppes Digger60 Schweppes Digger


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Jacob Schweppe invented the modern softdrink-industry

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17 Side by Side Schweppes

Tribute to Henry´s

08 Diary Schweppes

01 T.Henry Schweppes

00 Advertisement in my Chemists´and Druggists´Diary of 1900, author 01 / 02 Thomas Henry, 1734 – 1816, an apothecary in Manchester, Eng., is attributed the first production of carbonated water, which he made in 12-gallon barrels using an apparatus based on Priestley’s, Encyclopaedia Britannica 03 Calcined Magnesia – last antique sample of Thomas Henry´s bottles,  Odyssey´s Virtual Museum 04 / 05  Thomas´son William Henry, 1774 – 1836, Chemist, Copley-Medal. He developed what is known today as Henry’s Law. 1802 first production of Mineral Waters in Manchester; Royal Society of Chemistry 06 Range of softdrinks “Thomas Henry” with portrait of William Henry, est. 2010 in Germany.

00 Opener Schweppes

Listen to the sssschschsch…

…Jacob Schweppe perfected the production and bottling of artificial carbonated water in 1783 and set into motion a beverage revolution.

03 J.Schweppe

From medicinal wonder-cures and fountains of youth, through to round-bottled egg-sodas and international world fairs, the history of his brand is synonymous with style, spirit and sophisticated refreshment.

Jacob Schweppe was born in Witzenhausen, Germany in 1740 as son of an citiy councilman.

09 Witzenhausen Schweppes

28 TZ Witzenhausen Schweppes

He was baptized in the Liebfrauenkirche of Witzenhausen 1740, the 16th of march. Schweppes prename is definetely “Jacob” – not Jean or Johann, as often discribed.04-liebfrauen-schweppe

29-marktplatz-foto-jens-ehrhardt

Jacob became a craftsman of considerable talent. As a helpmate of a wandering tinkerman he left Germany and settled in Geneva/Switzerland. Probably about 1767 he was a successful jeweller or “bijoutier”.

07-steingut-schweppes

He was also a keen amateur scientist following the works of the leading chemists of this days like the englishman Dr. Joseph Priestley. Jacob Schweppe was particulary interested in the question of the aeration of water and the production of mineral waters, which Priestley published 1772 as “Directions for Impregnating Water with Fixed Air”.

10 Idee Schweppes

The quality of drinkable water for the worldwide growing marine-fleets was one of the topics of the 18th century. Among the claims for fixed air was that it might prove a remedy for scurvy.

06 Schiff Schweppes

Just as well seemed artificial spring waters  to be big business: chemists and druggists delivered the exploding upper class of the european industrial age with handcrafted carbonated waters over the counter.

02 Books Schweppes

In about 1780, Jacob Schweppe abandoned his jewellery business and applied all his energies in the professional production of artificial mineral waters. With much determination he succeeded in devising a system of aeration superior to anything that had previously been achieved.

12 Schweppes Geneva

In 1783, the “Schweppes Story” begins in Geneva at the foot of the Swiss Alps. Jacob Schweppe first discovered the secret behind producing carbonated beverages on a commercial scale. So he started his “Geneva-System”. It consisted of a container which enclosed an agitator which generated carbon dioxide from a mixture of chalk and sulphuric acid. The gas was then passed through water into a gasometer. With the aid of a pump the gas was then conveyed into a closed wooden carbonating vessel where it was dissolved in water under pressure with the assistance of an agitator. This apparatus was the first to make practical use of a compressing pump as had been suggested by Priestley.

14 Partner Schweppes

 A partnership was formed in 1790 between Jacob Schweppe, his engineer Nicholas Paul and Paul’s father Jacques Paul. Henry Albert Gosse joined the partnership after being introduced by Nicolas Gosse,  a pharmacist. Previously the artificial waters had been made from non-distilled water. The new firm proposed to use only distilled water and to manufacture in addition to Seltzer and Spa Water the waters of Pyrmont, Bussang, Courmayeur, Vals, Seidschutz, Balarac, Passay and other mineral waters. As well as expanding the range of waters, it was decided to expand the range of operations and a decision was taken to start a factory in London.

11 CdV Schweppes

On 9th January 1792, Jacob Schweppe arrived in England, bringing a letter of recommendation from Professor Pictet of Geneva which he could present to the government. The first factory was at 141 Drury Lane. At the time, some mineral waters were already being sold in London by numerous apothecaries. Rudimentary mineral water machines were carted through the street for the purpose of street sales. On 20th February 1795 the partnership with Paul and Gosse was formally dissolved. Jacob Schweppe sacrificed the goodwill of the business he himself had created in Geneva in ten years of hard work. In return he kept the London business.

01 Schweppes

Jacob Schweppe did not stay long in Drury Lane and by 1794 he had moved to 8 Kings Street, Holborn. He soon moved the factory again to 11 Margaret Street, Cavendish Square, Westminster at Michaelmas in 1795. In this street, at various addresses, he remained until he retired.

comm schweppes

schweppes spanien

Commercial Summary. Advertising-video from Schweppes Europe. As far as I can see not free from errors, but entertaining history alive. http://www.museeschweppes.com/site_en/index.html

Nice to see from our Schweppes Tonic in Spain: HISTORIA. http://www.schweppes.es/tonica/nuestras-tonicas

13 Coke Schweppes

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Bottle-digging to the roots of Coke

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03 Schweppes

All contents © Authors archive

Industrial innovation. Premium effervescence. Mental refreshment.

Schweppes since 1783: the chapter before Coke.

A “Cheers!” Let us drink to John Stith Pemberton, the excellent medical practitioner and druggist. He was the one who handed his new tincture against headaches and fatigue over the counter in Atlanta on 8th May 1886 for the first time. The rest of the story goes like this: The inventive man gave away a billion dollar deal two year s later when he sold his formula for the ridiculously small amount of 2300 USD to the smart businessman Asa Griggs Candler. He turned the mixture into a brand now 79 billion USD worth and the “it-brand” of the world for ages. Until the year 2013 when Google (93 bn) and Apple (98 bn) prepared to overtake.

