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{{Short description|Defunct popular glassware company}}
{{Infobox_Company
{{Good article}}
| company_name = Fostoria Glass Company
{{Infobox company
| company_type = ]
| name = Fostoria Glass Company
| foundation = South Vine Street<br />], USA<br />December 15, 1887
| logo = Fostoria Glass Co. logo 1906.png
| closed = ]
| type = ]
| location = ], ]
| key_people = | fate =
| predecessor =
| industry = ]
| successor =
| num_employees = 1,000 at its peak
| foundation = {{Start date|December 15, 1887 in ]}}
| founder = Lucian B. Martin, William S. Brady
| defunct = 1986
| location_city = ], U.S.
| location =
| locations =
| key_people = Lucian B. Martin, William S. Brady, ], William A. B. Dalzell
| industry = ]
| products = {{hlist|]|]|]s}}
| owner =
| num_employees = 1000<small> (at peak in 1950)</small>
}} }}
The '''Fostoria Glass Company''' was a manufacturer of pressed, blown and hand-molded ] and ]. It began operations in ], on December 15, 1887, on land donated by the townspeople. The new company was formed by men from ] who were experienced in the ]making business. They started their company in northwest ] to take advantage of newly discovered ] that was an ideal fuel for glassmaking. Numerous other businesses were also started in the area, and collectively they depleted the natural gas supply. Fuel shortages caused the company to move to ], in 1891.
]

The '''Fostoria Glass Company''' manufactured pressed, blown and hand-molded ] and ] for almost 100 years. It began operations in ], ], on December 15, 1887, at South Vine Street, near Railroad,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fostoriaglass.com/fostoriaglassco.htm|title=The Fostoria Glass Company|publisher=Fostoria Ohio Glass Association|accessdate=2008-10-08}}</ref> on free land donated by the townspeople. When natural resources declined in Fostoria, the company moved to ], in 1891.
After the move to Moundsville, the company achieved a national reputation. Fostoria was considered one of the top producers of ]. It had over 1,000 patterns, including one (''American'') that was produced for over 75 years. ]s were located in ], ], ], ], and other large cities. The company advertised heavily, and one of its successes was sales through ]. Fostoria products were made for several ]. The company employed 1,000 people at its peak in 1950.

During the 1970s, foreign competition and changing preferences forced the company to make substantial investments in cost-saving automation technology. The changes were made too late, and the company's commercial division was losing money by 1980. The plant was closed permanently on February 28, 1986. Several companies continued making products using the Fostoria patterns, including the Dalzell-Viking Glass Company and ]—both now closed.

==Background==
{{See also|List of Glass Companies Led by Former Employees of Hobbs, Brockunier and Company|Petroleum industry in Ohio}}
In the last half of the 19th century, labor and fuel were the two largest expenses in U.S. glassmaking.<ref name="DOC12">{{harvnb|United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce|1917|p=12}}</ref> People with the knowledge necessary to make glass were difficult to find. Management at Wheeling's ] had a policy of using skilled glassworkers from Europe, who would train the local employees—resulting in a superior workforce.<ref name="WDI18731212P3">{{cite news
|title= South Wheeling Glass Works
|newspaper=Wheeling Daily Intelligencer
|page = 3
|date = 1873-12-12
}}</ref> In the 1860s, ], became a "hub for chemical and technological improvements to the composition of glass and the development of furnaces, molds, and presses" for making glass.<ref name="Fones8586">{{harvnb|Fones-Wolf|2007|pp=85–86}}</ref> By the end of the 1870s, the Hobbs glass works became the largest glass maker in the United States.<ref name="Skrabec2007P73">{{harvnb|Skrabec|2007|p=73}}</ref>{{#tag:ref|The Hobbs glass works, located in South Wheeling in Ohio County, West Virginia, was renamed numerous times over a period of about 60 years. Some of the names were Barnes & Hobbs; Hobbs & Barnes; Hobbs, Brockunier & Company; and Hobbs Glass Company.<ref name="OhioLibrary">{{cite web
|title=Hobbs Brockunier Glass, Wheeling, WV 1886
|publisher= Ohio County Public Library
|url= http://www.ohiocountylibrary.org/wheeling-history/hobbs-brockunier-glasswheeling-wv-1886/2736
|access-date=2013-11-24}}</ref>|group=Note}} One of the earliest places to which the Hobbs glass making talent spread was ], located in ], across the river from Wheeling and Ohio County.{{#tag:ref|Bellaire is located in the Ohio coal belt, and therefore had a fuel source for local factories.<ref name="McKelvey79">{{harvnb|McKelvey|1903|p=79}}</ref> By 1881, Bellaire had 15 glass factories, and was known as "Glass City".<ref name="Revi69">{{harvnb|Revi|1964|p=69}}</ref>|group=Note}} Former employees of the Hobbs glass works became the talent that established many of the region's glass factories, and many became company presidents or plant managers.<ref name="WDI18731212P3"/>

Transportation resources were also important to the glass industry. Waterways provided an efficient and safe way to transport glass, especially before the construction of high-quality roads and the railroad system.{{#tag:ref|An example of the importance of waterways can be observed in February 1912. It was reported that because of ice on the Ohio River, 600 barrels of glassware from the Fostoria Glass Company were waiting shipment at the Moundsville wharf.<ref name="Ice25">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Around the Glass and Lamp Factories<!-- (right column, bottom of page)-->|magazine=Crockery and Glass Journal <!-- Page 25 -->|publisher=Whittemore and Jaques, Inc. |date=1912-02-15 }}</ref>|group=Note}} As the railroad industry developed, it also became an important transportation resource. By 1880, almost all of the nation's top ten glass producing counties were located on a waterway. ], (which includes ]) was the nation's leading glass producer based on value of production. Ohio's Belmont County and West Virginia's ], separated by the ], ranked 6th and 7th.<ref name="DOC11">{{harvnb|United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce|1917|p=11}}</ref>

Since fuel was one of the top two expenses in glassmaking, manufacturers needed to monitor its availability and cost.<ref name="DOC12"/> Wood and coal had long been used as fuel for glassmaking. An alternative fuel, gas, became a desirable fuel for making glass because it is clean, gives a uniform heat, is easier to control, and melts the ] of ingredients faster. Gas furnaces for making glass were first used in Europe in 1861.<ref name="DOC36">{{harvnb|United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce|1917|p=36}}</ref> In early 1886, a major discovery of ] occurred near the small village of ].<ref name="Paquette2425">{{harvnb|Paquette|2002|pp=24–25}}</ref> Communities in northwestern Ohio began using low-cost natural gas along with free land and cash to entice glass companies to start operations in their town.<ref name="Paquette26">{{harvnb|Paquette|2002|p=26}}</ref> Their efforts were successful, and at least 70 glass factories existed in northwest Ohio between 1886 and 1900.<ref name="ToledoBladePaq">{{cite news
|title=O-I Retiree's Quest to Clear up History of Glass Industry Develops into Book
|url=https://www.toledoblade.com/opinion/2002/09/24/O-I-retiree-s-quest-to-clear-up-history-of-glass-industry-develops-into-book/stories/200209240045
|access-date=2020-01-09
|newspaper=The Blade
|date=2002-09-24
|quote=He found that more than 70 glass factories - he calls them glasshouses - sprang up in northwest Ohio between 1886 and 1900, giving the region a true claim to be called the "glass center of the world".
}}</ref>


==Beginning== ==Beginning==
]<!--]-->The Fostoria Glass Company was incorporated in West Virginia in July 1887.<ref name="Paquette179">{{harvnb|Paquette|2002|p=179}}</ref> The founders of the Fostoria Glass Company were drawn to ], to exploit the newly discovered natural gas. The new firm also received cash incentives of $5,000 ({{Inflation|US|5000|1887|fmt=eq}}) to $6,000 ({{Inflation|US|10000|1887|fmt=eq}}). The plant was located on Fostoria's South Vine Street and the town was served by multiple railroads. The factory's furnace had a capacity of 12 pots, and originally employed 125 workers.<ref name="Paquette180"/>{{#tag:ref|A pot was essentially a measure of a glass plant's capacity. Each ceramic pot was located inside the furnace. The pot contained molten glass created by melting a batch of ingredients that typically included sand, soda, and lime.<ref name="DOC67">{{harvnb|United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce|1917|p=67}}</ref> Stationed around each pot was a team of laborers that extracted the molten glass and began the process of making the glass product.<ref name="DOC7174">{{harvnb|United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce|1917|pp=71–74}}</ref>|group=Note}} Production of ], bar goods, and lamps began on December 15, 1887.<ref name="Paquette180"/>
{{See also|Ohio Oil and Gas Production}}

The Fostoria Glass Company was incorporated in West Virginia in July 1887.<ref name="Paq179">{{Cite book
The glass men that formed the new company had gained their experience from working at the Hobbs, Brockunier and Company glass plant in Wheeling. Lucian B. Martin, the company's first president, had been a sales executive at the Hobbs works.<ref name="Fones8586"/> William S. Brady, the company's secretary, had worked as a financial manager there and more recently managed a glass plant in ].<ref name="Murray40">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|p=40}}</ref><ref name="Fones8586"/> James B. Russell and Benjamin M. Hildreth had worked at the Hobbs plant, and Russell had also worked at a Pittsburgh glass works.<ref name="Paquette180">{{harvnb|Paquette|2002|p=180}}</ref> German-born Otto Jaeger had been head of the ] department at the Hobbs works.<ref name="WheelingOtto">{{cite web
| last = Paquette
|title=Otto Jaeger - Founder of Fostoria, Seneca, and Bonita Art Glass |publisher=Ohio County Public Library
| first = Jack K.
|url=http://www.ohiocountylibrary.org/wheeling-history/otto-jaeger/4284
| title = Blowpipes, Northwest Ohio Glassmaking in the Gas Boom of the 1880s
|access-date=2018-05-07}}</ref> Former Ohio governor ], son of the city of Fostoria's namesake, was added to this group of glass industry veterans to form the new company's board of directors.<ref name="Paquette180"/>
| publisher = Xlibris Corp.

