-40%

BADGER STATE WATERTOWN WISCONSIN BLACK PAINTED SELTZER BOTTLE

$ 26.4

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Color: Red
  • Bottle Type: Seltzer
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Condition: Used

    Description

    We live in a disposable world. Virtually the same moment a new device is introduced to the marketplace, manufacturers promote a new and better version coming out in the near future. Built in obsolescence has become the norm – but it wasn't always this way.
    Back in depression era America, most people were happy to have almost any creature comfort available, and they used and reused most everything, and valued what they had. That was true of everything from diapers to soda pop. During that time period, and before, right up to the post-WWII era boom that ushered in a new and burgeoning more fickle middle class looking for new and better things, most were relatively content to own functional items that were meant to endure.
    Before the advent of disposable plastic bottles and disposable aluminum cans, that clutter the landfill in the interest of convenience, decades ago, soda and seltzer bottles were made of thick glass that were meant to be used and reused to satisfy the needs of consumers, not just for the moment, but for generations to follow.
    They were created in the time when people had to return thick and heavy glass bottles of soda to the stores. For convenience, since about 1860, in America, there were men and occasionally women who dispensed seltzer and soda from either places of business, sometimes known as package stores, or delivered to homes and businesses is these very heavy, but enjoyable products.
    In the larger metropolitan areas seltzer bottles were generally delivered in cases of 10, in a wooden box which weighed on average 70 pounds filled. Up until the 1950s , a few diehard older seltzer man still use horses and wagons, but generally deliveryman employed special trucks set up to contain 72 cases in the bay on the bottom, and 60 cases in returnable soda on top. Major soda companies like Coke, Pepsi, 7-Up, Dr Pepper, etc., all use heavy returnable glass delivered in a wooden box. And these major soda companies ,on rare occasion , used seltzer bottles as a vessel to contain their proprietary ingredients. Seltzer bottles were used in every state in the union, and remarkable examples still survive – a testament to their enduring nature. Most seltzer bottles were the more common round ones, but fancy and more ornate examples survive. They were larger in size and more heavy, and were generally sold in wooden sixpacks.
    I AM OFFERING SEVERAL SELTZER BOTTLES FROM MID WESTERN STATES..THESE ARE ALL HARD  BOTTLES TO FIND, AND THESE AUCTIONS WILL LAST FOR ONLY ONE WEEK, AND THEN THOSE THAT DON'T SELL WILL GO BACK IN TO MY COLLECTION.
    I ACTUALLY VALUE EVERY ONE OF THEM, BUT IT IS TIME FOR MANY OF MY SELTZER BOTTLES TO GO TO NEW HOMES WHERE THEY WILL BE APPRECIATED.
    MY GRANDFATHER STARTED DELIVERING SELTZER WITH A HORSE DRAWN CART IN 1919, AND MY FATHER WAS A SELTZERMAN WHEN I WAS BORN IN 1952. I'VE COLLECTED THEM WAS A CHILD EVEN  IN THE 1950'S WHEN NO ONE APPRECIATED THEM.
    WHEN MY GRANDFATHER JAKE TURNED 95 AND MY GRANDPARENTS CELEBRATED THEIR 70TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY, THEY HAD A PARTY FOR THE FAMILY IN THEIR APARTMENT. INSTEAD OF RECEIVING GIFTS THEY EMPTIED OUT THEIR BANK ACCOUNT AND GAVE THEIR MONEY TO THEIR FOUR GRANDCHILDREN. I WAS ABLE TO PUT A DOWN PAYMENT ON A HOME, THAT RIGHT NOW I WOULDN'T BE ABLE TO BUY, HAD THEY NOT EXERCISED THEIR GENEROUS DEED  36 YEARS AGO.SINCE THAT TIME I MANAGED TO FILL THE HOUSE WITH 7,000 SELTZER BOTTLES TAKEN FROM SELTZER SHOP TO SELTZER SHOP AS THEY ALL CLOSED UP. I'D BE HAPPY TO LIVE THAT WAY, BUT ALONG THE WAY I GOT MARRIED AND HAD CHILDREN. AND I SUSPECT THEY DON'T SHARE MY PASSION FOR COLLECTING AND WOULD JUST AS HAPPILY SEE ME SELL THEM ALL ASIDE FOR MAYBE A FEW.