Me, a german bottle guy

05 Schweppes
From user to collector - the development from a copywriter to “Dr. h.c. Schweppes, the storyteller. Here at the Palmolive set with Jan Miner in 1979. The American is best known for her iconic role as the manicurist Madge in a 27-year series of television commercials for the Palmolive dish-washing detergent in the early 1960s until the late 1990s.
03 J.Schweppe
Why on earth must a total stranger from Germany tell this old story again to all the clever bottle-diggers and collectors? Because in all likelihood  a certain Jacob Schweppe from Witzenhausen/Germany had already set the course for Coca Cola & Co about 100 years earlier. Read all about it on the excellent website “bottles & bygones” from Mike Sheridan and in the 160 pages thick book “Schweppes – The First 200 Years “ by Douglas Simmons, the late secretary of Schweppes and Cadbury Schweppes / UK.
01 Schweppes Book 83

However, the traces of the author and his original documents and museum artifacts seem to have disappeared. Or maybe they are not open to the public. That is why there is not any “Soda hall of fame” anywhere in the world to honor the achievement of the godfather of all soft drinks. Schweppes does not have a home where, like in Germany, the smallest beer label becomes an authentic experience: the brewery, historic buildings, local museums, a collection. Not to mention the Marketing-Mecca in Atlanta. There is no hands-on experience, just a book, at least antiquarian.

Global player versus global players 

Looking at the historic context through my marketing eyes, Schweppes has opened the market for soft drinks. Schweppervescence has been making history for 230 years. Coca Cola is 100 years younger but is now far ahead in the market and a legend into the bargain. Maybe it is due to the concessions concessionaires had to make. Coca- Cola is backed up by Coca Cola and behind Schweppes are Suntory, Dr. Pepper, PepsiCo or Coca-Cola. The pioneer Schweppes in London, New York or Sidney – he is forgotten.

02 Schweppes

The family-tree of the modern softdrink-industry: Schweppes, the first 200 years, published 1983. Coca-Cola, the first 100 years, published 1986. With the competition-bottles of the the early 20th century.

The story is worth to be retold : by collectors

As an ebay-bottle-digger and soda-popper „Dr. h.c.Schweppes“  I have  finished my first terms. I am in touch with many collectors and communities and from the details they provide me with I learn something new every day, albeit realizing that not everything that can be found on the homepages and Wikipedia is true. Also, that there is so much more to be discovered.  From all over the world I receive bottles, memorabilia and documents for my small, private Schweppes museum in the native country of Jacob Schweppe. Maybe one day this collection will adorn the lounge of a famous hotel in Berlin. Or London?  So: Welcome, bienvenue, bienvenida – please enjoy the hands-on Schweppes story.

04 Collection

Storytelling crates on 10 m2: first steps of my private Schweppes-Museum nearby Berlin, Germany. The World of Coca-Cola in the heart of Atlanta/Georgia contains 5500 m2 – it is the Olympic idea, that counts.

From the Roman Empire to the British Empire

As opposed to the countries of the former British Empire, experts on bottle-digging, diving and collecting are very rare in Germany. To make up for this, “Germania” was already part of the Roman Empire of Julius Cesar since the 50s before Christ. I was born directly behind the 348 miles long Limes. When I was a child I used to dig for pieces of ‘Terra Sigillata” , the red shards of the Roman china. It can be found under www.terra-sigillata-museum.de in good condition. The fine art of „Cologne Glass“ can be marveled at under www.museenkoeln.de/roemisch-germanisches-museum/ next to the cathedral. The imperial sources of fizzy waters constituted one of the three most important parts of Roman life: baths, wine, love. However, 2000 years ago such world famous mineral waters like Appolinaris, Fachingen, Pellegrino, Pyrmont, or Selters were fed into the swimming pools of the spas.

06 Schweppes

I was born directly behind the 348 miles long Limes boundary wall in Germany from the first century A.D. When I was a child I used to dig for pieces of ‘Terra Sigillata” , the red shards of the Roman china.

  Since 1783: Refreshment for the new world

With the French Revolution, in the 18th century, the era of enlightenment and the industrial revolution in England started, as well as the reformation of the economy and living conditions. The United States are founded and the British Empire (red) soon covers a quarter of the land area of the world. Jacob Schweppe is a successful watch-maker and scientist in Geneva/Switzerland. According to the patent of the English scientist Joseph Priestley for the production of artificial mineral water he develops the first industrial production line for mineral water together with the engineer Paul and the druggist Gosse in 1783, known as the Geneva-System. His products are an innovation. They contain a high dose of carbonic acid. This guarantees consistently high product quality in a safe packaging. They are available to the people at reasonable prices. Also, the soda waters and lemonades in their unmistakably marked egg-bottles already fulfilled the criteria for a modern brand more than 200 years ago. From 1792 the Schweppes products make their way from London to the million markets of the new world.

07 Schweppes

In the 18th century, Schweppes eggbottles were the ambassadors of effervescence around the globe.The Britisch Empire (red), covers a quarter of the land area of the world.

Egg-Bottle?  Hamilton Bottle? Torpedo Bottle? Ballast Bottle? Drunken Bottle ? 

Schweppes´ Bottle No. 1

01 Schweppes

This earthenware bottle, initially designed to lay on its side to keep the cork moist, has the branding SCHWEPPES & Co: 79. Margaret Street, London. It was developed according to the concept of Jacob Schweppe and produced between 1795 and 1831. The instruction read:  “In order to maintain the quality of the water the bottles should be kept in a cool place and lay on their side.” Only 6 bottles of the illustrated bottle type “Schweppes No.1” are known to exist worldwide. Later on, Schweppes switched to embossed glass bottles.