| year = 2002
Henry Humphreville, who had worked at Brady's Riverside Glass Company in Wellsburg, was hired as plant manager, and offered some diversity with his additional experience working in Pittsburgh—the nation's other center of glassmaking innovation.<ref name="Fones8586"/> Many of the employees hired for the startup were from the Wheeling area.<ref name="Fones8586"/> At least 20 "first class workmen" joined the company from Bellaire, Ohio, which is across the Ohio River from Wheeling.{{#tag:ref|Deacon Scroggins, Jack Crimmel, and Hayes O'Neal were the first class workmen cited in a Bellaire newspaper article about the move. One author believes "Jack" Crimmel is probably Jacob Crimmel.<ref name="Murray41">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|p=41}}</ref>|group=Note}} ] and Jacob Crimmel were "key craftsmen in the early period of the company" and both had worked at ] in Bellaire and the Hobbs plant in Wheeling.<ref name="Venable174">{{harvnb|Venable|Jenkins|Denker|Grier|2000|p=174}}</ref> The Crimmel brothers had also been involved with the startup of the predecessor to the Belmont Glass Company.<ref name="Paquette248">{{harvnb|Paquette|2002|p=248}}</ref> Crimmel family recipes for glass were used in the early days of the Fostoria Glass Company.<ref name="Murray6162">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|pp=61–62}}</ref>
| location =

| page = 179
==Early products==
| url =
]
| doi =
The company advertised as a manufacturer of pressed glassware, and specialties were candle stands, ]s, and banquet lamps.<ref name="Murray39">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|p=39}}</ref> The first piece of glass pressed at the plant was a salt dip, pattern number 93. A popular early pattern called ''Cascade'' looked like a swirl and was used for candelabras and ink wells. It was also used for tableware such as containers for sugar, cream, and butter.<ref name="Murray4344">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|pp=43–44}}</ref> ''Cascade'' was the first tableware pattern made, and it continued through the years under different names.<ref name="Murray429">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|p=42}}</ref>
| isbn = 1-4010-4790-4

| oclc = 50932436
The company had many talented designers. Among them was Charles E. Beam, who was the head of the company's ] shop and eventually added to the board of directors. Beam's specialty was designing dishes with animals as the covers, and one of his creations that is "highly-prized" by today's collectors is a dish with a dolphin covering.<ref name="Murray45">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|p=45}}</ref> Beam received a patent in 1890 for a glass mold that would enable pieces of chandeliers and candelabras to have small holes.<ref>, "Glass-mold", issued 1890-12-16.</ref><!--
}}</ref> The company was organized by men that had worked for the Hobbs, Brockunier and Company glass works in ]. Lucian B. Martin was the first president. Other men in the original management team were William S. Brady, James B. Russell, Benjamin M. Hildreth, and Otto Jaeger.<ref name="Paq180"> {{Cite book
{{cite patent
| last = Paquette
| first = Jack K. | country = US
| number = 442,599
| title = Blowpipes, Northwest Ohio Glassmaking in the Gas Boom of the 1880s
| status = patent
| publisher = Xlibris Corp.
| year = 2002 | title = Glass-mold
| location = | pubdate =
| page = 180 | gdate = 1890-12-16
| fdate = 1890-04-08
| url =
| doi = | pridate =
| inventor =
| isbn = 1-4010-4790-4
| invent1 = Charles E. Beam
| oclc = 50932436
| invent2 =
}}</ref> To take advantage of Ohio's gas boom, the new company's glass works was built in ]. ] was a desirable fuel for glass manufacturing, and many firms were drawn to northwest Ohio during the 1880s to exploit this newly discovered resource. The firm also received incentives of $5,000 to $10,000 cash. The factory’s furnace had a capacity of 12 pots, and originally employed 125 workers.<ref name="Paq180" /> At least 20 glass employees relocated from ], for the startup. These were experienced glass men such as ] and his brother Jacob, Hayes O’Neal, and Deacon Scroggins.<ref name="Murray41">{{Cite book
| assign1 =
| assign2 =
| class =
}}--> Company president Martin was also a talented designer, and he patented the ''Cascade'' ink well (called an inkstand) in 1890 and a paper weight with swirl sides in 1891.<ref name="Murray45"/><ref>, "Inkstand", issued 1890-07-01.</ref><!--
{{cite patent
| country = US
| number = 19,953
| status = patent
| title = Inkstand
| pubdate =
| gdate = 1890-07-01
| fdate = 1890-05-27
| pridate =
| inventor =
| invent1 = Lucien B. Martin
| invent2 =
| assign1 = Fostoria Glass Company
| assign2 =
| class =
}}--><ref>, "Paper Weight", issued 1891-01-13.</ref><!--
{{cite patent
| country = US
| number = 444,647
| status = patent
| title = Paper Weight
| pubdate =
| gdate = 1891-01-13
| fdate = 1890-06-02
| pridate =
| inventor =
| invent1 = Lucien B. Martin
| invent2 =
| assign1 =
| assign2 =
| class =
}}-->

The company's first ''Virginia'' pattern was introduced around Christmas in 1888.{{#tag:ref|Murray discusses the ''Virginia'' pattern, and identifies it as pattern number 140. He also shows an advertisement for the ''Virginia'' pattern in an 1889 edition of the Crockery and Glass Journal.<ref name="Murray4647">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|pp=46–47}}</ref> Long and Seate do not identify this pattern, but list a ''Virginia'' plate etching as pattern 267 that was made from 1923 to 1929. They also list a ''Virginia'' glass pattern, number 2977, that was made from 1978 to 1986.<ref name="Long181182">{{harvnb|Long|Seate|2003|pp=181–182}}</ref>|group=Note}} This pattern was quickly stolen (or "pirated") by a rival company. Fostoria Glass copied the copy, and named this purportedly new pattern ''Captain Kidd''. Eventually this same ''Virginia/Captain Kidd'' pattern was also called ''Foster'' or ''Foster Block'' in honor of Charles Foster. An advertisement for the ''Captain Kidd'' pattern featured a butter dish, spoon dish, a sugar bowel, and a creamer.<ref name="Murray4647"/>

Fostoria's ''Valencia'' pattern, number 205, is often called ''Artichoke'' because of the shape of the overlapping leaves on the bottom half of the glassware.<ref name="Lechner67">{{harvnb|Lechner|Lechner|1998|p=67}}</ref> This pattern was advertised in China, Glass and Lamps magazine in early 1891.<ref name="Murray56">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|p=56}}</ref>

The ''Victoria'' pattern is popular with collectors, and a wide variety of products were made with this pattern.<ref name="Murray4849">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|pp=48–49}}</ref> It is the only pattern that was patented by the company. Its appearance has a strong resemblance to a French company's pattern, and Fostoria Glass had some employees from France's glassmaking region.<ref name="Murray4849"/> When the company moved to Moundsville, all of the molds for this pattern mysteriously disappeared. The missing molds were never found, and the ''Victoria'' pattern was never produced again.<ref name="Murray5960">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|pp=59–60}}</ref>

==Move to Moundsville==
]
Northwest Ohio's gas boom was short lived, as gas shortages started occurring during the winter of 1890–91. During April 1891, Fostoria Glass executives decided to move to Moundsville, West Virginia, because of the availability of coal as a fuel for the plant—and $10,000 cash ({{Inflation|US|10000|1891|fmt=eq}}) offered by the community.<ref name="Paquette181">{{harvnb|Paquette|2002|p=181}}</ref> In addition to the cash incentive, the company was also offered a 10-year supply of coal at a low price.<ref name="Rider48">{{harvnb|Rider|Grubber|2018|p=48}}</ref> The move was announced in September 1891. The Fostoria plant was sold to a group of investors led by Fostoria Glass executive Otto Jaeger, and his new company was named ].<ref name="Paquette182">{{harvnb|Paquette|2002|p=182}}</ref>

In early December, the move to Moundsville was delayed by a restraining order when several members of the Crimmel family, who owned stock in the company, filed suit. The Crimmels, who were also employees of the company, claimed shareholders should have been consulted for the move.<!--<ref name="Paquette182"/>--><ref name="POCR18911216P22">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title= (No title, lower right corner of page 22)|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wNs1AQAAMAAJ&q=Charles+E.+Beam+fostoria+glass&pg=RA24-PA22 |magazine=Paint, Oil and Drug Review <!-- Page 22 -->|location=Chicago |publisher=D. Van Ness Person |date=1891-12-16 }}</ref> The attempt to stop the move was unsuccessful, and the restraining order was lifted to enable the company to move by the end of the month.<ref name="Murray58">{{harvnb|Murray|1992|p=58}}</ref>

The company's first Moundsville furnace had a capacity of 14 pots.{{#tag:ref|Sources do not always agree on the number of pots for the first furnace. Rider says 16 pots.<ref name="Rider48"/> Lucht says 14 pots.<ref name="Lucht7">{{harvnb|Lucht|2011|p=7}}</ref> A trade magazine describing the firm in 1912 mentioned a 14-pot furnace, but did not mention one with 16-pots.<ref name="CGJ19120111P20">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Still Expanding |magazine= Crockery and Glass Journal<!-- Page 20 -->|location=New York |publisher=Whittemore and Jaques, Inc. |date=1912-01-11 }}</ref>|group=Note}} Coal was not used directly as a fuel for the furnace. Instead, the furnace burned ] made from the local supply of coal.<ref name="Fones87">{{harvnb|Fones-Wolf|2007|p=87}}</ref> About 60 workers from the Fostoria glass works moved with the company to the Moundsville location.<ref name="Paquette182"/>