    THERE IS NO ONE IN THIS ENTIRE WORLD WHO DID MORE TO PROMOTE THE BOTTLES, AND HONOR THOSE WHO WERE PART OF THIS BUSINESS, AND WHO  PERPETUATED THIS BUISINESS BY DRINKING THEIR BUBBLY CONTENTS.
    DURING A PERIOD OF 6 YEARS NO LESS THAN 7 FILM CREWS VISITED MY HOUSE TO FILM THE BOTTLES, AND TO WEAVE STORIES AROUND THEM. I'VE HAD THEM ON TV SHOWS AND MOVIES, AND FELT VERY PROUD TO KNOW THEY WERE MY BOTTLES THAT WERE A PART OF THE PRODUCTION...I FILMED WITH OTHER COUNTRIES AND EVERY MAJOR NETWORK LIKE CBS, ABC, NBC, THE FOOD NETWORK, HISTORY NETWORK, BBC, NHK...ETC ETC, AND IT WAS FUN, BUT EVERY BOTTLE WAS LOST IN THE CROWD OF THE MASSIVENESS OF THE COLLECTION, AND I NEVER GOT PAID A DIME.
    I'VE HAD PEOPLE STOP ME OR MY VAN WHILE DELIVERING, AND THAT INCLUDED CELEBRITES WHICH WAS FLATTERING AND BIZARRE AT THE SAME TIME; I WAS ONCE ON THE COVER OF TIME OUT NY, WHICH AT THAT MOMENT ADVERTISED THEIR MAGAZINE WITH A HUGE BLOWUP OF THE COVER ON ALL THE NEWS STANDS IN NYC. PEOPLE WOULD STOP ME AND SAY I SAW YOUR PICTURE ON THE NEWSTAND AND MY RESPONSE WAS "AS LONG AS IT'S NOT MY PICTURE ON A WANTED POSTER IN THE POST OFFICE I'M OKAY" ONE DAY THEY DID A STORY  ON ME IN GQ MAGAZINE AND SO NOW EVERY TIME MY WIFE COMPLAINS ABOUT THE WAY I DRESS I TELL HER I WAS IN GQ MAGAZINE SO I MUST BE FASHIONABLE.
    I'VE GOT LOTS OF MORE STORIES, BUT I'VE GOT A BUNCH OF AUCTIONS TO PUT ON., SO LET ME BEGIN.
    REMEMBER NO RELISTING.. IF THEY DON'T SELL THIS WEEK, I WILL HAPPILY RETURN THEM TO MY COLLECTION WHERE THEY MAY BE LOST TO REPORTERS AND FILM CREWS, BUT NEVER TO ME. I ENJOYED THEM 60 YEARS AGO, AND ENJOY THEM AS MUCH OR MORE TODAY.
    BOTTLE ONE IS A BLACK PAINTED ON CLEAR BOTTLE FROM THE 1930'S THROUGH THE 1950'S..IT IS FROM BADGER STATE BOTTLING CO OF WATERTOWN WISCONSIN..QUALITY BEVERAGES MANIUFACTURED IN WATERTOWN WIS.
    THE REVERSE SIDE IS FROM AMITYVILLE HARBOR  BEVERAGES OF AMITYVILLE NY. IT FEATURES AS THEIR ETCHING A STARBURST DESIGN. THAT'S THE TYPE OF THE DESIGN USED WHEN I FILMED FOR CBS SUNDAY MORNING, THEN WITH CHARLES OSGOOD 11 YEARS AGO.GENERALLY WHEN YOU FILM A SEGMENT THE FIELD PRODUCER AND CREW ARE ALL YOU MEET. I'VE BEEN FORTUNATE TO ACTUALLY GET TO MEET THE ANCHORS. I DID THE SAME THING WITH BARBARA WALTERS, WHICH WAS AN HONOR. I ACTUALLY DELIVERED TO THE VIEW AND KNEW HER QUITE WELL.
    ALSO PICTURED IS THE ACTUAL HOUSE THAT THE MOVIE THE AMITYVILLE HORROR IS BASED ON IN AMITYVILLE LONG ISLAND WHICH THIS BOTTLE WAS FROM PROBABLY THE 1950'S WHEN BADGER WENT OUT OF BUSINESS
    ALL AUCTIONS BELONG TO MY WIFE SELTZERLADY.
    I STILL DELIVER THE SELTZER AND WILL NEVER SELL ANY OF MY BOTTLES IF YOU OF SEE ME AROUND, BUT WILL TALK TO ALMOST ANYONE ABOUT THEM.
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    THESE ARE IN FABULOUS CONDITION CONSIDERING THEIR AGE AND THAT THEY'VE BEEN USED FOR GENERATIONS. WHEN YOU DELIVER THESE BOTTLES IN WOODEN CASES OF TEN WEIGHING 70 POUNDS THEY DO GET HANDLED ROUGHLY.
    AND THEY DO SHOW THEIR SIGNS OF AGE BUT THAT ONLY ADDS TO THEIR AUTHENTICITY AND DESIRABILITY..
    THESE BOTTLES HAVE BEEN CLEANED THOUGHLY BY MY WIFE AND THESE ARE HER AUCTIONS.
    THEY ARE MEANT FOR DISPLAY AND DECORATION..
    THESE ARE VINTAGE COLLECTIBLES AND WERE IN USE TILL RECENTLY..THEY ALL HAVE A LONG AND MAGNIFIENT HISTORY OF PLEASING MANY FOR GENERATIONS. THEY ARE TIME-WORN WHICH ONLY ADDS TO THEIR AUTHENTICITY AND SENSE OF CONTINUITY WITH THE PAST FOR THOSE WHO LOOK FOR THINGS THAT ARE MEANT TO BE USED FOR A MOMENT THEN DISPOSED OF JUST AS QUICKLY.
    THANK YOU.
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