An hour dig gives up one beauty

RelicDude

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Apr 20, 2012
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I'm starting to think I need to move further down my river bank my hole today did not give up much. But it did give me a beauty of a bitters and a nice abm local. The bitters is a so Richardson bitters. Does any one have any info on the bitters? I really like this bottle it has some nice green swirls in it. Thank you for looking _ Justin
 

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RelicDude

RelicDude

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Oops here the other
 

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digging440yrs

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Dec 5, 2012
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UPSTATE NEW YORK
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1970 COMPASS-
WHITES SILVER EAGLE-
WHITES DFX, 4X6DD COIL, 6X8DD COIL, 950 COIL, 10X12SEF COIL-
GARRETT PRO POINTER AT, GARRETT AT PRO , MINELAB EXPLORER SE with 8.5x12.5 Cors coil
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BEAUTIES !!! :thumbsup:
 

Bass

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Jan 20, 2013
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"Solon Osmond Richardson was the son of a doctor and planned to follow in his fatherā€™s footsteps. But his father, Dr. Nathan Richardson, also had a sideline. In 1808, he had begun to manufacture a remarkably effective medicine ā€“ an elixir whose effects were almost miraculously efficacious. It was so popular with his patients that he began selling it in convenient quart bottles. He called it Dr. Richardsonā€™s Bitters.

Dr. Solon O. Richardson joined in his fatherā€™s practice and also in the manufacture of the product. After his fatherā€™s death in 1837, S. O. Richardson carried on both family businesses. But his constitution, alas, was somewhat frail, so he eventually ceased the actual practice of medicine and merely carried on the manufacture of the tonic ā€“ after all, the tonic was also contributing to the health and well-being of his former patients. There was no denying the fact that those who followed Dr. S.O.ā€™s prescription of daily dosing soon felt remarkably better ... just by imbibing the bitters.

The mid-1800s were the era of patent medicines. Small town doctors, quacks and businessmen of all kinds brewed up concoctions that were guaranteed to cure-all, some riding wagons across the nation selling elixirs in villages, cities and towns. Some were mere ā€˜snake oilā€™ salesmen, little more than carnival barkers. These stood in stark contrast to the medicines that were carefully concocted by physicians like Dr. Nathan Richardson and his son. At the time that Dr. Solon O. Richardson began to market his product in earnest, ā€˜proprietary medicineā€™ was something very new in New England.

Solon O. Richardson may have been a good doctor, but he was an even better businessman. He recognized that, in marketing his product to a wider audience, and to sell his products in far flung markets, he would have to make some changes in the way it was customarily bottled. First of all, the usual bottle, shaped like a wine bottle, would never do for shipment of the product. After much study and research, a new design for the bottle was devised, but there were no nearby manufacturers for such a bottle ā€“ a lengthy search found a suitable glass manufacturer in Philadelphia. Next, a convenient method of transporting the bottles had to be found. In the days just before the proliferation of rail transport, this meant that private teams of horses and carriages had to be acquired. Solon O. Richardson transcended each of these difficulties one by one, and marketed his product across the nation.

Before long its success surpassed all expectations, and Richardson Bitters were a significant product for the town then still known as South Reading, Mass.; a labor force was employed to work hard at producing the bitters at Dr. Richardsonā€™s manufactory located on the corner of Crescent and Mechanic (now Princess) Streets, where the Fire Station would later be constructed. "


Nice finds Justin
 

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RelicDude

RelicDude

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Oh man your so good at the info thank you bass. I love the history of these bottles.
 

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RelicDude

RelicDude

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So what do you folks think this bottle dates to? Is that a pontil or a very crude hinge mold? And what created the green swirls in the aqua glass? Is this a common defect?
 

Bass

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Hinge mold. IMO yours dates 1880's-90's. Can't really see the swirls you are speaking of, try taking a couple more photos.
 

Goldenplug

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Jul 30, 2014
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Upstate, ny
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Garrett ace 250 8.5 x 11 dd coil, teknetics t2, sniper coil, dd coild, lesche digger, gator tool, garrett propointer.
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I love the bitters relic. I would trade my day for your day!
 

john glassman

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Apr 16, 2007
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Nice bitters bottle you found bass was right its 1880s bottle.
 

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