==Moundsville operations==
]
In 1899, the company became associated with the National Glass Company, which was a ]. Co-founder Lucien Martin left the firm in 1901 to work in Pittsburgh for National Glass. Another co-founder, William Brady, also moved to the Pittsburgh firm a short time later.<ref name="Fones9394">{{harvnb|Fones-Wolf|2007|pp=93–94}}</ref> Despite the association, Fostoria Glass Company did not become part of the National Glass Company.<ref name="Lechner68">{{harvnb|Lechner|Lechner|1998|p=68}}</ref>

William A. B. Dalzell joined the company as general manager in 1901.<ref name="Paquette65">{{harvnb|Paquette|2002|p=65}}</ref> Dalzell was from Pittsburgh, and his initial experience in the glass industry was with Pittsburgh's ]. The Dalzell brothers had been involved with the glass business as owners and management in West Virginia and Ohio.{{#tag:ref|Three Dalzell brothers (Andrew, James, and William) and a banker from Pittsburgh founded the Dalzell Brothers and Gilmore Glass Company in Wellsburg, West Virginia, during 1883. In 1888 (after the death of Andrew Dalzell) they received incentives to move their company to Findlay, Ohio. The company name was changed to Dalzell, Gilmore and Leighton, after well-known glassmaker William Leighton Jr. joined the firm from the Hobbs Glass works.<ref name="Paquette61-62">{{harvnb|Paquette|2002|pp=61–62}}</ref>
|group=Note}} When Fostoria Glass became associated with National Glass in 1899, Dalzell was working at the trust as manager of the western department.<ref name="Fones9394"/> When he joined Fostoria Glass, he brought Calvin B. Roe, who had been a bookkeeper and plant superintendent at Dalzell's Ohio plant. Dalzell quickly ascended to vice president.<ref name="Paquette65"/> Under Dalzell's leadership, the Fostoria Glass Company gained a national reputation. Dalzell served as president and/or chairman from 1902 until his unexpected death in 1928.<ref name="Paquette183">{{harvnb|Paquette|2002|p=183}}</ref>

In 1903, the company already operated two large furnaces when it added a three-story brick building that housed a new 14-pot furnace.<ref name="GPW1903SeptemberP15">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Notes from the Glass Factories (next page)|magazine= Glass and Pottery World<!-- Page 15 -->|location=Chicago |publisher=Porter, Taylor and Company |date=1903-09-01 }}</ref> One trade magazine believed that the addition made the company "probably the largest independent flint glass concern in the country...."<ref name="GPW1903AprilP15">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=News from the Glass Factories (next page) |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WjHnAAAAMAAJ&q=fostoria+glass+company+president&pg=PA26-IA55 |magazine= Glass and Pottery World<!-- Page 15 -->|location=Chicago |publisher=Porter, Taylor and Company |date=1903-04-01 |access-date=2018-04-30 }}</ref> By 1904, the company had 800 employees.<ref name="GPW1904AugustP15">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Glimpses of Glass Makers |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WjHnAAAAMAAJ&q=fostoria+&pg=PA26-IA55|magazine= Glass and Pottery World<!-- Page 15 -->|location=Chicago |publisher=Porter, Taylor and Company |date=1904-08-01|access-date=2018-04-30 }}</ref> Products made as of 1906 included decorated lamps, globes, shades, ] and pressed tableware, high grade ] blown ], ], and novelties.<ref name="GPW1906JanP39">{{cite magazine |author=Fostoria Glass Company |title=Fostoria Glass Company advertisement on page 39 |magazine=Glass and Pottery World <!-- Page 39 -->|location=Chicago |publisher=Porter, Taylor and Company |date=1906-01-01 }}</ref> At that time, a trade magazine said that the company "makes so many lines of glassware, all so perfectly, and markets its output so successfully to all classes of buyers, that no name is better known to all classes of trade."<ref name="GPW1906MayP25">{{cite magazine |author=Fostoria Glass Company |title=Glimpses of Glass Houses |magazine=Glass and Pottery World <!-- Page 25 -->|location=Chicago |publisher=Porter, Taylor and Company |date=1906-05-01 }}</ref>

===Moundsville Products===
]Fostoria was considered one of the top producers of ].<ref name="Prisant93">{{harvnb|Prisant|2003|p=93}}</ref> However, Fostoria glassware is also found on lists of ].{{#tag:ref| By the 1990s, the phrase "elegant glassware of the Depression" was being used to describe the better quality glass made at the same time as Depression glass.<ref name="Kovel3">{{harvnb|Kovel|Kovel|1991|p=3}}</ref> Thus, some of the patterns made by Fostoria using crystal glass are listed in books about Depression glass.<ref name="Kovel13">{{harvnb|Kovel|Kovel|1991|p=13}}</ref>|group=Note}} The company had over 1,000 patterns, including many designed by artist ]. An example of a glass pattern design by Sakier is the ''Colony'' pattern 2412. This pattern was produced in crystal from the 1930s until 1983. It was reissued as ''Maypole'' in the 1980s using colored glass.<ref name="WarmansFG124">{{harvnb|Schroy|Warman|2013|p=124}}</ref> Patterns can be a style of glass, an etching on the glass, or a cutting on the glass.{{#tag:ref|] refers to using acid to alter the surface of glass.<ref name="CorningMuseum">{{cite web
|title=Corning Museum of Glass - Acid Etching
|publisher=Corning Museum of Glass
|url=https://www.cmog.org/glass-dictionary/acid-etching
|access-date=2018-05-28}}</ref> ] or cutting glass refers to using a tool to carve into the glass.<ref name="FitzwilliamMuseum">{{cite web
|title=The Fitzwilliam Museum: Techniques of Glass Engraving
|publisher=University of Cambridge
|url=http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/gallery/glassengravers/techniques.html
|access-date=2018-05-28|date=2010-06-14
}}</ref>|group=Note}} Some of the most successful Fostoria patterns were ''American'', ''Kashmir'', ''June'', ''Trojan'', and ''Versailles''.<ref name="Prisant93"/> Pattern 1861 was named ''Lincoln'', and 1861 is the year ] became ].<ref name="CGJ12030716">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=The New York Crockery and Glass District (2nd page, right column)|magazine=Crockery and Glass Journal <!-- Page 16 -->|publisher=Whittemore and Jaques, Inc. |date=1912-03-07 }}</ref><ref name="LOCLincolnInaug">{{cite web
|title=Abraham Lincoln's Inauguration March 4, 1861
|website= America's Story from America's Library
|publisher=Library of Congress
|url=http://www.americaslibrary.gov/jb/civil/jb_civil_lincoln2_1.html
|access-date=2020-01-07}}</ref> The pattern was used for pressed tableware. It was pictured on the front page of the Crockery and Glass Journal on January 4, 1912.<ref name="CGJ12010401">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Crockery and Glass Journal (front page), Fostoria Quality Excels|magazine=Crockery and Glass Journal <!-- Page 16 -->|publisher=Whittemore and Jaques, Inc. |date=1912-01-04 }}</ref>

From the beginning of the Moundsville operations until about 1915, Fostoria focused on oil lamps and products for restaurants and bars—especially stemware and tumblers.<ref name="Venable174"/> In 1915, Fostoria introduced its ''American'' pattern (pattern number 2056). This glass pattern was used for stemware and tableware, and continued to be produced until 1988.<ref name="Sullivan188">{{harvnb|Sullivan|2010|p=188}}</ref> Described as "block geometric", its appearance was very different from other patterns when it was introduced. Most glass made with the ''American'' pattern was produced using Fostoria's high-quality crystal formula.<ref name="Warmans37">{{harvnb|Schroy|Meyer|2017|p=37}}</ref> ''American'' became Fostoria's most famous pattern.<ref name="Long6-8">{{harvnb|Long|Seate|2003|pp=6–8}}</ref> Management around this time was still led by W. A. B. Dalzell as company president. Vice president was C. B. Roe, and A. C. Scroggins Jr. was the secretary and treasurer. W. S. Brady was still listed as on the board of directors.<ref name="Moody1916P2634">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Fostoria Glass Co|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IH03AQAAMAAJ&q=Fostoria+Dalzell+roe&pg=PA2634 |magazine=Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1916 Vol. III <!-- Page 2634 -->|location= New York|publisher=Moody Publishing Company |date=1916 |access-date=2008-05-11 }}</ref>

] diminished the market for commercial barware, causing Fostoria to put more emphasis on tableware for the home. Their initial target market was the higher-quality portion of the home market.<ref name="Venable174"/> In 1924, the company became the first glass manufacturer to produce complete dinner sets in crystal ware.<ref name="Schramm4">{{harvnb|Schramm|2004|loc=Ch. 4 of e-book}}</ref> In 1925, the company introduced dinnerware in colors. A national advertising campaign was started in 1926 to promote the complete dinnerware sets.<ref name="Sullivan188"/> Fostoria was also a major contributor to the creation of the ].<ref name="Sullivan188"/> Clear and pastel dinner sets became very popular, although expensive. This led to low cost dinner sets being made by injecting molten glass into an automated pressing mold. The product often had minor flaws, so "lacy" patterns were often included in the mold, or etched onto the glass, to hide imperfections.<ref name="Kovel3"/>

