Currently not on view
Currently not on view
The main purpose of smelling bottles, or pungents, was to mask unpleasant odors, and thus they usually held smelling salts. They were first stoppered by corks and eventually by screw caps. The capacity of these bottles ranges from fractions of a dram to a little over an ounce. Decorative details include quilling (as side trim), embedded spirals, and occasionally engraving.
This bottle, and others like it, are known to have been made as early as 1763 in Great Britain, where they were advertised as "seahorses," referring to their curved shape. Between 1769 and 1774, Stiegel's American Flint Glass Company in Manheim, Pennsylvania, sold smelling bottles as simply "twisted smelling bottles." Then, beginning in 1826, the New England Glass Works began making this type of object, calling them "dolphins," while the Boston and Sandwich Glass Works advertised their "dolphin tail pungents." Other American glassworks were making similar forms of these popular bottles during the nineteenth century.
Currently not on view
Title: | Smelling Bottle or "Pungent" |
Date: | 1763-1860 |
Artist: | Artist/maker unknown, European or American |
Medium: | Non-lead glass (colorless) |
Dimensions: | Approximately: 1 5/8 x 3/8 x 2 3/4 inches (4.1 x 0.9 x 7 cm) |
Classification: | Containers |
Credit Line: | The George H. Lorimer Collection, 1938 |
Accession Number: | 1938-23-358 |
Geography: | Made in United States, North and Central America or made in Europe |
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Currently not on view