Minggu, 31 Mei 2015

Dr. E.L. Welbourn: A Hustler of Wide Experience ~ Medicine Bottles History Union City Indiana








Dr. E. L. Welbourn: A Hustler of Wide Experience
by
Joe Clevenger
[Article text is an image - click to enlarge.]

 







Union City Times-Gazette, Wednesday, November 12, 1947
Welbourn Rites Are Held Today At Los Angeles
Funeral services for Mrs. Malinda J. Welbourn, 87, widow of Dr. E. L. Welbourn and a former resident of Union City, who died Sunday at a hospital in Van Nuys, Calif., were held this afternoon at Los Angeles, Calif. Burial was in Forest Lawn cemetery at Los Angeles.
The death of Mrs. Welbourn followed an eight weeks' serious illness from a heart ailment and complications resulting from a broken hip.
A resident of the Union City vicinity most of her life, she was born on September 23, 1860, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Gettinger. Following her education in Randolph and Jay county schools, she was married to Dr. Welbourn, whose death occurred in California about 20 years ago.
For 40 years she resided at the home which was formerly the residence of Governor Isaac P. Gray, corner of West Oak and Union streets, Union City. Mrs. Welbourn sold that home to Dr. Leroy B. Chambers for office use two years ago, before making her permanent residence in Van Nuys, Calif.



Surviving are three sons, Dr. Marshall Welbourn, who resides in California; Raymond, of South Bend, Ind., and Dr. Leland Welbourn, of Van Nuys; two daughters, Dr. Pina Welbourn and Roxie J. Welbourn, both of Van Nuys; one step-son, Dr. Carl Welbourn, of Los Angeles; several grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. H. R. Roush, Mrs. Carl Thornburg and Mrs. Minnie Lindley, and a brother, B. F. Gettinger, all of the Union City community. One step son, Edward, and a sister, Mrs. Wesley Mangas, are deceased.

Their son:
DR. OCLASCO C. WELBOURN was born January 28, 1871, near New Paris, Ohio, during the temporary residence of his parents on a farm. He passed his boyhood and youthful years in Union City, Indiana, attending the schools of the city, and in 1888 was a student at Bethany College. In 1889 he entered the Eclectic Medical College of Cincinnati, from which he graduated in 1891, and during his three years study took a special course in diseases of the eye and ear, as well as private instruction and clinical practice as an extra course. Since his graduation he has been an
assistant to his father as manufacturing chemist, and is now a partner, under the firm name of Dr. E. L. Welbourn & Son. 
Dr. O. C. Welbourn was married in 1892, to Miss Daisy AL. Coldren, of Union City. His residence, one of the best in Union City, is directly across the street from his father's, and is the first and only one heated by hot water in Union City.
In 1899, he began a two years' tour of the world. In Paris, he took a special course in operative gynecology under the celebrated Dr. Samuel Pozzi. He also worked in England under the eminent surgeon, Mr. Charles Stonham. Upon his return to California in 1901, Dr. Welbourn located in Los Angeles and became medical director of the Deaconess Hospital. Death: 06 MAR 1956 in Los Angeles, California [Source]

Another bio [source]:
0C. WELBOURN, M. D. During the few 
years which mark the period of Dr. O. C. 
, Welbourn's professional career he has met 
with gratifying success, and though his residence 
in Long Beach dates back scarcely six j'ears, he 
has won the good will and patronage of many of 
the families of this place. He is a great student 
and endeavors to keep abreast of the times in 
everything pertaining to medical science, taking 
the leading journals devoted to the discussion of 
"the ills to which flesh is heir," and the treat- 
ment thereof Progressive in his ideas and favor- 
ing modern methods as a whole, he does not dis- 
pense with many of the true and tried systems 
which have stood the test of years. 

