Share your favorites on Show & Tell

One Tough Bottle

In Bottles > Cola and Pop Bottles > Show & Tell.
SpiritBear's items636 of 813Holland, Michigan, Souvenir PlateTehn Reichsmark
7
Love it
0
Like it

antiqueroseantiquerose loves this.
Rick55Rick55 loves this.
gargoylecollectorgargoylecollector loves this.
AnnaBAnnaB loves this.
TreyTrey loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
blunderbuss2blunderbuss2 loves this.
See 5 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 9 years ago

    SpiritBear
    (813 items)

    Local Coca-Cola Bottling Co. bottle from 1917; they come in 2 sizes. I have 3. (Had 4, but a guy coming to quote price on new windows knocked one over. One is intact, and one other as in 4 pieces when I found it-- but Rubber Cement saved the day!)

    This one I had found in the lake a few years ago after my foot, sliding along the bottom in a searching motion, detected it.

    Originally, it was so slime-covered and sediment-filled that I thought it was totally intact. I thought it was gonna be nicer than the other one I found that day in the lake. As it turns out, the other was much nicer. LOL.

    When I had finished searching, I cleaned my bottles up in the silt and water before putting them in my pack. I was shocked when this one revealed itself to be so totally damaged.

    The crack stretches in two directions around the bottle, reaching around the base and up the neck as well. One part ends about an inch away from another crack, which would have split the bottle.

    It all burst forth from a small bullet-hole in the shoulder where a tiny pellet looking like lead still remained.

    Our idea is that around the end of WW1, some people in the now rarely swum in part of the lake finished off their (Not Coca-Cola) drinks and floated them on a board or tossed them in the air to use as target practice with some sort of pellet gun. They succeeded in destroying a few, but this one ate lead and lived.

    logo
    Cola and Pop Bottles
    See all
    Paul Bunyan Beverages - Somewhere in Minnesota - ACL Soda Bottle - Circa 1950
    Paul Bunyan Beverages - Somewhere i...
    $59
    Vintage Cleveland Ohio ACL Soda Bottle Sante Beverages
    Vintage Cleveland Ohio ACL Soda Bot...
    $31
    1950 Ontario Beverages Acl Soda Bottle 2 Color 10oz Ontario, Oregon
    1950 Ontario Beverages Acl Soda Bot...
    $15
    1870's STONEWARE J.A. LOMAX Chicago ILLINOIS ILL. IL. Pottery beer SODA bottle
    1870's STONEWARE J.A. LOMAX Chicago...
    $10
    logo
    Paul Bunyan Beverages - Somewhere in Minnesota - ACL Soda Bottle - Circa 1950
    Paul Bunyan Beverages - Somewhere i...
    $59
    See all

    Comments

    1. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 9 years ago
      So, this is not a Coke bottle ?
    2. SpiritBear, 9 years ago
      It is unlikely that it held Coca-Cola.
      It is possible that it did, but most Coke people will not even give consideration that a bottle held Coca-Cola unless it has Coca-Cola in script. There is much evidence against that, but in this case we also have scripted bottles like this from my town.
      Also going against this one is that the Hobble-skirt shape came out before this one, so it was almost certainly another flavor of drink (flavor on cap or long-gone label.)

      This is a Coca-Cola Bottling Company bottle, which would likely have bottled things other than Coca-Cola. Coke alone would not save a company here-- especially back in the day when fruit flavours were much more popular.
    3. SpiritBear, 9 years ago
      Oh, as for how I know it's 1917: Date-code. The others are 1916-1919. The 1919 one was from a different location, thus giving me an end of WW1 date for when the bottles went into the lake.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.