Cobalt Blue Quart Milk Bottle With Baby Top

Many collectors around the state see the BROOKFIELD "BABY FACE" or "Baby Top" milk bottles while browsing flea markets and antique malls, and confusion arises concerning how onetime these bottles are, and if they are accurate.

In that location ARE many accurate "Baby Confront" or "Babe Height" style glass milk bottles that were fabricated for a large number of U.S. dairies in the mid-20th century, primarily in the 1940s-1960s era.  Nigh of them are of quart size, some of pint or half-pint size,  and typically behave either pyroglazed or embossed lettering with the proper name of the dairy and metropolis or town where the operation was located.  Some of these kinds of bottles could exist characterized equally "generic" milk bottles,  as at that place is no dairy or metropolis proper name marked on them.

Many of the Baby Confront bottles were manufactured past Lamb Glass Visitor of Mt. Vernon, Ohio.   Lamb Glass Company bottles typically have an "LG 52" or "L 52" marking on them, usually on the lower heel surface area of the container.  The 52 may be sitting "in the lap of the L".  Baby Tiptop milk bottles were also made past Knox Glass Bottle Company, which used a "keystone" symbol as their trademark.

(Notation:  I believe several other glass canteen makers also produced these types of bottles. If any readers accept seen babe face fashion bottles with the marker of another glass visitor, please allow me know  almost the mark and I can add that information to this article!  )


BACKGROUND

Although the "Baby Face" bottle wasn't invented until 1936, the basic idea of the "Cream separator top" canteen goes back at least to the 1920s.    On March 3, 1925, patent #ane,528,480 was issued to Norman A. Henderson for his new invention – a milk bottle with a "bulbous" or "head like" upper portion and a constriction between that and the lower (master) portion of the bottle. The bottle was designed so that the cream that rose to the top would exist more than or less contained inside the "seedling" area, and a rubber disc attached to a handle could be inserted into the canteen, and then the cream poured off while the milk was retained in the bottom portion of the bottle. https://sha.org/bottle/pdffiles/creamseparatorbottle.pdf


On Feb 18, 1936, a refinement on that basic manner of canteen was patented: the "Babe Top" canteen with the upper portion fashioned into the shape of a baby'southward face up.  This patent (patent #98,609)  was issued to Michael Pecora of West Hazleton, Pennsylvania and assigned to Pecora's Farm Dairy.  https://patents.google.com/patent/USD98609S/

Pecora'southward Dairy at Hazleton, PA was the first dairy to employ those bottles, but many other dairies (including BROOKFIELD DAIRY, HELLERTOWN, PA)  somewhen used the style but with their own proper noun and city pyroglazed on them.  Here is a link (courtesy of Worthopedia) to a typical pint size bottle from Pecora's Dairy in Hazleton.  The bottles were marked with the catchphrase "For Mothers Who Care".

https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/pint-baby-face-pecora-hazleton-pa-130805094



Recent Reproduction Bottles

Virtually all of the older, original Baby Height milk bottles, no affair what dairy was represented,  were manufactured in clear (or nigh colorless) glass. Some examples may have a very light greenish tint, or a pale straw, pink or peach bandage.

Annotation:  I don't know of a 100% foolproof way to differentiate between the older bottles and the repros, merely it may exist that the older, authentic Brookfield bottles comport the proper noun of the dairy forth with the city proper noun (Hellertown, PA), and are unremarkably pyroglazed instead of being embossed.  The chief identification problem which presents itself concerning the newer reproduction Brookfield bottles is this: Manifestly repro Brookfield milk bottles were also made in articulate (colorless) glass!   The bottles in clear that appear to be modern reproductions have no embossed markings on the base, which I think is too the case with the colored bottles.  The proper noun "BROOKFIELD" is embossed in big block lettering on the shoulder. They usually look shiny and make new, with no damage or scratching at all.  They testify no base wear, and they have no glassmaker logo or mark to indicate who made them.   From what I understand, they are also the type with a "double face" on the bottle.

The majority of the reproduction bottles are found in cobalt blue or pinkish glass, likewise as the clear ones discussed above. A few have been seen in emerald dark-green ("seven upward" dark-green), amber, or white milk glass.  These colored bottles have been manufactured within the last several decades, about of them plain from the 1970s and 1980s, possibly into the 1990s.  Some may engagement more recently than that.   Large numbers of these bottles have been imported into the United States from Asia, principally China.   At that place are as well smaller versions of the repro bottles, in pint or half-pint sizes.

Brookfield reproduction "Baby Face" milk bottle in cobalt blue glass
Brookfield reproduction "Baby Face" milk bottle in cobalt bluish glass

These bottlesare quite beautiful in their own right, and brand great window displays, but it is important that collectors understand that they are not true, original milk bottles.  Any seller that declares a cobalt blue, pink, bister or milk drinking glass Brookfield milk bottle to exist an old, authentic milk bottle is (either intentionally or accidentally) misrepresenting the piece.

Some other type of repro/fake milk bottle which is seen fairly often is the "Thatcher"  bottle with an embossed moo-cow on the front end.  Those are also seen in unusual colors such as pink and yellow bister, and were fabricated in Italy.  None of them were intended to be actually used to deliver milk, only are decorator bottles sold through the China Crownford Company in the 1960s/1970s.

NOTE: Generally speaking, during the era of the heaviest use of milk bottles in the Us (typically circa 1910 to 1960) the great bulk of milk bottles were made in articulate glass to show off the white color of the milk.  A few dairies used bottles that were made in amber or emerald green (only they are non babe-faced bottle types).  Most of the colored authentic milk bottles probably appointment from the 1950s and '60s.

In some other countries around the world, such equally in the United Kingdom, milk bottles have seen common use much later than in the The states.

(I might as well mention that the Brookfield baby face milk bottles accept NO connection whatsoever with the  "BROOKFIELD" marked drinking glass electrical insulators that were manufactured by the Brookfield Glass Company).


For an extensive alphabetical list of marks seen on bottles, fruit jars, electrical insulators and tableware, please click here to go to the Glass Bottle Marks pages (page one).

Click here to become to my Dwelling Folio.




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Source: https://glassbottlemarks.com/brookfield-baby-face-milk-bottles/

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