Vintage and Antique Liquor Bottles

Drunk History: The Rise, Fall, and Revival of All-American Whiskey
By Hunter Oatman-Stanford — At a time when obscure new whiskeys are appearing on cocktail menus from Savannah to Seattle, it's hard to imagine the American whiskey industry was ever under threat. For starters, the grain-based spirit is as American as apple pie, or at least George Washington—in fact, the first president’s Mount Vernon estate was once the site of the country’s largest distillery, specializing in the Mid-Atlantic region’s famous rye whiskey. But despite its noble foundations, America's whiskey industry...

Bill Lindsey on How To Read a Bottle
By Maribeth Keane — My maternal grandfather and uncle got into bottles in about 1965 or ‘66 when I was in high school, and we started digging. My uncle was in Arizona, near some of the old mining camps there. Those were the glory days of bottle digging. People had access with four-wheel drive vehicles and gas was cheap and time-off was more abundant. Then years passed and people started really hitting the ghost towns and mining camps and logging camps of the West. Anyway, we started by digging some of the...