His father was Dr. E. L. Welbourn, who was 
actively engaged in medical practice in Union 
City, Ind., for many years, and was one of the most 
influential and respected citizens of that section. 
The birth of our subject occurred in that place 
twenty-nine years ago, and there he passed the 
days of his youth. He received his elementary 
education in the public schools and subsequently 
it was his privilege to pursue a course in the 
higher branches of learning at Bethany College, 
in West Virginia. He then began the study of 
medicine, for from his early years he had mani- 
fested unusual aptitude in everything relating to 
his father's profession, and under his guidance 
had laid the foundations of medical knowledge. 
After taking a thorough course in the Cleveland 
(Ohio) Eclectic Medical College and being grad- 
uated from there in 1S91, he gave several years 
to practice in the hospitals in order to better 
equip himself for his subsequent duties. In 1894 
he came to Long Beach, where he established an
office. Within a very short time he wou the 
coufidence of the people and his practice has 
steadily increased, until his time now is fully 
occupied and he rarely has any leisure. 

That Dr. Welbourn stands high among his 
professional brethren is shown by the fact that 
for the past four years he has been honored with 
the responsible position of secretary of the South- 
ern California Medical Association and of the 
State Medical Association. His handsome suite 
of offices is in the Long Beach Bank building. 
He has erected a pretty, modern residence for his 
family and is prospering in every way. Socially 
he possesses those qualities of mind and heart 
which rarely fail of winning friends. Fraternally 
he belongs to the Knights of Pythias, the Macca- 
bees and the Woodmen of the World. He also 
has been identified with the Masonic order for 
some time and stands high in the estimation of 
his brother Masons. 

Eight years ago Dr. Welbourn married Miss 
Daisy L. Vinson, who was born and reared in 
Kentucky, and who is a lady of amiable qualities 
and excellent attainments. They have one child, 
a little daughter, Hester L- by name. In the 
domestic circle the doctor finds his chief pleasure, 
and like the majority of California householders 
he spends considerable time in the beautifying of 
his property and in keeping his flowers and lawn 
in fine condition. 

Here are a couple photos of Billy Tibbets' drugstore in Union City, Indiana, but that's a whole other rabbit hole to go down some other day.



_______________________________________________
Findlay Antique Bottle Club
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Sabtu, 30 Mei 2015

New Fruit Jar Show & Get-Together June 13, 2015 Cambridge City Indiana


























There's a new Fruit Jar collector event coming up in June!

Central Indiana Early Summer Fruit Jar Get Together/Show

Saturday, June 13, 2015



9:00am - 3:00pm

Huddleston Farm House Inn Museum
838 National Road
Cambridge City, IN 47327

The Huddleston Farmhouse is located approximately 60 miles east of Indianapolis and 20 miles west of Richmond on U.S. 40. [Google map link.]

Marty Troxell tells us his hopes & dreams for the get-together:
  • Friday eve socializing. My home will be open for awhile. 
  • [Overnight camping]
  • Saturday: the show/sale, more camaraderie, tearful goodbyes to those who must leave. 
  • Saturday eve: food (as yet to be determined), more show & tell, campfire socializing. 
  • Sunday morning: Clean up/ pack up, more tearful goodbyes.
  • The Midwest Fruit Jar Club meeting [in Muncie] (great opportunity for all who can go), and more goodbyes & maybe a tour for those who may not have made it earlier. 
  • Doesn't this sound good?!
See the official Facebook Event Page with lots of chatter: what jars are coming/ what peeps are coming / food, etc. Everyone's excited. ​

Call Marty Troxell for details -- (765) 478-3800


You can check out the nearby antique shops too. [Link

Nestled along the Old National Road and in the very heart of Antique Alley, Cambridge City could easily qualify as the best-kept secret in Wayne County. What’s the secret? The secret is that this quaint town is the home to ten antiques shops and malls, four eateries and three museums – all within walking distance of one other. Rich in history and filled with beautifully-restored homes, this picturesque town of 1,900 people has a small town feel and a huge heart. But it is the abundance of antiques shops and quaint eateries that make this a must-see weekend destination spot. Nine of the ten antiques shops are located in a 2-block stretch along the Old National Road in downtown Cambridge City, including Marty's shop:  

Doublehead Trading Company specializes in reclamation with hundreds of old doors, windows, fireplace mantels, porch columns, a large selection of collectibles and so much more. Marty has one of the largest glass jar displays in the area. 137 W Main St Cambridge City, IN.