By 1926, the company had 10,000 different items in its catalog, and employment before the Depression peaked at around 650 people.<ref name="Venable174"/> Among the etching patterns introduced by Fostoria during the 1920s were ''June'', ''Versailles'', and ''Trojan''. The ''June'' pattern, which was made from 1928 to 1951, was etched on stemware and tableware.<ref name="Long9293">{{harvnb|Long|Seate|2003|pp=92–93}}</ref> It is one of the rare patterns that can be dated based on color of the glass.<ref name="Kovel48">{{harvnb|Kovel|Kovel|1991|p=48}}</ref> The ''Versailles'' pattern, made from 1928 to 1943, was another etching pattern. The etchings were mostly on plates and dishes. The glass product with the etching was made in many colors.<ref name="Kovel8687">{{harvnb|Kovel|Kovel|1991|pp=86–87}}</ref> The etching pattern called ''Trojan'' was made from 1929 to 1943. The ''Trojan'' etchings were mostly on plates and dishes. Original glass colors were rose and topaz. Gold tint was used in some of the last years of production.<ref name="Kovel85">{{harvnb|Kovel|Kovel|1991|p=85}}</ref> By 1928, Fostoria was the largest producer of handmade glass in the nation.<ref name="Sullivan188"/>

===Depression and post-war===
] for Fostoria's ''Chintz'' pattern|alt=advertisement for stemware]]During the Great Depression the company made glassware for the higher and lower cost segments of the market. Two popular Fostoria etching patterns were ''Navarre'' and ''Chintz''. ''Navarre'' was made from 1937 until 1980. Some of the pieces were etched onto the ''Baroque'' glass pattern, but others were on more modern glass patterns. The product was originally made in crystal, but later on a few pieces with color.<ref name="Kovel58">{{harvnb|Kovel|Kovel|1991|p=58}}</ref> The ''Baroque'' glass pattern was made by Fostoria from 1937 to 1965, and used for stemware and many types of tableware.<ref name="Long1618">{{harvnb|Long|Seate|2003|pp=16–18}}</ref> The ''Chintz'' pattern was made from 1940 to 1973. This etching pattern is a drawing of branches leaves and flowers, and was usually on the ''Baroque'' glass pattern.<ref name="Kovel26">{{harvnb|Kovel|Kovel|1991|p=26}}</ref> The ''Colony'' pattern discussed earlier was introduced around this time.{{#tag:ref|Long and Seate list the ''Colony'' pattern (number 2412) as manufactured from 1940 to 1973.<ref name="Long53">{{harvnb|Long|Seate|2003|p=53}}</ref> Schroy says the pattern was produced from the 1930s to 1983.<ref name="WarmansFG124"/>|group=Note}} Another long-lived glass pattern, ''Century'', was introduced in 1949 and made until 1982. It was used for stemware and tableware.<ref name="Long46">{{harvnb|Long|Seate|2003|p=46}}</ref> Advertising during the 1940s included photos in the Ladies Home Journal.<ref name="NameIt">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Yours, for a toast to charm (advertisement) |magazine=Ladies' Home Journal <!-- Page 18 -->|location=Philadelphia, PA |publisher=The Curtis Publishing Company |date=April 1948 }}</ref>

Production peaked in 1950 when Fostoria's 1,000 employees manufactured over 8 million pieces of glass and crystal. A combination of quality products and national advertising helped the company continue to be the largest manufacturer of handmade glassware in the United States. Every American president from ] through ] had glassware made by Fostoria.<ref name="Schramm4"/> Long-lived patterns introduced during the 1950s included ''Rose'', ''Wedding Ring'', and ''Jamestown''. ''Rose'' was a cutting on stemware and tableware, and it was produced from 1951 to 1973.<ref name="Long141">{{harvnb|Long|Seate|2003|p=141}}</ref> ''Wedding Ring'' was a decoration on stemware and tableware that was produced from 1953 to 1975. ''Jamestown'' was a glass pattern for stemware and tableware, and was used for numerous products from 1958 to 1982. The glass used was crystal and seven colors of glass: amber, blue, green, pink, amethyst, brown, and ruby. Among ''Jamestown'' stemware, ruby is valued higher than other colors by collectors.<ref name="Long9091">{{harvnb|Long|Seate|2003|pp=90–91}}</ref> Among the milk glass patterns, ''Vintage'' was used for tableware and a few types of stemware from 1958 to 1965.<ref name="Long181">{{harvnb|Long|Seate|2003|p=181}}</ref>

In the 1960s and 1970s, the company's marketing campaign expanded to include boutiques and display rooms within jewelry and department stores. Fostoria's top customer in 1971 was ]. It was Marshall Field's that had created a bridal registry in 1935, which was important to manufacturers of tableware for the home.<ref name="Venable305">{{harvnb|Venable|Jenkins|Denker|Grier|2000|p=305}}</ref> Fostoria also published its own consumer direct magazine, "Creating with Crystal", during the 1960s and 1970s.<ref name="Rinker97">{{harvnb|Rinker|1997|p=97}}</ref> The ''Woodland'' glass pattern, not to be confused with the ''Woodland'' etching from the 1920s, was introduced in 1975 and made until 1981.<ref name="Long188189">{{harvnb|Long|Seate|2003|pp=188–189}}</ref>

===Morgantown===
In 1965, Fostoria purchased the Morgantown Glassware Guild, which had also been known as the Morgantown Glass Works. Morgantown was a leader in barware and also made tableware. First Lady ] had chosen Morgantown glassware for official ] tableware, and Fostoria sought to capitalize on this. Glassware from Morgantown could be sold as stylish entry-level tableware for the home. This segment was profitable for Fostoria for only two years, as department stores eliminated secondary sources and restaurants began switching to machine-made glass. Fostoria closed the Morgantown factory in 1971.<ref name="Venable177178">{{harvnb|Venable|Jenkins|Denker|Grier|2000|pp=177–178}}</ref>

==Decline==
]In 1950, company president David B. Dalzell had said the Fostoria's competition came from "three sources: other companies in the domestic trade, imports, and automatic machinery."<ref name="Venable174"/> During the 1970s, changing preferences and a substantial increase in imports of machine-made lead-crystal tableware forced the company to make significant investments in machinery. This late attempt to be more competitive by automating more of the manufacturing process unsettled the labor force, and the company faced ]s during the early 1970s. By 1980, the company's commercial division was unprofitable.<ref name="Venable178">{{harvnb|Venable|Jenkins|Denker|Grier|2000|p=178}}</ref>

In 1983, Fostoria sold its factory to Lancaster Colony Corporation of ]. However, Lancaster Colony shut down the Fostoria Glass factory permanently on February 28, 1986. At the time, Kenneth B. Dalzell, the fourth generation of Dalzells at Fostoria Glass, was head of Fostoria operations.<ref name="Paquette183"/> Dalzell purchased the assets of Viking Glass company of ] in April 1987, and renamed the company Dalzell-Viking.<ref name="AGR">{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title= |magazine=American Glass Review <!-- Page 18 -->|publisher=Commoner Publishing Company |date=1988 }}</ref> Fostoria inventory and molds were sold to several companies, and Dalzell-Viking was one of the purchasers.<ref name="Lechner67"/> The ''American'', ''Baroque'', and ''Coin'' patterns were thereafter produced by others, including Dalzell-Viking. Some of this glassware produced at Dalzell-Viking was made by former Fostoria employees using Fostoria molds—making it difficult to differentiate from glassware made at the Fostoria plant.<ref name="Sullivan188"/> Dalzell-Viking closed in 1998.<ref name="Schroy244">{{harvnb|Schroy|2001|p=244}}</ref>

== See also ==
*]
*]

==Notes==
===Footnotes===
{{Reflist|group=Note|colwidth=30em}}

===Citations===
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}

===References===
{{refbegin|20em}}
*{{cite book
|last = Fones-Wolf
|first =Ken
|title = Glass towns: industry, labor and political economy in Appalachia, 1890–1930s
|publisher = University of Illinois Press
|year = 2007
|location = Urbana, IL
|oclc = 69792081
|isbn =978-0-252-03131-1
}}
*{{cite book
| last1 = Kovel
| first1 = Ralph M.
| last2 = Kovel
| first2 = Terry H.
| title = Kovels' Depression Glass & American Dinnerware Price List
| publisher = Crown Publishers
| year = 1991
| location = New York
| pages = 250
| isbn = 978-0-51758-444-6
}}
*{{cite book
|last1 = Lechner
|first1 =Mildred
|last2 = Lechner
|first2 =Ralph
|title = The World of Salt Shakers: Antique & Art Glass Value Guide, Volume 3
|publisher = Collector Books
|year = 1998
|location = Paducah, KY
|pages = 311
|isbn =978-1-57432-065-7
}}
*{{cite book
|last1 = Long
|first1 =Milbra
|last2 = Seate
|first2 =Emily
|title = The Fostoria Value Guide
|publisher = Collector Books
|year = 2003
|location = Paducah, KY
|pages = 206
|oclc = 229317585
|isbn =978-1-57432-583-6
}}
*{{cite book
|last = Lucht
|first = Ralph K.
|title = Arnold Fiedler: Glass and Marble Maker Par Excellence
|publisher = AuthorHouse
|year = 2011
|location = Bloomington, IN
|pages = 27
|oclc = 761194444
|isbn =978-1-456-73702-3
}}
*{{Cite book
| last = McKelvey
| first = Alexander T.
| title = Centennial History of Belmont county, Ohio and Representative Citizens
| publisher = Biographical Publishing Company
| year = 1903
| location = Chicago
| pages =
| url = https://archive.org/details/centennialhistor00mcke
| quote = Centennial history of belmont county.
| oclc = 318390043
}}
*{{Cite book
| last = Murray | last = Murray
| first = Melvin L. | first = Melvin L.
Line 45: Line 265:
| year = 1992 | year = 1992
| location = Fostoria, OH | location = Fostoria, OH
| page = 41 | pages = 184
| url = | oclc = 27036061
| doi = }}
*{{Cite book
| id =
| oclc = 27036061
}}</ref> Their work experience included glassmaking at the ] and Hobbs, Brockunier and Company. Production began December 15, 1887, and products included tableware, bar goods, and lamps.<ref name="Paq180" />

