Difference between revisions of "Household Items"
| Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
*[[Bottle for Medicinal Salve]] | *[[Bottle for Medicinal Salve]] | ||
| − | *[[Hard Cider Bottle]] | + | *[[Old Hard Cider Bottle]] |
*[[Pitcher from an Old Refrigerator]] Blue ceramic and cork | *[[Pitcher from an Old Refrigerator]] Blue ceramic and cork | ||
*[[Tumbler (Substitute)]] | *[[Tumbler (Substitute)]] | ||
Revision as of 07:26, 23 October 2008
Contents
Drugs
Food for the Apocalyspe
Glassware and "Stand-ins" for Historic Glassware
- Bottle for Medicinal Salve
- Old Hard Cider Bottle
- Pitcher from an Old Refrigerator Blue ceramic and cork
- Tumbler (Substitute)
Household Items
ri;1848;13;re
Bottle for Medicinal Salve attributed to Dr. Edward Williams and the treatment of Phineas T. Gage, Cavendish, Vermont, September 13, 1848. (Dr. Williams was the first doctor to examine and treat Gage after the accident.) Blue glass with traces of unguent. 19th Century.
Brown paper was wrapped around this artifact which was tied with string. Connections to the Williams family are seen in this item which was found among some items of historical interest belonging to Alice Lovell Eaton, librarian for the Norman Williams public library in Woodstock. Some of these, in turn, were preserved by Eaton’s first-cousin’s wife’s sister, Clara Richardson, a long time bookkeeper for the grocery and hardware store in town and an equally long-term volunteer for the local historical society.