30 StoneGlass Scchweppes

Paul explained his preference for glass bottles over earthenware: “glass, though more expensive, retains the gas and can be transported more safely three or four hundred miles by land, or on a voyage to the East or West Indies. “Schweppes´”  System definitely was in use before 1809, when William Hamilton described it in his patent for a continuous carbonation process.

04 Schweppes

The first launch in the market were half pint pontiled bottles in olive green glass 1795 – 1831: J. Schweppe & Co, Genuine Superior Aerated Waters, 79 Margaret Street. The glassbottle was initially blown by hand. The embossing changed later on in Oxford Street, 51 Berners Street.

08 Schweppes

The estimated manymillion bestseller, produced 1831 – 1895 in London for the rest of the world. Embossed Oxford Street, 51 Berners Street. I vitalized it for the illustration with the authentic filling: triple carbonated soda water, the highpressured fizzzz for the typical schweppervescence of these times.

09 Schweppes

After Joseph Priestley´s patent of a practical method of making artificial mineral waters in 1772, the pharmacists and druggists in GB started to fill their homemade products into oval bottles, inspired by J.Schweppe & Co. At the beginning, these bottles were unembossed, certainly branded with papersigns, private labels or neckhangers. ref. google: Carbonated Soft Drinks: Formulation and Manufacture, Dr. David Steen,Philip R. Ashurst

Ready for the “blob” 

While wax and resin mixtures were used in the 15th century as a stopper, the cork is also mentioned in English literature in the early 1500s for the same purpose, in connection with bottles. And it was the stopper which permitted the development of the true champagne. This is the stopper which permitted the development of the true champagne. Schweppes relied for more than 100 years on the use of the wired-on cork. My illustrated example, still unopened original seal has survived undamaged 90 years in a cellar in Kent/UK.

10 Schweppes

The cork was not immediately “tied-on” in the early period for, in England, at least, the wired-on cork dates from 1675-1700. In the early champagne and wine days, the corked (sealed) bottle section was inverted in a wax compound or oil to coat the cork; the seal was thus improved.Wax stoppers, used in Mid-Continental Europe for alchemy and medicine, were replaced by tight corks after the latter’s discovery.Thus, corks became the common bottle stoppers during a 300 year period, from early development before 1600 to almost complete use until 1900. (Holscher 1965,  Berge 1980, about the early history of cork) The Schweppes glass containers very often travelled around the globe in all climate zones for weeks and months. Despite many other developments  in the 19th century, Schweppes relied for more than 100 years on the use of the wired-on cork. The illustrated, still unopened original seal has survived undamaged 90 years in a cellar in Kent/UK.

TROOT UNCORKING

Royal Warrant of Appointment

13 Schweppes

The high esteem of the products and excellent social contacts enabled the brand to gain acceptance by the Royal Family. As purveyor to the court, from 1831 J. Schweppe & Co. was allowed to use the royal coat of arms in advertising. The shield is surrounded by a garter with the motto of the Order of the Garter in French: Honi soit qui mal y pense  (“shame upon him who thinks evil upon it”).

12 Schweppes

Bottle diving and bottle digging, illustrated with a pair of my Schweppes cordial bottles from the beginning of the 20th century. The right one is from Australia. The left one is from the English Channel nearby Southampton. The british harbour, where the 1912 Titanic departed to New York…

1851, the year of records

25 Schweppes Crystal Palace

24 Schweppes Crystal inside

In 1850, sales were 157.366 dozen. The first world exhibition in London in 1851 was  a welcome impetus to J. Schweppe & Co. The daringly conceived structure of glass and iron known as the Crystal Palace, built to house the exhibition, was erected in Hyde Park. Nearly 2000 feet long, it covered more than 18 acres, arching over several large elm trees. In the center, J. Schweppe & Co. built an 8 meter high fountain. Still today, this fountain is an integral part of the trademark.

15 Schweppes

In all, six million visitors came from all parts of the globe. For 5.500 Pounds (8.800 USD) J. Schweppe & Co. were assigned the privilege as tenders for the supply of non alcoholic refreshments. J. Schweppe & Co. supplied their soda and other mineral waters, Aerated Lemonade, German Seltzer Water and their new Malvern Soda Water. The company’s sales amounted to well over one million bottles during the six months of the exhibition. Furthermore their sales in the country rose to 175,000 dozen in 1851. In 1852 they climbed again to 192,000 dozen. A record which yet had to be broken by Coca-Cola.

26 Schweppes fountain

Schweppes productions worldwide

During the 1870s Tonic Water and Ginger Ale had been added to the range. In 1877 J. Schweppe & Co. started their first overseas production in Sydney, further branches followed in Melbourne and Brooklyn in 1884.

16 Schweppes

The art of “schweppervescence”  

At the beginning of the 20th century the brand name J. Schweppe & Co. was finally turned into “Schweppes”. The fizzy phonetics of the founder’s name is the copy platform of internationally successful campaigns, like “All the best siphons say Sss…ch…weppe…ss..-“ (1931) and “Schweppervescence lasts the whole drink through” (1946)

 14 Schweppes

All over the world, the middle and upper classes could be won as premium customers. Schweppe’s Table Waters were served exclusively in royal households, leading clubs, hotels, steamship lines and spas throughout the world. Ad of 1920.

schweppes added value

31 Sortiment Schweppes 1906

The leading fullrange-segment of softdrinks: a Schweppes portfolio 1906. The stylish cap-lifter powered a brandnew innovation: the crown-cork. Introduced by Schweppes in 1905.

The end of the bloptop

Crown Cork Schweppes

Devellopping the cap for Coke

Before William Painter patented the crown-cork in 1892, a lot of developments of bottles-stoppers were made in the 18th and 19th century. The target was, to invent sealed safe-containers for the effervescence of beers and the exploding range of artificial sodas and softdrinks.
11 Schweppes

After 100 years, Schweppes learns to fly. 