___________________________________

SUNDAY JUNE 14, 2015


The Midwest Fruit Jar Club meeting is nearby at the Minnetrista Center's Cantina in Muncie. June 14, 2015 Sunday, 1:30 pm.

The Minnetrista is on the grounds of the Ball Brothers estates at
1200 N Minnetrista Pkwy, Muncie, IN 47303

http://www.minnetrista.net/directions-map/



Minnetrista: A Ball Family Legacy
In 1887, the Ball family moved its glass manufacturing business from Buffalo, New York to Muncie. Ball Brothers Glass Company became one of America's best known manufacturers of canning jars.

The Ball family purchased most of the land along the north bank of White River between Wheeling and Granville pikes in 1893. The name chosen by the family for the property was taken from a Sioux word, "mna" (pronounced mini) which means "water," and combined with the English word, "tryst," to form "Minnetrista," or, "a gathering place by the water."

L.L. Ball house was remodeled in 1910.

The L.L. Ball House, today.

The Lucius Lorenzo Ball House on the grounds of the Minnetrista Center . 


The building is one of the five founding Ball brother's original Muncie homes. The brothers moved from New York to Indiana in the 1880s to relocate their glass manufacturing business. William H., Frank C., Edmund B., George A., and Lucius L. Ball, founded what is now Ball Corporation, prospered in business, married into Indiana families, and began engaging in a variety of community activities.

Read Dick Cole's History of the L.L. Ball House here.
_______________________________________________
Findlay Antique Bottle Club
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2015 Findlay Bottle Show NEW LOCATION - Sunday Oct. 18, 2015 Ohio


  • FINDLAY BOTTLE SHOW
  • Sunday October ​18, 2015
  • The show is held at the Sterling Center Reception Hall 
    4570 Fostoria Avenue, Findlay, Ohio 45840

    Google Maps link - Also, see detailed directions and map below.

  • Show hours: from 9am - 2pm
  • Admission is $2.00
  • Kids under 12 are free (w/adults)​
  • Free appraisals w/paid admission
  • Plenty of FREE parking in a huge paved parking lot.
  • Show is in a heated building, w/tons of restrooms, and a food concession inside with lots of comfy seating.

  • Early Bird Hours: 7-9am – Tickets are only $10 and include complimentary Coffee and Donuts until 9am.
  • Early Bird Session is Sunday only, not Saturday.

Early Bird Buyers Admission on Sunday morning,​ from 7-9am​, is​ just $10​. You'll get first pick when the dealers are still setting up​, and free donuts and coffee while they last!​

There are several SUNDAY ONLY dealers inside who do NOT set up on Saturday, PLUS the outside dealers​ only set up on S​unday morning, so there's plenty of fresh merch to choose from for Sunday's Early Bird buyers!

Announcing THE 2015 
FINDLAY BOTTLE SHOW'S 
NEW LOCATION!
WE'RE MOVING!
NEW LOCATION – BIGGER and BETTER – MORE DEALER TABLES


We're pleased to announce that the 2015 Findlay Bottle Show will be held in a new location, at The Sterling Center.

Yes, we're moving again. You know what they say, "The only constant in life is change!"...


So...
Come to the Best Little NEW and IMPROVED, BIGGER and BETTER Bottle Show in the MidWest!

We are excited to have all our bottle friends join us at this wonderful new show venue. 

The Sterling Center is located at 4570 Fostoria Avenue, Findlay Ohio - map link.


Of course, the Findlay Bottle Show will retain its best features:
  • Great dealers selling
  • Wonderful collectors shopping
The Sterling Center has all the features that make for a great bottle show:
  • Room for more dealer tables
  • Wide aisles, padded chairs
  • Excellent lighting, heating and air conditioning
  • Plentiful restrooms
  • Huge paved parking lot
  • Handicapped accessability
  • Food concession inside w/seating
  • Dealer-only set-up on Saturday
  • Complimentary donuts and coffee for Early Birds and Dealers during Sunday morning set-up.

