Flask, 1822-1835
Add to SetSummary
Glass factories in America began producing inexpensive, mold-formed flasks in the early 1800s. These figured flasks, often decorated with symbols of national pride or political or cultural affiliation, appealed to America's common man. Membership in the Freemasons grew in the early decades of the 1800s. This flask combines Masonic imagery (arch and pavement) with an emblem of America's agrarian roots (farm tools and grain).
Glass factories in America began producing inexpensive, mold-formed flasks in the early 1800s. These figured flasks, often decorated with symbols of national pride or political or cultural affiliation, appealed to America's common man. Membership in the Freemasons grew in the early decades of the 1800s. This flask combines Masonic imagery (arch and pavement) with an emblem of America's agrarian roots (farm tools and grain).
Artifact
Flask (Bottle)
Date Made
1822-1835
Creators
Place of Creation
United States, Ohio, Zanesville
Creator Notes
Made for J. Shepard & Company by Zanesville Glass Works.
On Exhibit
at Greenfield Village in Davidson-Gerson Gallery of Glass
Object ID
2001.0.115.433
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford.
Material
Glass (material)
Color
Amber (Color)
Dimensions
Height: 7 in
Width: 4.25 in
Length: 1.5 in
Inscriptions
pressed on back: ZANESVILLE / OHIO / J. SHEPARD & CO.