Coca-Cola learns to walk. 

In 1903, regular point-to-point flights became a possibility. In 1911, the twenty mail-carrying flights of the Coronation Aerial Post between London and Windsor were on the same basis. Schweppes sent a suitable message to their customers: “We were first in introducing Aerated Waters and have maintained our position as the premier firm for over 120 years. We again take the lead in addressing you by First Aerial Post, and ask you as a connoisseur to insist on having Schweppes Soda Water, Dry Ginger Ale or Tonic Water. It has reached every part of the world. Yours faithfully, SCHWEPPES LIMITED.“ The rest is a new story.

17 Schweppes

news

MAZ hjk 4.8.14

ebay bottle-diggers, germany

schweppes german ebay diggers

No, our country never belonged to the British Empire and there will be never a local eggbottle under the meadows. But we are hardcore explorers and collectors, digging to the roots of mental refreshment. So we found out the never ending story of our countryman Jacob Schweppe, who teached the germans fizzy sophistication as added values from Britain since 1783. Lets ring the bell for schweppervescence!

A hidden place 

schweppes hidden place

Bad news for the Schweppes-Community: there is no Schweppes hall of fame worldwide. So our project must be No 1!  The private fan-collection of a good friend, more than 3000 schweppes-items from the globe, digged in more than 20 years.

Our vision: the hall of fame

A flagship store, hot spot, eventcenter and meeting point, dedicated to our fizzy community worldwide. Authentic. Open Source. Powered by schweppervescence, the spirit of Schweppes. (Don´t dream, do it…)

SCHWEPPES MUSEUM

Global spirit

32 Schweppes Exhibition 1900  

01 London Ludgate Schweppes

03 Burma Pav Wembley Schweppes

02 Foundershouse Bristol Schweppes

06 Park

04 Cider Display

05 POS

07 Squash Display

33 Schweppes Genval 1923

35 Schweppes Aintree

34 Schweppes Bristol

Schweppes Jersey Card

“Cheerio!”

12 Schweppes Geneva

Storytelling since 1783

Established the first softdrink-industry worldwide: Jacob Schweppes Geneva-System from 1783. “Priestley’s studies of 1772 would however capture the eye of a young German watchmaker in Geneva, Switzerland, who would ultimately bring Priestly’s science to the masses.  His name was  Jacob Schweppe.  After further experimentation, Schweppe was able to simplify carbonation through the application of two common compounds – sodium bicarbonate and tartaric acid.  Schweppe branded this process the Geneva System and in 1783, would leave watch-making behind and set up mass production under the new Schweppes brand.  These early waters were sold under the guise of medicinal remedies, needless to say the true effects only aided in hydrating patients, not healing them.  After his initial success in Switzerland, Schweppe moved his company to England in 1792 where he set up his first mass production factory in London at 141 Drury Lane.” Drinking Cup

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Filed under: coke history Tagged: bottle digger, Cadbury Schweppes, coca-cola, coca-cola-history, coke, coke-history, eggbottle, Germany, hamilton bottle, history schweppes, Jacob Schweppe, krombacher, London, orangina-schweppes, Schweppes, schweppes 1783, schweppes archive, schweppes brand, schweppes chronic, schweppes history, schweppes story, soda history, torpedo bottle

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2014 im Rückblick

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Die WordPress.com-Statistik-Elfen haben einen Jahresbericht 2014 für dieses Blog erstellt.

Hier ist ein Auszug:

Ein New York City U-Bahnzug fasst 1.200 Menschen. Dieses Blog wurde in 2014 etwa 7.300 mal besucht. Um die gleiche Anzahl von Personen mit einem New York City U-Bahnzug zu befördern wären etwa 6 Fahrten nötig.

Klicke hier um den vollständigen Bericht zu sehen.


Filed under: coke history

Spirits and Contemporaries

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Just in this moment, on June 23th 2015, the Queen refreshes at Berlin. spiritschweppes.com reaches the place, other softdrinks cannot reach.
QUEEN BERLIN 23.6.2015

Must seen! The Empire 1838, definetely inspired by spiritschweppes.com01 Mr.Turner

Plot Summary: “Mr. Turner” explores the last quarter century of the great if eccentric British painter J.M.W. Turner (1775-1851). The 98-gun ship ‘Temeraire’ played a distinguished role in Nelson’s victory at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, after which she was known as the ‘Fighting Temeraire’. The ship remained in service until 1838 when she was decommissioned and towed from Sheerness to Rotherhithe to be broken up….

Obsessive: 500 Sodas bringing flavour to the people

sodapopstop

“I don´t work, I just play all day long.” 13 minutes of your live for the man, who offers the freedom of choice for sodapopbottles, people never had heard before.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gPbh6Ru7VVM&app=desktop

Walter James Hawksford, US export manager 

01 SCHWEPPES TITANIC

“Schweppes – the table waters of Kings – supplied to the royal households, leading clubs, hotels & steamship lines” was claimed into the beginning 20th Century. One of these steamship lines was White Star…