==Move to Moundsville==
Unfortunately for the area glass factories, Northwest Ohio's gas boom was short lived. Gas shortages started occurring during the winter of 1890–91. During April 1891, company executives decided to move to Moundsville, West Virginia. Moundsville was selected because of the availability of coal as a fuel for the plant—and $10,000 cash offered by the community.<ref name="Paq181"> {{Cite book
| last = Paquette | last = Paquette
| first = Jack K. | first = Jack K.
| authorlink = Jack K. Paquette
| title = Blowpipes, Northwest Ohio Glassmaking in the Gas Boom of the 1880s | title = Blowpipes, Northwest Ohio Glassmaking in the Gas Boom of the 1880s
| publisher = Xlibris Corp. | publisher = Xlibris Corp.
| year = 2002 | year = 2002
| location = | pages = 559
| page = 181
| url =
| doi =
| isbn = 1-4010-4790-4 | isbn = 1-4010-4790-4
| oclc = 50932436 | oclc = 50932436
}}
}}</ref> The move was announced in September 1891. The Fostoria plant was sold to a group of investors led by Otto Jaeger, and the his new company was the Seneca Glass Company.<ref name="Paq182"> {{Cite book
*{{Cite book
| last = Paquette
| first = Jack K. | last = Prisant
| first = Carol
| title = Blowpipes, Northwest Ohio Glassmaking in the Gas Boom of the 1880s
| title = Antiques Roadshow Collectibles: The Complete Guide to Collecting 20th Century Toys, Glassware, Costume Jewelry, Memorabilia, Ceramics, and More
| publisher = Xlibris Corp.
| year = 2002 | publisher = Workman Publishing
| location = | year = 2003
| page = 182 | location = New York
| url = | pages = 589
| doi = | isbn = 0-7611-2887-5
}}
| isbn = 1-4010-4790-4
*{{Cite book
| oclc = 50932436
| last = Revi
}}</ref> In early December, the move to Moundsville was delayed by a temporary restraining order. Several members of the Crimmel family, who owned stock in the company, filed suit. The Crimmels claimed shareholders should have been consulted for the move.<ref name="Paq182" /> The restraining order was lifted a short time later, Fostoria Glass Company moved by the end of December, and the Seneca Glass Company began operations January 1892.<ref name="Murray59"> {{Cite book
| last = Murray | first = Albert Christian
| title = American Pressed Glass and Figure Bottles
| first = Melvin L.
| publisher = Nelson
| title = Fostoria, Ohio Glass II
| publisher = M. L. Murray | year = 1964
| year = 1992 | location = New York
| location = Fostoria, OH | oclc = 965803
}}
| page = 59
*{{cite book
| url =
| doi = |last1 = Rider
| id = |first1 =Gary L.
| oclc = 27036061 |last2 = Grubber
|first2 =Karen
}}</ref>
|title = Marshall County

|publisher = Arcadia Publishing
==Early years==
|year = 2018
]
|location = Charleston, South Carolina
]
|pages = 127
Fostoria built a ] in 1891 that could fire 14 pieces of ] at a time, considered exemplary for the period. During the early years of 1887 through 1909, Fostoria advertised that it manufactured "tableware, colognes, stationers' glassware and candelabra", as well as inkwells, sponge cups, vases, fingerbowls and fruit jars. Many of the stemware designs were needle etched or wheel cut, popular styles during the early 20th century.<ref name="about" />
|oclc = 1038801924

|isbn =978-1-54022-875-8
By 1925, five additional furnaces were added and the company was in its heydey, manufacturing ], ], and decorative lamps, before adding a colored ] and ] product line.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.replacements.com/mfghist/fostoriaglass.htm|title=Fostoria Glass Company|publisher=replacements.com|accessdate=2008-10-08}}</ref> Fostoria struggled through the ] and ], but survived, producing ] and ], and the notable patterns of ''Chintz'' (1940), ''Colony'' (1940), ''Romance'' (1942), and ''Holly'' (1942). .
}}

*{{Cite book
Production peaked in 1950 when Fostoria manufactured over 8 million pieces of glass and crystal.<ref name="fgs" /> The company expanded in the 1950s, adding the crystal patterns ''Century'' (1950), ''Rose'' (1951), ''Wedding Ring'' (1953), and ''Jamestown'' (1959). In the 1960s and 1970s, the company's marketing campaign expanded to include boutiques and display rooms within jewelry and department stores. In addition, Fostoria published its own consumer direct magazine, "Creating with Crystal" during this period.
| last = Rinker

| first = Harry L.
All U.S. Presidents from ] through ] ordered glassware from Fostoria.<ref name="fgs" />
| title = Stemware of the 20th Century: The Top 200 Patterns

| publisher = House of Collectables
==Later years==
| year = 1997
Foreign competition increased during the 1970s. In 1983, Fostoria sold its ] to Lancaster Colony Corporation of ]. By 1986, Lancaster Colony closed the factory and sold the remaining stock directly to consumers.<ref name="about" />
| location = New York

| pages = 195
Fostoria's best-selling pattern was ''American'', introduced in 1915. After the factory closure, Lancaster Colony contracted with Dalzell Viking Glass Company of ], to continue manufacturing some Fostoria patterns, including ''American''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ndga.net/advertising/advfostoria.php|title=Fostoria Glass Company Advertisements|date=April 14, 2008|publisher=National Depression Glass Association|accessdate=2011-04-01}}</ref> Thereafter, L.E. Smith Glass Company of ], bought the ''American'' molds.
| isbn = 978-0-67660-084-1

}}
Fostoria stemware and dinnerware continue to be popular collector items, with colored pieces valued higher than clear ones of the same pattern.<ref name="about">{{cite web|url=http://antiques.about.com/od/elegantglass/a/aa072702.htm|title=Fostoria Glass|last=Wiggins|first=Pamela |publisher=about.co|accessdate=2008-10-08}}</ref> Earlier ''American'' pieces are more valuable than later ones.
*{{Cite book

| last = Schramm
The Anna B. Smith House in Moundsville was purchased by the Fostoria Glass Society of America and turned into a Fostoria museum in 1990.<ref name="fgs">{{cite web|url=http://www.fostoriaglass.org/fgsamus.htm|title=MUSEUM - The Anna B. Smith House|publisher=fostoriaglass.org|accessdate=2008-10-08}}</ref>
| first = Robert W.

| title = Moundsville
==Competitors==
| publisher = Arcadia
Fostoria's chief competitors included:
| year = 2004
* ], Cambridge, Ohio
| location = Charleston, South Carolina
* ], Wheeling, West Virginia
| isbn = 978-0-73851-735-3
* ], Newark, Ohio
| oclc = 630552674

}}
==References==
*{{cite book
{{Reflist}}
| last = Schroy
| first = Ellen Tischbein
| title = Warman's Americana & Collectibles
| publisher = Krause Publications
| year = 2001
| location = Iola, WI
| pages = 400
| oclc = 299224470
| isbn = 978-0-87341-976-5
}}
*{{cite book
| last1 = Schroy
| first1 = Ellen Tischbein
| last2 = Warman
| title = Warman's Depression Glass Field Guide 2017: Values and Identification
| publisher = KP/F+W Media
| year = 2013
| location = Iola, WI
| pages = 511
| oclc = 1011912525
| isbn = 978-1-44023-456-9
}}
*{{cite book
| last1 = Schroy
| first1 = Ellen Tischbein
| last2 = Meyer
| first2 = Pam
| title = Warman's Depression Glass Handbook 2017: Identification, Values, Pattern Guide
| publisher = Krause Publications
| year = 2017
| location = Iola, WI
| pages = 320
| oclc = 1011859939
| isbn = 978-1-44024-813-9
}}
*{{cite book
|last = Skrabec
|first = Quentin R.
|title = Michael Owens and the Glass Industry
|publisher = Pelican Publishing
|year = 2007
|location = Gretna, LA
|oclc = 137341537
}}
*{{cite book
|last = Sullivan
|first = Amy
|title = Schroeder's Antiques Price Guide
|publisher = Collector Books
|year = 2010
|location = Padacuh, KY
|page =
|url = https://archive.org/details/schroedersantiqu0000sull/page/607
|oclc = 433147612
|isbn = 978-1-57432-632-1
|url-access = registration
}}
*{{Cite book
| last = United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce
| title = The Glass Industry. Report on the Cost of Production of Glass in the United States
| publisher = Government Printing Office
| year = 1917
| location = Washington
| url = https://archive.org/details/glassindustryrep00unit
| page =
| quote = Glass blower.
| oclc = 5705310
}}
*{{cite book
|last1=Venable
|first1=Charles L.
|last2=Jenkins
|first2=Tom
|last3=Denker
|first3=Ellen P.
|last4=Grier
|first4=Katherine C. <!-- |last5=Harrison
|first5=Stephen G. -->
|title=China and Glass in America, 1880-1980: from Tabletop to TV Tray
|publisher=Dallas Museum of Art
|location=Dallas
|year=2000
|isbn=978-0-81096-692-5
|oclc=905439701
}}
{{Refend}}


