pre-pro.com home

Original artwork and Greeting cards
by JuliaJaneArt




   

Advertisement

SEARCH

<<  Previous    Next  >>

Index

OLD VALLEY WHISKEY (wave) / EXTRA SPECIAL QUALITY (beneath text is a picture of three elderly, jacketed men. although the details are not as clear on the next example. The one on the right holds a bottle that all three are looking at. The label on the bottle reads: OLD / VALLEY / WHISKEY )

ID#: RRP2432
How do I buy this glass?
see details below
Glass Category:Liquor advertising
Glass Type:Thin-walled shot
Label Type:Usual white-etched label
Dimensions:2-1/8" x 1-15/16" x 1-3/8"
Edmonson:Not listed
State:NY
City:New York
Brand Registered:1872, 1905
Notes:
The Cook & Bernheimer Co. listed from 1863-1917.

Cook & Bernheimer were NY wholesalers who distributed throughout the US, including the West Coast. Branch offices were located in Chicago and Cincinnati, among others. In 1889, they obtained an exclusive contract to bottle and distribute Mt Vernon whiskey, distilled by the Hannis Distilling Co. of Baltimore and Philadelphia. The whiskey was sold in distinctively square brown bottles that bore the Hannis name only, with no mention of Cook & Bernheimer.

Brand names used by this company include: "Cabinet Gin", "Cabinet Gin", "Diadem", "Dove Gin", "Gold", "Gold Lion", "Gold Lion Gin", "Good Luck", "Hoffman House", "Jockey Club Gin", "Joke", "Kermis Gin", "Lenox", "Long & Short", "M. V.", "Manhattan", "Mantoue's Upper Crust", "Marshall's Malt", "Monarch", "Monongahela A", "Mount Vernon", "Mount Vernon", "Mount Vernon Pure Rye Whiskey", "Navahoe", "Old Berkshire", "Old Valley", "Old Woodburn", "Province", "St. Anthony", and "Thistle Gin."

Company name timeline:
The Cook & Bernheimer Co.

Address timeline:
144-150 Franklin (1891-1917)

Find out more about The Cook & Bernheimer Co.
SEARCH

<<  Previous    Next  >>

Index

<top of page

SEARCH

<<  Previous    Next  >>

Index

This glass is shown for informational purposes only and is not for sale.

We MAY be able to find a glass like this for you, however.

Be warned, these glasses are rare antiques, around 100 years old. Prices typically range from $30 or so on the more common glasses (e.g., a Hayner or a Detrick) to $250+ on desirable picture glasses.

Please send a message expressing your interest using the comment box below -- and don't forget to include an e-mail address or we have no way of knowing who to reply to!


Re glass ID# RRP2432:

Copyright © 2002-2024 pre-pro.com.  All rights reserved.