02 SCHWEPPES TITANIC03 SCHWEPPES TTANIC04 SCHWEPPES TITANIC05 SCHWEPPES TITANIC06 SCHWEPPES TITANIC

Bridget Penney with a photograph of her grandfather Walter James Hawksford. More than one hundred years since RMS Titanic sank, a Weymouth woman will be remembering a survivor of the tragedy. Bridget Penney, from Southill, will be among families gathering at Southampton today to remember all those who took the fateful voyage across the Atlantic. Her grandfather Walter James Hawksford, only survived the sinking because he was asked to row in one of the lifeboats. The passenger liner sank on April 15, 1912, after hitting an iceberg off Newfoundland.The ship had been on its maiden voyage from South-ampton to New York, her passengers included some of the wealthiest people in the world as well as people emigrating to America to start a new life. Of the 2,224 people on board only 710 survived. Mrs Penney said she had known very little of her grandfather’s story, as he never spoke of it, until the family found a letter he had written after the tragedy and she did some investigating. She said: “He was working for drinks company Schweppes and was to be their first export manager in America. They paid for a first class ticket for him and his wife Edith. Luckily she couldn’t go.” On the night of April 14-15 he was awoken to a ‘bump and a long grinding sound’. The message was soon passed to passengers that an iceberg had damaged the ship and they went on to the deck. Women and children were put into the lifeboats first. Mrs Penney said: “I just keep thinking he must have been watching people get into the boats and knowing that he wasn’t going to be saved.” By a lucky stroke of fate it was his love of rowing and time spent in Kingston Rowing Club that saved his life.She said: “He was standing near lifeboat number three and they were a rower short. First officer William Murdoch turned and said ‘Is there anyone here who can row?’ “He put his hand up. “They rowed about half a mile out. “When the boat went down they all took their hats off and bowed their heads.” The 710 survivors were picked up by the ship Carpathia and taken to New York. Mr Hawksford was then able to write to his wife to let her know he was safe. In his letter he said: “Here I am you see, still alive and kicking, we have had a pretty rough time of it. I daresay you know almost as much by now as I do from the papers, so I won’t enlarge upon the horrors of it all.” He added: “The thing that has troubled me most is the anxiety you must all have had.” Mr Hawksford returned to England and the story that passed down through the family was that his brown hair turned white soon after his return. Mrs Penney said she would be in Southampton to pay her respects to all Titanic’s passengers and to remember her grandfather.She said: “I want to go and be where the boat was as a mark of respect for him.” THE DORSET ECHO, first published Saturday 14 April 2012 in News by the author Catherine Bolado, Senior Reporter

SSSCHWEPPESSS & Elvis 1961

Schweppes Elvis 1961

 

1961 London Bus with “SSSCHWEPPESSS” advert. Headline “Elvis Presley, the full story by Hedda Hopper”. HH (May 2, 1885 – February 1, 1966) was one of America’s best-known gossip columnists. Hopper continued to write gossip to the end, her work appearing in many magazines and later on radio.

The legend of the “Hamilton” Bottle

HAMILTON PATENT

Torpedo bottles, egg bottles, pointy enders, ovates, ballast bottles or bombs are often called mistakenly HAMILTON bottles. Named after William Francis Hamiltons embossed “Patent-Bottle” 1809 ff. He lived in Lower Mount Street in the City of Dublin and granted a Patent in 1809  “for a new Method of preparing Soda and other Mineral Waters…” – but definitly not for the special type of bottles, who could not stand up on their own. It is generally accepted, that JACOB SCHWEPPE was the industrial inventor of soda water and the first mass producer of Torpedo Bottles. He moved to London in 1792 and used egg shaped bottles until the turn of the century 1910. His earliest Torpedo Bottle was a pottery or stoneware bottle, the SCHWEPPES NO 1, followed from the pointilled Glass-Bottle “Margaret Street” from 1795 – 1831. Thank you David Walker Barker, Leeds/GB, for your example of the authentic Hamilton Patent Bottle, “Hamiltons Patent Aerated Waters” circa 1825 – 1830.

Bottle Club 1890

Schweppes Kilner

 

Vintage Schweppes skittle bottle 180mm tall with a base diameter of 45mm.
It has embossed on the front ‘SCHWEPPES’ and on the back the Royal Crest and underneath ‘ BY APPOINTMENT’. On the base is embossed the bottle’s manufacturer ‘K.B.LTD G 143’. This was Kilner Bros Ltd and they manufactured bottles from around 1870 until 1922, based in Thornhill Lee’s West Yorkshire.
This article was published by the Dewsbury Reporter in their Men of Science supplement: …Some idea of the magnitude of the operations carried out can be gathered from the fact that the firm employed seven commercial travelers and 600 workers. By this time the Kilners had also opened another extensive works in Conisborough which employed a further 500 workers. For many years Kilners held a leading position in the trade, and were patentees of a system for making the rims of bottles and jars one uniform size so they could be fitted with tin caps..

RMS Rhone 1865 – 1867

15 Schweppes RMS RHONE

The R.M.S. Rhone was part of the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company which provided services between England, Caribbean and South America. It was a high-class vessel with a short career. In 1867 she was one of about 75 vessels damaged or lost in a hurricane. Hundred years later, Bert Kilbride, a diver known as “The last Priate of the Carribbean”, lifted a treasure of egg bottles, filled with genuine (Schweppes?) mineral water. Today, the wreck is one of the most popular dives in the British Virgin Islands.

http://www.divebvi.com/dive-sites/rms-rhone/

Working Class Heroes

03 Schweppes Industry

the term “soft drinks” was originated to distinguish the flavoured drinks from hard liquor or spirits. Soft drinks were recommended as a substitute in the effort to change the hard-drinking habits of the English and early Americans.

Commander Whitehead

Whithead
on board the liner Queen Elizabeth where British fashions were shown to American buyers, are COMMANDER WHITEHEAD of Schweppes U.S.A. on left and LORD DUNMORE. 10.11.1965. wikipedia: Walter Edward WhiteheadCBE (20 May 1908 – 16 April 1978) was a British Royal Navy officer, a veteran of the South Pacific campaign, better known as the advertising representative of Schweppes Tonic Water. The first campaign was created by Ogilvy & Mather Agency in 1955 and ran through the 1960s. Born in Aldershot, England, Commander Whitehead was at one time the President of Schweppes (USA) and General Manager (Overseas). He died in Petersfield.[1

Oscar Wilde

05 Schweppes O.Wilde

in full Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde   (born Oct. 16, 1854, Dublin, Ire.—died Nov. 30, 1900, ParisFrance), Irish wit, poet, and dramatist whose reputation rests on his only novelThe Picture of Dorian Gray (1891), and on his comic masterpieces Lady Windermere’s Fan (1892) and The Importance of Being Earnest (1895). He was a spokesman for the late 19th-century Aesthetic movement in England, which advocated art for art’s sake, and he was the object of celebrated civil and criminal suits involving homosexuality and ending in his imprisonment (1895–97).