==Further reading== ==Further reading==
*{{cite book
* Kerr, A. (1994). ''Fostoria: an identification and value guide of pressed, blown & hand molded shapes''. Paducah, Ky: Collector Books. ISBN 0-89145-564-7
|last = Bones
* Piña, L. A. (2006). ''Fostoria American: line 2056. A Schiffer book for collectors''. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Pub. ISBN 0764324691
|first =Frances
* Weatherman, H. M. (1972). ''Fostoria: its first fifty years''. Springfield, Mo: The Weathermans. OCLC 410096
|title = Fostoria Glassware, 1887-1982: Identification and Values: 95 Years of Glassmaking
|publisher = Collector Books
|year = 1999
|location = Paducah, KY
|pages = 446
|oclc = 41878453
|isbn =978-1-57432-108-1
}}
*{{cite book
|last = Kerr
|first =Ann
|title = Fostoria: an Identification and Value Guide of Pressed, Blown & Hand Molded Shapes
|publisher = Collector Books
|year = 1994
|location = Paducah, KY
|pages = 360
|oclc = 1003180297
|isbn =978-0-89145-726-8
}}
*{{cite book
|last = Piña
|first =Leslie
|title = Fostoria American: line 2056. A Schiffer Book for Collectors
|publisher = Schiffer Pub.
|year = 2006
|location = Atglen, PA
|pages = 160
|oclc = 76827604
|isbn = 978-0-76432-469-7
}}
*{{cite book
|last1 = Long
|first1 =Milbra
|last2 = Seate
|first2 =Emily
|title = Fostoria Stemware: The Crystal for America
|publisher = Collector Books
|year = 2008
|location = Paducah, KY
|pages = 268
|oclc = 229317585
|isbn =978-1-57432-583-6
}}
*{{cite book
|last = Skrabec
|first = Quentin R.
|title = Edward Drummond Libbey, American glassmaker
|publisher = McFarland
|year = 2011
|location = Jefferson, NC
|oclc = 753968484
|isbn =978-0-78648-548-2
}}
*{{cite book
|last = Weatherman
|first =Hazel M.
|title = Fostoria: Its First Fifty Years
|publisher = The Weathermans
|year = 1972
|location = Springfield, MO
|pages = 320
|oclc = 410096
|isbn = 978-0-91307-402-2
}}
*{{cite book
|last = Williams
|first =Juanita L.
|title = Fostoria Glass: Scarce, Unique, and Whimsies
|publisher = Schiffer Pub.
|year = 2004
|location = Atglen, PA
|pages = 256
|oclc = 55209418
|isbn = 978-0-76431-974-7
}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Commons category|Fostoria Glass Company}}
* Photos:
**
**
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*
*
*


*
*
*
* - 1946 27-minute film sponsored by Fostoria Glass and produced by ]
{{Glass makers and brands}} {{Glass makers and brands}}
{{Authority control}}


] ]

] ]
] ]
] ]
]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 16:38, 26 November 2024

Defunct popular glassware company

Fostoria Glass Company
Company typePrivate company
IndustryGlassware
FoundedDecember 15, 1887 in Fostoria, Ohio (December 15, 1887 in Fostoria, Ohio)
FounderLucian B. Martin, William S. Brady
Defunct1986
HeadquartersMoundsville, West Virginia, U.S.
Key peopleLucian B. Martin, William S. Brady, Charles Foster, William A. B. Dalzell
Products
Number of employees1000 (at peak in 1950)

The Fostoria Glass Company was a manufacturer of pressed, blown and hand-molded glassware and tableware. It began operations in Fostoria, Ohio, on December 15, 1887, on land donated by the townspeople. The new company was formed by men from West Virginia who were experienced in the glassmaking business. They started their company in northwest Ohio to take advantage of newly discovered natural gas that was an ideal fuel for glassmaking. Numerous other businesses were also started in the area, and collectively they depleted the natural gas supply. Fuel shortages caused the company to move to Moundsville, West Virginia, in 1891.

After the move to Moundsville, the company achieved a national reputation. Fostoria was considered one of the top producers of elegant glass. It had over 1,000 patterns, including one (American) that was produced for over 75 years. Showrooms were located in New York, Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco, and other large cities. The company advertised heavily, and one of its successes was sales through bridal registries. Fostoria products were made for several U.S. presidents. The company employed 1,000 people at its peak in 1950.

During the 1970s, foreign competition and changing preferences forced the company to make substantial investments in cost-saving automation technology. The changes were made too late, and the company's commercial division was losing money by 1980. The plant was closed permanently on February 28, 1986. Several companies continued making products using the Fostoria patterns, including the Dalzell-Viking Glass Company and Indiana Glass Company—both now closed.

Background

See also: List of Glass Companies Led by Former Employees of Hobbs, Brockunier and Company and Petroleum industry in Ohio

In the last half of the 19th century, labor and fuel were the two largest expenses in U.S. glassmaking. People with the knowledge necessary to make glass were difficult to find. Management at Wheeling's J. H. Hobbs, Brockunier and Company had a policy of using skilled glassworkers from Europe, who would train the local employees—resulting in a superior workforce. In the 1860s, Wheeling, West Virginia, became a "hub for chemical and technological improvements to the composition of glass and the development of furnaces, molds, and presses" for making glass. By the end of the 1870s, the Hobbs glass works became the largest glass maker in the United States. One of the earliest places to which the Hobbs glass making talent spread was Bellaire, Ohio, located in Belmont County, across the river from Wheeling and Ohio County. Former employees of the Hobbs glass works became the talent that established many of the region's glass factories, and many became company presidents or plant managers.

Transportation resources were also important to the glass industry. Waterways provided an efficient and safe way to transport glass, especially before the construction of high-quality roads and the railroad system. As the railroad industry developed, it also became an important transportation resource. By 1880, almost all of the nation's top ten glass producing counties were located on a waterway. Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, (which includes Pittsburgh) was the nation's leading glass producer based on value of production. Ohio's Belmont County and West Virginia's Ohio County, separated by the Ohio River, ranked 6th and 7th.

Since fuel was one of the top two expenses in glassmaking, manufacturers needed to monitor its availability and cost. Wood and coal had long been used as fuel for glassmaking. An alternative fuel, gas, became a desirable fuel for making glass because it is clean, gives a uniform heat, is easier to control, and melts the batch of ingredients faster. Gas furnaces for making glass were first used in Europe in 1861. In early 1886, a major discovery of natural gas occurred near the small village of Findlay, Ohio. Communities in northwestern Ohio began using low-cost natural gas along with free land and cash to entice glass companies to start operations in their town. Their efforts were successful, and at least 70 glass factories existed in northwest Ohio between 1886 and 1900.

Beginning

1882 railroad map area around Fostoria, Ohio
1882 Ohio railroad map for area around Fostoria

The Fostoria Glass Company was incorporated in West Virginia in July 1887. The founders of the Fostoria Glass Company were drawn to Fostoria, Ohio, to exploit the newly discovered natural gas. The new firm also received cash incentives of $5,000 (equivalent to $169,556 in 2023) to $6,000 (equivalent to $339,111 in 2023). The plant was located on Fostoria's South Vine Street and the town was served by multiple railroads. The factory's furnace had a capacity of 12 pots, and originally employed 125 workers. Production of tableware, bar goods, and lamps began on December 15, 1887.

The glass men that formed the new company had gained their experience from working at the Hobbs, Brockunier and Company glass plant in Wheeling. Lucian B. Martin, the company's first president, had been a sales executive at the Hobbs works. William S. Brady, the company's secretary, had worked as a financial manager there and more recently managed a glass plant in Wellsburg, West Virginia. James B. Russell and Benjamin M. Hildreth had worked at the Hobbs plant, and Russell had also worked at a Pittsburgh glass works. German-born Otto Jaeger had been head of the engraving department at the Hobbs works. Former Ohio governor Charles Foster, son of the city of Fostoria's namesake, was added to this group of glass industry veterans to form the new company's board of directors.

Henry Humphreville, who had worked at Brady's Riverside Glass Company in Wellsburg, was hired as plant manager, and offered some diversity with his additional experience working in Pittsburgh—the nation's other center of glassmaking innovation. Many of the employees hired for the startup were from the Wheeling area. At least 20 "first class workmen" joined the company from Bellaire, Ohio, which is across the Ohio River from Wheeling. Henry and Jacob Crimmel were "key craftsmen in the early period of the company" and both had worked at Belmont Glass Company in Bellaire and the Hobbs plant in Wheeling. The Crimmel brothers had also been involved with the startup of the predecessor to the Belmont Glass Company. Crimmel family recipes for glass were used in the early days of the Fostoria Glass Company.

Early products

elegant stemmed wine glass with etching that appears to be plant-like
Etched stemware

The company advertised as a manufacturer of pressed glassware, and specialties were candle stands, candelabras, and banquet lamps. The first piece of glass pressed at the plant was a salt dip, pattern number 93. A popular early pattern called Cascade looked like a swirl and was used for candelabras and ink wells. It was also used for tableware such as containers for sugar, cream, and butter. Cascade was the first tableware pattern made, and it continued through the years under different names.

The company had many talented designers. Among them was Charles E. Beam, who was the head of the company's mold shop and eventually added to the board of directors. Beam's specialty was designing dishes with animals as the covers, and one of his creations that is "highly-prized" by today's collectors is a dish with a dolphin covering. Beam received a patent in 1890 for a glass mold that would enable pieces of chandeliers and candelabras to have small holes. Company president Martin was also a talented designer, and he patented the Cascade ink well (called an inkstand) in 1890 and a paper weight with swirl sides in 1891.

The company's first Virginia pattern was introduced around Christmas in 1888. This pattern was quickly stolen (or "pirated") by a rival company. Fostoria Glass copied the copy, and named this purportedly new pattern Captain Kidd. Eventually this same Virginia/Captain Kidd pattern was also called Foster or Foster Block in honor of Charles Foster. An advertisement for the Captain Kidd pattern featured a butter dish, spoon dish, a sugar bowel, and a creamer.