Mark your calendars now for​ Sunday October 18, 2015 for a great day of shopping, learning more about our collections, making new friends and visiting with other folks who "speak bottle-ese". 

Read the details below, and hope to see you there!


This is a wonderful new location for us, and is a little larger and much nicer than our old location. In past years we have always sold out of dealer tables, and had a waiting list for cancellations.

Note: For our 2014 show we sold more tables than will put us at ''sold out'' in this new 2015 venue.
  • 8' Dealer tables are $35.00 each. Limit 3.
  • This new location will allow us to arrange the show layout as will best accommodate the number of tables needed. 
  • Tables will still be assigned on a first-paid basis.
Dealer contracts are now available.

Call the show chairman to reserve your tables NOW!
Fred Curtis​ (419-424-0486​)

  • Contract can  be viewed here (it's a pdf) -- link.
  • New: You can pay online with Paypal. 
The contract pdf link might not work in all browsers, so please email to receive it as an attachment.
  • You can read the contract online, and then pay for your dealer table(s) via Paypal. 
  • Online tables are $1-more-each to cover part of the Paypal fees.
  • The show chairman will be notified when you reserve your tables by Paypal. 
  • In the chance that tables are sold out, we will contact you, and you can cancel the payment before we ''accept'' it.
  • Online payment signifies contractual agreement. We will still need you to fill out and sign a paper contract at the show.
Don't want to pay with Paypal? You can call Fred to have him snail-mail you a contract, or you can print out the contract and mail it in with a check. (Contract Link)

If your contract/payment is received after the tables are sold out, we will contact you. Don't worry, your payment will be cancelled / refunded / returned.

It's best to call Fred to reserve your table(s) before you make a payment.


    # of Tables
    Contract Signature: Name Here
    When you make your Paypal payment there will be a place to fill in the two names for your dealer name tags (2 per contract).

    (Contract Link)



    • Sunday October ​18, 2015
    • The show is held at the Sterling Center Reception Hall 
      4570 Fostoria Avenue, Findlay, Ohio 45840

      Google Maps link - Also, see detailed directions and map below.

    • Show hours: from 9am - 2pm
    • Admission is $2.00
    • Kids under 12 are free (w/adults)​
    • Free appraisals w/paid admission
    • Plenty of FREE parking in a huge paved parking lot.
    • Show is in a heated building, w/tons of restrooms, and a food concession inside with lots of comfy seating.

    • Early Bird Hours: 7-9am – Tickets are only $10 and include complimentary Coffee and Donuts until 9am.
    • Early Bird Session is Sunday only, not Saturday.

    Early Bird Buyers Admission on Sunday morning,​ from 7-9am​, is​ just $10​. You'll get first pick when the dealers are still setting up​, and free donuts and coffee while they last!​ 

    There are several SUNDAY ONLY dealers inside who do NOT set up on Saturday, PLUS the outside dealers​ only set up on S​unday morning, so there's plenty of fresh merch to choose from for Sunday's Early Bird buyers!

    Saturday Oct. 17 is for dealers only. Sorry, no ​public ​early bird adm​ission on Saturday.​ You must have a ​​dealer contract.

    There are always plenty of outside spaces available​ (weather permitting​)​.​ Most years the day is nice enough, and we have several outside dealers. Even if it's cold, there are always a few hardy souls who set up out there. Keep your fingers and toes crossed for sunshine this year.
    • Contact Show Chairman, Fred Curtis​ (419-424-0486​) for more info​.​
    Directions from I-75:



    Sterling Center Reception Hall 

    4570 Fostoria Avenue, Findlay, Ohio

    From I-75, coming from North or South, take exit #157, and just follow the signs for Rt. 12, approx. 5 miles. 

    Rt. 12 becomes Fostoria Avenue, so it is easier to find than these directions seem:
    • Take exit 157 for OH-12 toward Findlay/Columbus Grove
    • Turn East onto OH-12 E/W Main Cross St
    • Turn North onto S Main St
    • Turn East onto Center St
    • Continue onto Tiffin Ave
    • Slight left onto Fostoria Ave
    The Sterling Center / 4570 Fostoria Avenue, Findlay / is located behind the Humane Society building.