Jane Austen

04-schweppes-austen

(born Dec. 16, 1775, Steventon, Hampshire, Eng.—died July 18, 1817, Winchester, Hampshire), English writer who first gave the novel its distinctly modern character through her treatment of ordinary people in everyday life. Austen created the comedy of manners of middle-class life in the England of her time in her novels, Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814),Emma (1815), and Northanger Abbey and Persuasion (published posthumously, 1817)….

Seltzer Man

SELTZER MAN

when water was worth. Take 12 minutes of your time for this impressive slow-beverage documentation. A man and his baby, surviving in NY. In my opinion: oscar-award :-)

http://photoblog.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/05/11/11604855-seltzer-delivery-man-practices-bygone-craft-in-new-york-city?lite

John Cleese

11-schweppes-cleese

in full John Marwood Cleese  (born October 27, 1939, Weston-super-MareSomerset,England), British comic actor best known for his television work on Monty Python’s Flying Circus and Fawlty Towers. Famous is John Cleese’s first advert for Schweppes 1988, that was shown exclusively on VHS tapes of A Fish Called Wanda. Here on youtube, he expresses his thoughts on subliminal advertising. VIDEO:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W05zZm4JMGA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g9TRTsAiNAE

Bert Kilbride

bert

“I have been a treasure seeker around the British Virgin Islands for over 5 decades where I resided from the 1950´s through 2005. I have charted (in my head) 138 ship wrecks. My mom taught me to swim before I could walk and I hhave been a diver for almost a century now. ” On January 8, 2008, his heart and kidneys were 94 years old and just couldn´t support him any longer. Berts life:

http://www.bertkilbride.com

The Queen Victorian Aera, Schweppe´s boomtime

02 Schweppes Victoria

in full Alexandrina Victoria   (born May 24, 1819, Kensington Palace, London,England—died January 22, 1901, Osborne, near CowesIsle of Wight), queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1837–1901) and empress of India (1876–1901). She was the last of the House of Hanover and gave her name to an era, theVictorian Age. During her reign the English monarchy took on its modern ceremonial character.

Willliam IV

14 Schweppes William

also called Prince William Henry, Duke Of Clarence (1789–1830), GermanWilhelm Heinrich, byname The Sailor King   (born Aug. 21, 1765,  London—died June 20, 1837, Windsor Castle, near London), king of Great Britain and Ireland and king of Hanover from June 26, 1830. In 1831, the Post Office Directory recorded J.Schweppe & Co. as “Soda and Mineral Water Manufacturers to Their Majesties and the Royal Family”. In the British Imperial Calendar for 1833, J.Schweppe is listed as purveyor of soda water to His Majesty´s Household.

Artur Kozlowski

12-schweppes-diver1

the bottle-diver at a secret lake in a foreign language: “Bardzo ciekawe podwodne znalezisko. Butelka po wodzie sodowej z najstarszej na swiecie manufaktury Schweppe, produkujacej wodę sodowa. Zakłady te produkowały taką wode w latach 1834-1883 w Dublinie na Berner Street. Oryginalna inskrypcja na butelce brzmi: J. SCHWEPPE & Co. 51 BERNER STREET OXFORD STREET GENUINE SUPERIOR AERATED WATERS.” VIDEOS: 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovztGLUwQvA

Rebirthing of an egg bottle in Valparaiso by Ramon Martinez/Recolecta Antiguedades Botteleros

Charles Dickens

01 Schweppes Dickens

in full Charles John Huffam Dickens    (born February 7, 1812, PortsmouthHampshireEngland—died June 9, 1870, Gad’s Hill, near Chatham, Kent), English novelist, generally considered the greatest of the Victorian era. His many volumes include such works as A Christmas Carol, David Copperfield, Bleak House,A Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations, and Our Mutual Friend.Dickens enjoyed a wider popularity than had any previous author during his lifetime. Much in his work could appeal to simple and sophisticated, to the poor and to the queen, and technological developments as well as the qualities of his work enabled his fame to spread worldwide very quickly.

Al Capone

06 Schweppes Prohibition

byname of Alphonse Capone, also called Scarface   (born Jan. 17, 1899, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.—died Jan. 25, 1947, Palm Island, Fla.), the most famous American gangster, who dominated  organized crime in Chicago from 1925 to 1931. In the prohibition-year 1927, Capone and his gang were pulling in approximately $60 million per year- most of it from beer. Capone not only controlled the sale of liquor to over 10,000 speakeasies, but he also controlled the supply from Canada to Florida.

07 Schweppes Capone

the period of the US-prohibition (1920-1933) pushed the popularity  of long- and softdrinks. Coke´s arrow pointed to the refreshment of soda-fountains, Schweppes established his career as multi-talented mixer. I do not know exactly the components of Capones drinks, (his gang shown above), but for sure Schweppes was part of the Chicago lifestyle …

08 Schweppes Chicago 30

Dr. Emery

09 Schweppes Dr.Emerys Flask

this bottle is unique and one of the most storytelling items of my collection. A rare leather and glass flask from the prohibition era. It is signed on the bottom Dr. Thy M Emery and has the date August 1929. It also has an inscription by Dr. Emery that reads: “The Shot How Big I say. How I meant it then. I know now.” The front of the flask reads: Shasta Springs, Cal./You can’t Fool Nature!/Prohibitionists have Red Noses and Will Tell you Where to fill Flask./August 1929. The other side reads: Drink Meter/Directions/Take Internally/One Drink Freezing/Two Drinks Moderating/Three Drinks Fair and Warmer/Four Drinks Hot and Sultry/Empty Cyclone/Thunder and Lightning. Measures 5 1/2″ x 1 1/2″ x 3 1/2″. A great piece of history, which has survived Dr. Emery.