Fostoria's Valencia pattern, number 205, is often called Artichoke because of the shape of the overlapping leaves on the bottom half of the glassware. This pattern was advertised in China, Glass and Lamps magazine in early 1891.

The Victoria pattern is popular with collectors, and a wide variety of products were made with this pattern. It is the only pattern that was patented by the company. Its appearance has a strong resemblance to a French company's pattern, and Fostoria Glass had some employees from France's glassmaking region. When the company moved to Moundsville, all of the molds for this pattern mysteriously disappeared. The missing molds were never found, and the Victoria pattern was never produced again.

Move to Moundsville

old advertisement for Fostoria Glass
Advertisement from 1906

Northwest Ohio's gas boom was short lived, as gas shortages started occurring during the winter of 1890–91. During April 1891, Fostoria Glass executives decided to move to Moundsville, West Virginia, because of the availability of coal as a fuel for the plant—and $10,000 cash (equivalent to $339,111 in 2023) offered by the community. In addition to the cash incentive, the company was also offered a 10-year supply of coal at a low price. The move was announced in September 1891. The Fostoria plant was sold to a group of investors led by Fostoria Glass executive Otto Jaeger, and his new company was named Seneca Glass Company.

In early December, the move to Moundsville was delayed by a restraining order when several members of the Crimmel family, who owned stock in the company, filed suit. The Crimmels, who were also employees of the company, claimed shareholders should have been consulted for the move. The attempt to stop the move was unsuccessful, and the restraining order was lifted to enable the company to move by the end of the month.

The company's first Moundsville furnace had a capacity of 14 pots. Coal was not used directly as a fuel for the furnace. Instead, the furnace burned coal gas made from the local supply of coal. About 60 workers from the Fostoria glass works moved with the company to the Moundsville location.

Moundsville operations

colorful lamps in catalog
Some Fostoria oil and electric lamps and hand-decorated vases, 1904

In 1899, the company became associated with the National Glass Company, which was a corporate trust. Co-founder Lucien Martin left the firm in 1901 to work in Pittsburgh for National Glass. Another co-founder, William Brady, also moved to the Pittsburgh firm a short time later. Despite the association, Fostoria Glass Company did not become part of the National Glass Company.

William A. B. Dalzell joined the company as general manager in 1901. Dalzell was from Pittsburgh, and his initial experience in the glass industry was with Pittsburgh's Adams and Company. The Dalzell brothers had been involved with the glass business as owners and management in West Virginia and Ohio. When Fostoria Glass became associated with National Glass in 1899, Dalzell was working at the trust as manager of the western department. When he joined Fostoria Glass, he brought Calvin B. Roe, who had been a bookkeeper and plant superintendent at Dalzell's Ohio plant. Dalzell quickly ascended to vice president. Under Dalzell's leadership, the Fostoria Glass Company gained a national reputation. Dalzell served as president and/or chairman from 1902 until his unexpected death in 1928.

In 1903, the company already operated two large furnaces when it added a three-story brick building that housed a new 14-pot furnace. One trade magazine believed that the addition made the company "probably the largest independent flint glass concern in the country...." By 1904, the company had 800 employees. Products made as of 1906 included decorated lamps, globes, shades, blown and pressed tableware, high grade lead blown tumblers, stemware, and novelties. At that time, a trade magazine said that the company "makes so many lines of glassware, all so perfectly, and markets its output so successfully to all classes of buyers, that no name is better known to all classes of trade."

Moundsville Products

glassware with geometric bumps in the glass
Fostoria American pattern

Fostoria was considered one of the top producers of elegant glass. However, Fostoria glassware is also found on lists of Depression glass. The company had over 1,000 patterns, including many designed by artist George Sakier. An example of a glass pattern design by Sakier is the Colony pattern 2412. This pattern was produced in crystal from the 1930s until 1983. It was reissued as Maypole in the 1980s using colored glass. Patterns can be a style of glass, an etching on the glass, or a cutting on the glass. Some of the most successful Fostoria patterns were American, Kashmir, June, Trojan, and Versailles. Pattern 1861 was named Lincoln, and 1861 is the year Abraham Lincoln became President of the United States. The pattern was used for pressed tableware. It was pictured on the front page of the Crockery and Glass Journal on January 4, 1912.

From the beginning of the Moundsville operations until about 1915, Fostoria focused on oil lamps and products for restaurants and bars—especially stemware and tumblers. In 1915, Fostoria introduced its American pattern (pattern number 2056). This glass pattern was used for stemware and tableware, and continued to be produced until 1988. Described as "block geometric", its appearance was very different from other patterns when it was introduced. Most glass made with the American pattern was produced using Fostoria's high-quality crystal formula. American became Fostoria's most famous pattern. Management around this time was still led by W. A. B. Dalzell as company president. Vice president was C. B. Roe, and A. C. Scroggins Jr. was the secretary and treasurer. W. S. Brady was still listed as on the board of directors.

Prohibition diminished the market for commercial barware, causing Fostoria to put more emphasis on tableware for the home. Their initial target market was the higher-quality portion of the home market. In 1924, the company became the first glass manufacturer to produce complete dinner sets in crystal ware. In 1925, the company introduced dinnerware in colors. A national advertising campaign was started in 1926 to promote the complete dinnerware sets. Fostoria was also a major contributor to the creation of the bridal registry. Clear and pastel dinner sets became very popular, although expensive. This led to low cost dinner sets being made by injecting molten glass into an automated pressing mold. The product often had minor flaws, so "lacy" patterns were often included in the mold, or etched onto the glass, to hide imperfections.

By 1926, the company had 10,000 different items in its catalog, and employment before the Depression peaked at around 650 people. Among the etching patterns introduced by Fostoria during the 1920s were June, Versailles, and Trojan. The June pattern, which was made from 1928 to 1951, was etched on stemware and tableware. It is one of the rare patterns that can be dated based on color of the glass. The Versailles pattern, made from 1928 to 1943, was another etching pattern. The etchings were mostly on plates and dishes. The glass product with the etching was made in many colors. The etching pattern called Trojan was made from 1929 to 1943. The Trojan etchings were mostly on plates and dishes. Original glass colors were rose and topaz. Gold tint was used in some of the last years of production. By 1928, Fostoria was the largest producer of handmade glass in the nation.

Depression and post-war

advertisement for stemware
Advertisement from 1948 Ladies' Home Journal for Fostoria's Chintz pattern

During the Great Depression the company made glassware for the higher and lower cost segments of the market. Two popular Fostoria etching patterns were Navarre and Chintz. Navarre was made from 1937 until 1980. Some of the pieces were etched onto the Baroque glass pattern, but others were on more modern glass patterns. The product was originally made in crystal, but later on a few pieces with color. The Baroque glass pattern was made by Fostoria from 1937 to 1965, and used for stemware and many types of tableware. The Chintz pattern was made from 1940 to 1973. This etching pattern is a drawing of branches leaves and flowers, and was usually on the Baroque glass pattern. The Colony pattern discussed earlier was introduced around this time. Another long-lived glass pattern, Century, was introduced in 1949 and made until 1982. It was used for stemware and tableware. Advertising during the 1940s included photos in the Ladies Home Journal.

Production peaked in 1950 when Fostoria's 1,000 employees manufactured over 8 million pieces of glass and crystal. A combination of quality products and national advertising helped the company continue to be the largest manufacturer of handmade glassware in the United States. Every American president from Dwight D. Eisenhower through Ronald Reagan had glassware made by Fostoria. Long-lived patterns introduced during the 1950s included Rose, Wedding Ring, and Jamestown. Rose was a cutting on stemware and tableware, and it was produced from 1951 to 1973. Wedding Ring was a decoration on stemware and tableware that was produced from 1953 to 1975. Jamestown was a glass pattern for stemware and tableware, and was used for numerous products from 1958 to 1982. The glass used was crystal and seven colors of glass: amber, blue, green, pink, amethyst, brown, and ruby. Among Jamestown stemware, ruby is valued higher than other colors by collectors. Among the milk glass patterns, Vintage was used for tableware and a few types of stemware from 1958 to 1965.

In the 1960s and 1970s, the company's marketing campaign expanded to include boutiques and display rooms within jewelry and department stores. Fostoria's top customer in 1971 was Marshall Field's. It was Marshall Field's that had created a bridal registry in 1935, which was important to manufacturers of tableware for the home. Fostoria also published its own consumer direct magazine, "Creating with Crystal", during the 1960s and 1970s. The Woodland glass pattern, not to be confused with the Woodland etching from the 1920s, was introduced in 1975 and made until 1981.

Morgantown

In 1965, Fostoria purchased the Morgantown Glassware Guild, which had also been known as the Morgantown Glass Works. Morgantown was a leader in barware and also made tableware. First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy had chosen Morgantown glassware for official White House tableware, and Fostoria sought to capitalize on this. Glassware from Morgantown could be sold as stylish entry-level tableware for the home. This segment was profitable for Fostoria for only two years, as department stores eliminated secondary sources and restaurants began switching to machine-made glass. Fostoria closed the Morgantown factory in 1971.

Decline

color picture of glassware with geometric pattern
Fostoria's American pattern

In 1950, company president David B. Dalzell had said the Fostoria's competition came from "three sources: other companies in the domestic trade, imports, and automatic machinery." During the 1970s, changing preferences and a substantial increase in imports of machine-made lead-crystal tableware forced the company to make significant investments in machinery. This late attempt to be more competitive by automating more of the manufacturing process unsettled the labor force, and the company faced strikes during the early 1970s. By 1980, the company's commercial division was unprofitable.