    Note: Hotel names and phone numbers may not be current.

    • The best selection of hotels are at I-75 exit #159 / Rt 224
    • You can easily get to and from the hotels area and the bottle show. It's just a 10-15 minute drive. (Follow the same directions as above.)
    • There are many restaurants near the I-75 hotel area.
    • There are also many restaurants on 224/Tiffin near to the show venue. 
    • There are a few hotels near to the show, but their prices tend to be higher than the ones at I-75.
    • Google link to Findlay hotels listings: here
    • Call the hotel for your reservation asap.
    Saturday's Dealer set-up will run from 1pm - 9pm. (Contract Link)

    Since there are so many restaurants within 5 minutes drive of the show venue, the club will not be serving dinner on Saturday.

    Link to a list of all the nearby restaurants.

    Here's a map to give you an idea. There are dozens of restaurants, from fast food to fancy, from Seafood, Italian, Pizza, Chinese or... you name it!






    For all reservation and contract questions, contact Show Chairman:
    FRED CURTIS 419-424-0486

    • 8' Dealer tables are $35.00 each. Limit 3.
    • Full payment must accompany each contract. (Contract Link)
    • Checks may be held until the show. Cancellations w/full refund accepted until Oct. 1st. Confirmations will be mailed.
    • Final table assignments will not be made until after October 1st, since this new location will allow us to arrange the show layout as will best accommodate the number of tables needed. BUT...
    • Tables will still be assigned on a first-paid basis, so get your PAID contracts to Fred Curtis right away. 
    • These details are subject to change until the contracts are released.
    • Contact Show Chairman, Fred Curtis​ (419-424-0486​) for more info​.​
    • No tables reserved untill the contracts become available on May 11, 2015.
    • (Contract Link)
    ______________________________________________

    Some pix from previous shows: 

    2014:

    Click to enlarge pix.


    2013:







      See more photos: 2012 -- 2011 -- 2010

      (Contract Link)

      Kamis, 07 Mei 2015

      Don't It Make Your Ball Jars Blue? or: Just What Made the Famous Ball Blue Glass Color? -- The Hoosier Slide, Indiana


      Mason1.jpg


      "It's all in the sand, baby!"

      At one of our Findlay Bottle Club meetings, Jeff passed around a fruit jar that was a smooth-lip Mason's 1858, but in the familiar shade of aqua-ish-blue of Ball fruit jars. It is conventional wisdom that all "Ball Blue"-color jars were made by Ball (as no other fruit jar maker has jars in this famous shade), so it stands to reason that this Mason's 1858 was also made by Ball.  
      What's up with "Ball Blue", you might ask? Why is only Ball glass that particular shade of blue? Jeff's answer --  "It's all in the sand, baby!"
      Most of us know glass is made from sand. You might not have known that glass color comes from the mineral content in the sand that's used to make the glass. So, we wondered what was different about the sand that Ball used? How come no other company had sand that made their jars that particular shade? And why did Ball stop making jars in the signature color?


      Turns out it was the sand from the once famous Indiana landmark, called the HOOSIER SLIDE in Michigan City, Indiana.

      Vintage postcards of the Hoosier Slide.

      Once the largest sand dune on Lake Michigan, the Hoosier Slide was a tree-covered tourist attraction, used for picnics and even weddings. 




      Visitors enjoyed sliding down the loose sands.

      Then stripped of its timber by the 1870's, it became a sand-blowing nuisance. 

      Commercial sand mining began about 1890, when the Monon Railroad built a switching track along the south side of the dune. 

      Also in 1890, natural gas was discovered in central Indiana, and glass factories started in the Muncie area. Large users of Hoosier Slide sand were the Ball Brothers in Muncie, Pittsburg Plate Glass in Kokomo, and the nearby Hemingway Glass Co.

      The sand was found to be good for glass making, and thus the once loved Hoosier Slide was sold off, wheelbarrow by wheelbarrow. The great sand dune was reduced to nothing.