10 Schweppes Prohib. Recipe

dr. Emery would have used “recipes” like this.  A original government issued Prohibition Prescription for Spirits Frumenti, the US pharmaceutical term for Whiskey, 2 fluid ounces every 3 times daily! From the days of Al Capone, flappers and moonshine this prescription was the only legal way to drink liquor in the US! The whiskey was prescribed for Mrs. Pilles, by Dr. Raub, on January 22, 1933, and was filled the same day by Pharmacist, Alvin H. Kern, of Easton, PA. It was issued by the Treasury Department and is printed on, beautiful pink paper. In the center is the old Treasury Seal with the Latin inscription, “Thesaur. Amer. Septent. Sigil.”. When you hold this prescription up to the light PROHIBITION is watermarked, as with the metal strips that are used in U.S. bills today. This was the pharmacist’s duplicate copy, printed on the back are the “Instructions”, one of which is: “This duplicate prescription must be retained by the druggist as permanent record, open to inspection by Federal Officers”, the top copy was sent to the government. The prescription measures 5 1/2″ x 4 1/2″. Thank you Grace from New Jersey for your great research!

Big Beards

13-schweppes-pub

the australian pub with no beer, Episode 3: Old Hepburn Hotel turns the beer taps off for the first time in 100 years, and the Black Widow Bikie Gang are not too impressed… until they have their first taste of a Fluffy Duck! See more at youtube VIDEO: 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBuR39ubakg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uBd61YR7JS0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v_WMQAl6Aa8

Sir Adrian Cadbury

01 Schweppes Book 83

02 Adrian Schweppes

Winds of change. In 1983, Schweppes marked his 200th bicentenary with “Schweppes – the first 200 years”. Here is one of 1130 copies worldwide, signed by the author Douglas A.Simmons and Basil E.S.Collins of Cadbury-Schweppes. Accompanied by product-milestones on australian beermats.

Chairman for 24 years was Sir George Adrian Hayhurst Cadbury (born 1929), a former British Olympic rower. He managed Cadbury/Schweppes (established 1969) as a central operated global brand. Since 2006, the brand is managed nationwide by concessionary companies.

(will continue)

13 Coke Schweppes

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brand eins 09 2018: homestory spiritschweppes

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Legends & Stories : Fizzy genetics of Coca Cola

A brand suggesting to be the pioneer: “Thomas Henry, gentleman and first mover since 1773”. (Schweppes claims his Geneva-Patent for aerated waters 1783) Fact is: labeled on the bottle is William Henry, https://www.britannica.com/biography/William-Henry For marketing uses, he’s looking sexier than his father. As a pharmacist, Thomas Henry was famous in producing HENRYs MAGNESIA, later on he sells aerated waters over the counter. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Henry_(apothecary) The question is: does anyone know a bottle or a document to identify Thomas Henrys aerated waters?
Thank you John Ault for your great input.

 

STORYTELLING : WATER AT THE TABLE OF MANKIND

A home story of spiritschweppes

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https://www.brandeins.de/magazine/brand-eins-wirtschaftsmagazin/2018/personal/schweppes-die-mutter-von-coca-cola?utm_source=zeit&utm_medium=parkett
Issue from Germanys leading marketing journal brand eins 09 2018:  a portrait of my project spiritschweppes – focussing private engagement in storytelling global fizzy marketing. (translated by google)

“The mother of Coca-Cola”
Brand care is usually the sole responsibility of the company. In the case of Schweppes, a private citizen has taken on the task. A home visit.
Text: Jens Bergmann
Illustration: Manu Burghart

• Hans-Jürgen Krackher serves homemade apple and ginger lemonade in his apartment building in Potsdam. Limo von Schweppes is not his thing – but the brand has done it to him. So much so that the 67-year-old has set up a museum with him. The exhibits include the first bottles in which Jacob Schweppe (1740-1821) filled soda water. They have an arched bottom to withstand carbonic acid pressure and are called Egg Bottles because of their shape. A stoneware specimen is Krackher’s pride; There are only five of them worldwide. So far, he has invested “a six-figure sum” in his “Wunderkammer”. “Dr. h.c. Schweppes “, as he likes to call himself, also runs the website spiritschweppes.com and two profile pages on Pinterest.
His mission began in 2014. At that time, the advertisers, who had been working for the beverage industry for a long time, were commissioned by Schweppes GmbH, which belongs to the Krombacher brewery, to research the history of the brand. The Siegerländer own in this country the rights. One reason for the order: A naughty competitor had stepped on the plan. In 2010, a Berlin-based company had launched the soft drink brand named after the British pharmacist Thomas Henry (1734-1816) – with a seemingly long tradition. Above all, the newcomer’s tonic water has become a success thanks to the gin wave, which is also based on fantastic stories, although it is more expensive than that of Schweppes, the inventors of this drink.
Krackher researched – and was fascinated by Jacob Schweppe. He delivered his work to the client, which he enlightened, inter alia, on the first name of the entrepreneur: this was for years incorrectly named by the company Johann Jacob Schweppe. With Krackher’s report, the collaboration ended in his grief. He would have liked to become an official brand ambassador. Schweppes, according to his credo, must advertise much more strongly with his unique story. And need a place where this story can be experienced with original pieces. So he tackled the matter as a lone fighter.
He tirelessly talks about his topic. Jacob Schweppe, born in Witzenhausen, North Hesse, made his career as a jeweler in Geneva in the 1770s and was interested in technical innovations. One made it possible to aerate water and make it so durable. Clean drinking water was rare, which is why many people swallowed rough amounts of alcohol as a germ-free alternative. Recognizing the potential of soda water, Schweppe developed an industrial manufacturing process with partners and entered production in London on a grand scale in 1783 – the Schweppes brand was born. The transport problem he solved with the egg-shaped bottles.
The company achieved its breakthrough in 1851, when it was exclusively able to supply visitors to the London World’s Fair. Schweppes soda water spread throughout the British Empire. In 1870, the quinine-containing tonic water was introduced, which was to serve in the colonies of malaria prophylaxis. So Schweppes became the first global soft drink brand – referring to “the mother of Coca-Cola” (Krackher).
Later Schweppes passed through several hands and today belongs to various corporations, in many countries this is the Coca-Cola Company. Owner of Schweppes Europe is the Japanese company Suntory, which has granted licenses to some beverage manufacturers. Not ideal for the care of a global brand. But also a chance for the volunteer brand ambassador Krackher.
Do the Krombacher brewery interfere with its unauthorized activities? “Not at all,” says Franz-Josef Weihrauch, spokesman for the company. At a cooperation but “currently not thought”. Meanwhile Krackher puts his hopes on the Japanese company Suntory, whom he wants to persuade to a roadshow on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the brand in 2033. There is no way around his pieces, because: “I have the most important collection.” —