In 1983, Fostoria sold its factory to Lancaster Colony Corporation of Columbus, Ohio. However, Lancaster Colony shut down the Fostoria Glass factory permanently on February 28, 1986. At the time, Kenneth B. Dalzell, the fourth generation of Dalzells at Fostoria Glass, was head of Fostoria operations. Dalzell purchased the assets of Viking Glass company of New Martinsville, West Virginia in April 1987, and renamed the company Dalzell-Viking. Fostoria inventory and molds were sold to several companies, and Dalzell-Viking was one of the purchasers. The American, Baroque, and Coin patterns were thereafter produced by others, including Dalzell-Viking. Some of this glassware produced at Dalzell-Viking was made by former Fostoria employees using Fostoria molds—making it difficult to differentiate from glassware made at the Fostoria plant. Dalzell-Viking closed in 1998.

See also

Notes

Footnotes

  1. The Hobbs glass works, located in South Wheeling in Ohio County, West Virginia, was renamed numerous times over a period of about 60 years. Some of the names were Barnes & Hobbs; Hobbs & Barnes; Hobbs, Brockunier & Company; and Hobbs Glass Company.
  2. Bellaire is located in the Ohio coal belt, and therefore had a fuel source for local factories. By 1881, Bellaire had 15 glass factories, and was known as "Glass City".
  3. An example of the importance of waterways can be observed in February 1912. It was reported that because of ice on the Ohio River, 600 barrels of glassware from the Fostoria Glass Company were waiting shipment at the Moundsville wharf.
  4. A pot was essentially a measure of a glass plant's capacity. Each ceramic pot was located inside the furnace. The pot contained molten glass created by melting a batch of ingredients that typically included sand, soda, and lime. Stationed around each pot was a team of laborers that extracted the molten glass and began the process of making the glass product.
  5. Deacon Scroggins, Jack Crimmel, and Hayes O'Neal were the first class workmen cited in a Bellaire newspaper article about the move. One author believes "Jack" Crimmel is probably Jacob Crimmel.
  6. Murray discusses the Virginia pattern, and identifies it as pattern number 140. He also shows an advertisement for the Virginia pattern in an 1889 edition of the Crockery and Glass Journal. Long and Seate do not identify this pattern, but list a Virginia plate etching as pattern 267 that was made from 1923 to 1929. They also list a Virginia glass pattern, number 2977, that was made from 1978 to 1986.
  7. Sources do not always agree on the number of pots for the first furnace. Rider says 16 pots. Lucht says 14 pots. A trade magazine describing the firm in 1912 mentioned a 14-pot furnace, but did not mention one with 16-pots.
  8. Three Dalzell brothers (Andrew, James, and William) and a banker from Pittsburgh founded the Dalzell Brothers and Gilmore Glass Company in Wellsburg, West Virginia, during 1883. In 1888 (after the death of Andrew Dalzell) they received incentives to move their company to Findlay, Ohio. The company name was changed to Dalzell, Gilmore and Leighton, after well-known glassmaker William Leighton Jr. joined the firm from the Hobbs Glass works.
  9. By the 1990s, the phrase "elegant glassware of the Depression" was being used to describe the better quality glass made at the same time as Depression glass. Thus, some of the patterns made by Fostoria using crystal glass are listed in books about Depression glass.
  10. Etching refers to using acid to alter the surface of glass. Engraving or cutting glass refers to using a tool to carve into the glass.
  11. Long and Seate list the Colony pattern (number 2412) as manufactured from 1940 to 1973. Schroy says the pattern was produced from the 1930s to 1983.

Citations

  1. ^ United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce 1917, p. 12
  2. ^ "South Wheeling Glass Works". Wheeling Daily Intelligencer. 1873-12-12. p. 3.
  3. ^ Fones-Wolf 2007, pp. 85–86
  4. Skrabec 2007, p. 73
  5. "Hobbs Brockunier Glass, Wheeling, WV 1886". Ohio County Public Library. Retrieved 2013-11-24.
  6. McKelvey 1903, p. 79
  7. Revi 1964, p. 69
  8. "Around the Glass and Lamp Factories". Crockery and Glass Journal. Whittemore and Jaques, Inc. 1912-02-15.
  9. United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce 1917, p. 11
  10. United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce 1917, p. 36
  11. Paquette 2002, pp. 24–25
  12. Paquette 2002, p. 26
  13. "O-I [Owens-Illinois] Retiree's Quest to Clear up History of Glass Industry Develops into Book". The Blade . 2002-09-24. Retrieved 2020-01-09. He found that more than 70 glass factories - he calls them glasshouses - sprang up in northwest Ohio between 1886 and 1900, giving the region a true claim to be called the "glass center of the world".
  14. Paquette 2002, p. 179
  15. ^ Paquette 2002, p. 180
  16. United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce 1917, p. 67
  17. United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce 1917, pp. 71–74
  18. Murray 1992, p. 40
  19. "Otto Jaeger - Founder of Fostoria, Seneca, and Bonita Art Glass". Ohio County Public Library. Retrieved 2018-05-07.
  20. Murray 1992, p. 41
  21. ^ Venable et al. 2000, p. 174
  22. Paquette 2002, p. 248
  23. Murray 1992, pp. 61–62
  24. Murray 1992, p. 39
  25. Murray 1992, pp. 43–44
  26. Murray 1992, p. 42
  27. ^ Murray 1992, p. 45
  28. US patent 442,599, "Glass-mold", issued 1890-12-16.
  29. US patent 19,953, "Inkstand", issued 1890-07-01.
  30. US patent 444,647, "Paper Weight", issued 1891-01-13.
  31. ^ Murray 1992, pp. 46–47
  32. Long & Seate 2003, pp. 181–182
  33. ^ Lechner & Lechner 1998, p. 67
  34. Murray 1992, p. 56
  35. ^ Murray 1992, pp. 48–49
  36. Murray 1992, pp. 59–60
  37. Paquette 2002, p. 181
  38. ^ Rider & Grubber 2018, p. 48
  39. ^ Paquette 2002, p. 182
  40. "(No title, lower right corner of page 22)". Paint, Oil and Drug Review. Chicago: D. Van Ness Person. 1891-12-16.
  41. Murray 1992, p. 58
  42. Lucht 2011, p. 7
  43. "Still Expanding". Crockery and Glass Journal. New York: Whittemore and Jaques, Inc. 1912-01-11.
  44. Fones-Wolf 2007, p. 87
  45. ^ Fones-Wolf 2007, pp. 93–94
  46. Lechner & Lechner 1998, p. 68
  47. ^ Paquette 2002, p. 65
  48. Paquette 2002, pp. 61–62
  49. ^ Paquette 2002, p. 183
  50. "Notes from the Glass Factories (next page)". Glass and Pottery World. Chicago: Porter, Taylor and Company. 1903-09-01.
  51. "News from the Glass Factories (next page)". Glass and Pottery World. Chicago: Porter, Taylor and Company. 1903-04-01. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  52. "Glimpses of Glass Makers". Glass and Pottery World. Chicago: Porter, Taylor and Company. 1904-08-01. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  53. Fostoria Glass Company (1906-01-01). "Fostoria Glass Company advertisement on page 39". Glass and Pottery World. Chicago: Porter, Taylor and Company.
  54. Fostoria Glass Company (1906-05-01). "Glimpses of Glass Houses". Glass and Pottery World. Chicago: Porter, Taylor and Company.
  55. ^ Prisant 2003, p. 93
  56. ^ Kovel & Kovel 1991, p. 3
  57. Kovel & Kovel 1991, p. 13
  58. ^ Schroy & Warman 2013, p. 124
  59. "Corning Museum of Glass - Acid Etching". Corning Museum of Glass. Retrieved 2018-05-28.
  60. "The Fitzwilliam Museum: Techniques of Glass Engraving". University of Cambridge. 2010-06-14. Retrieved 2018-05-28.
  61. "The New York Crockery and Glass District (2nd page, right column)". Crockery and Glass Journal. Whittemore and Jaques, Inc. 1912-03-07.
  62. "Abraham Lincoln's Inauguration March 4, 1861". America's Story from America's Library. Library of Congress. Retrieved 2020-01-07.
  63. "Crockery and Glass Journal (front page), Fostoria Quality Excels". Crockery and Glass Journal. Whittemore and Jaques, Inc. 1912-01-04.
  64. ^ Sullivan 2010, p. 188
  65. Schroy & Meyer 2017, p. 37
  66. Long & Seate 2003, pp. 6–8
  67. "Fostoria Glass Co". Moody's Manual of Railroads and Corporation Securities 1916 Vol. III. New York: Moody Publishing Company. 1916. Retrieved 2008-05-11.
  68. ^ Schramm 2004, Ch. 4 of e-book
  69. Long & Seate 2003, pp. 92–93
  70. Kovel & Kovel 1991, p. 48
  71. Kovel & Kovel 1991, pp. 86–87
  72. Kovel & Kovel 1991, p. 85
  73. Kovel & Kovel 1991, p. 58
  74. Long & Seate 2003, pp. 16–18
  75. Kovel & Kovel 1991, p. 26
  76. Long & Seate 2003, p. 53
  77. Long & Seate 2003, p. 46
  78. "Yours, for a toast to charm (advertisement)". Ladies' Home Journal. Philadelphia, PA: The Curtis Publishing Company. April 1948.
  79. Long & Seate 2003, p. 141
  80. Long & Seate 2003, pp. 90–91
  81. Long & Seate 2003, p. 181
  82. Venable et al. 2000, p. 305
  83. Rinker 1997, p. 97
  84. Long & Seate 2003, pp. 188–189
  85. Venable et al. 2000, pp. 177–178
  86. Venable et al. 2000, p. 178
  87. "". American Glass Review. Commoner Publishing Company. 1988.
  88. Schroy 2001, p. 244

References

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