      W. Manny Dieckilman, the son of a man who worked the Hoosier slide shares this info about the 3 men pictured at lower left of this postcard:

      "The 3 men pictured on the train tracks with Hoosier Slide in the background are: left, Dan Hutton, Train Master of the Monon Railroad” center, on tracks is Henry Dieckilman, Foreman (working there for 25 plus years), on right, William Manny, owner of Hoosier Slide."
      "Although I hold no memory of my father, who died when I was three in 1921, I am forever conscious of the footprints remaining from his labors in the late 1890's and early 1900's. For twenty-five years, six days a week, he pushed an iron-wheeled wheelbarrow, moving sand from Hoosier Slide onto gondola carts headed for the manufacturing of canning jars.." --W. Manny Dieckilman 



      Henry Dieckelman is listed in the Michigan City, City Directory, 1913, as the Foreman of the Hoosier Slide Sand Co. [Source]



      According to "Naturalization records : abstractions from declaration of intentions, Superior Court, Michigan City, La Porte County, Indiana", Henry came from Germany in 1880. (Note the different spelling of his last name from his son, W. Manny Dieckilman.) [Source]

      Read more of W. Manny Dieckilman's memories on emichigancity.com.


      William B. Manny, proprietor of the Hoosier Slide Sand Company, is profiled in a1904 book [here].


      Dan Hutton was listed in the Railroad Switchmens Union in 1901 [Source] as Michigan City's Monon Yardmaster [Source].


      hoosierslide.jpg
      Once Indiana's most famous landmark, Hoosier Slide was a huge sand dune bordering the west side of Trail Creek where it entered Lake Michigan. At one time it was nearly 200 feet tall, mantled with trees. Cow paths marked its slopes and people picnicked upon its crest. Climbing Hoosier Slide was very popular in the late 1800's with the excursionist crowds who arrived in town by boat and train from Chicago and other cities. The summit, where weddings were sometimes held, afforded an excellent view of the vast lumberyards which then covered the Washington Park area.
      With the development of Michigan City, the timber was cut for building construction and the sand began to blow, sometimes blanketing the main business district of the town on Front St., which nestled near its base.
      When it was discovered that the clean sands of Hoosier Slide were useful for glassmaking, the huge dune began to be mined away. Dock workers loaded the sand into railroad cars with shovel and wheelbarrow to be shipped to glassmakers [and other places].
      Over a period of 30 years, from about 1890 to 1920, 13 1/2 million tons of sand were shipped from Hoosier Slide until the great dune was leveled. By the 1920's, nothing remained of the giant dune. 


      In 1929, NIPSCO (Northern Indiana Public Service Company) built a power plant on the Hoosier Slide site.
      _____________________

      I don't know exactly what geologic event caused the Hoosier Slide's sand to have just the right mineral mix to create the famous Ball Blue glass color, but it was apparently something special that didn't turn up in any other fruit jar makers glass. There are many shades of aqua and blue in the fruit jar world, but only the one BALL BLUE.


      Ball has come close with these new blue jars, but even they could not reproduce Hoosier Slide/Ball Blue glass.


      Once the Hoosier Slide sand was all used up, Ball had to get another source, and the glass formula was forever changed. No more pretty Ball Blue glass.
      Hoosier Slide sand analysis from Crown Jewels (Insulators).
      ______________________________

      Here's an excerpt from the Bottle Colors page on Bill Lindsey's phenominal Historic Glass Bottle Identification site — http://www.sha.org/bottle/colors.htm#Aqua

      Aqua glass is a "natural" result of the iron impurities found in most sands. It is very rare (maybe unknown) that sand does not contain some traces of iron. Sand deposits with very low iron content were (and probably still are) highly valued commodities. Although good quality sand was plentiful in the Eastern United States, some was still being imported from Belgium for Western American glass factories as late as the 1940s. Aqua glass is the result of sand which is relatively low in the amount of iron which was not off-set by de-colorizing agents. High levels of iron produce darker greens, black glass, and even amber. Natural aqua glass was often called "green glass," "bottle glass," or "bottle glass green" by glass makers.