 

2019 : visit spiritschweppes at Potsdam, Germany, you are welcome!

spirit 2019 ff

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lasst leere flaschen geschichte erzählen • let empty bottles tell the story • laissez les bouteilles vides raconter l’histoire • deja que las botellas vacías cuenten la historia • lascia che le bottiglie vuote raccontino la storia • deixe garrafas vazias contar a história • Пусть пустые бутылки рассказывают историю • Αφήστε τα κενά μπουκάλια να πουν την ιστορία • Boş şişelerin hikayeyi anlatmasına izin verin • Laat lege flessen het verhaal vertellen • 让空瓶子讲故事 • Laat leë bottels die storie vertel • Nechte prázdné lahve vyprávět příběh • Låt tomma flaskor berätta historien • اسمحوا زجاجات فارغة تحكي القصة • खाली बोतलों को कहानी कहने दो • Leig leis na botail falamh innse an sgeulachd…..


You are Welcome at my Wunderkammer at Potsdam, Germany

WORLD DAY OF WATER

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Yesterday on the 22nd of March the international WORLD DAY OF WATER has passed almost unnoticed. He had the guiding theme “leaving no one behind – water and sanitation for all”. As late as the 18th century, Benjamin Franklin, the American scholar, publicist and politician said: IN WINE, THERE IS WISDOM. IN BEER, THERE IS FREEDOM. IN WATER, THERE IS BAKTERIA. The photo from my marketingcabinet spiritschweppes.com should pay tribute to the historic drinking water pioneers. SPA 17 / 18C, SELTERS / SCHWEPPES 18 / 19c, SINALCO / COCA COLA 20c. These first global players in carbonated, hygienic drinking water have taken humanity a long way to the development of water and sewer systems (end19C). With safe drinking water at an affordable price – innovatively packaged in the world’s first bottles. In the foreground: water bacteria, made visible.

GENUSS-TREND BERLIN, 27.APRIL – SEE YOU SOON

TASTE THE LIMEY CLUB 1890

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https://www.facebook.com/schweppes.au/posts/2143950615700438?comment_id=2144991588929674

THE BIRTH OF THE “LIMEYS CLUB”. Horst Lichter’s “Bares for Rares” is the most popular antique show on German television. In January 2019 an original Schweppes decanter appeared there. Fitted with two eggbottles incl. cork stoppers: J. SCHWEPPE & CO.LTD • LONDON • EAUX ARTIFICIAL. • (fountain of great exhibition 1851) TRADE MARK. The experts and dealers could not agree on a purchase. www.spiritschweppes.com -storyteller Hans-Jürgen Krackher and his collector friend Christian Warnecke (No.1 Schweppes-Collector in the Guinness Book) reckoned the seller and agreed on the purchase. The original Schweppes decanter from about 1890 with embossing bottles in English-French is now a star of the digital spiritschweppes-collection. all nice followers are cordially invited to live-tasting at Hans-Jürgen Krackher’s Marketing-Cabinet in Potsdam / Germany.

“Lemon Squash Frame”, advertised by Mapping and Webb in 1890. page 67, SCHWEPPES – The First 200 YEARS

Horst Richters “Bares für Rares” by ZDF Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen, Germany. From Granny’s kitchen cupboard to a coveted collector’s item, every kind of junk is sold. The moderator mediates between the providers and traders and presents not only the often curious items, but also their owners.

Expert Albert Maier, showmaster Horst Lichter, seller Fritz Kühne

experts and dealers Wolfgang Pauritsch, Fabian Kahl, Ludwig Hofmaler

seller Michael Kühne as a storyteller in the daily press in the Rheinische Anzeiger, Dormagen / North Rhine-Westphalia

storyteller and collectors Hans-Jürgen Krackher, Potsdam and Christian Warnecke, Hamburg on tour

GOOD NEWS FROM DOWNUNDER :-)

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Hans-Jürgen Krackher Dear Marcus Dance, AUS, unfortunately this is the problem of marketing by concessionaires. J.Schweppe since 1783, Schweppe´s Ltd, Cadbury Schweppes, the British roots –  the values of the first real world brand – everything has gone. There is no longer a factory called Schweppes, and the Trade Mark belongs to the Japanese liquor company Suntory. Today, Schweppes products are produced worldwide by Coca Cola, Pepsi Cola or by large beer brands, in Germany by Krombacher Pils. This means, that the regional bottler of concessionaire brands do not feel passionately responsible for the history and value of the brand. So there is for Schweppes, with Spa and Selters the genetic “mother” of Coca Cola, no central corporate archive. Christian and I have taken over this job as private collectors and storytellers and – it’s a lot of fun as Davids between the Goliaths.

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