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Toy Mug

ManufacturerProbably Adams and Company American, 1861-1891
Date1876-1880
DimensionsH: 5.1 cm (2 in.); Rim Diam: 4.55 cm (1 25/32 in.); Base Diam: 4.55 cm (1 25/32 in.); W (with handle): 6.2 cm (2 7/16 in.)
MediumOpal non-lead glass.
ClassificationGlass
Credit LineGift of Mrs. Harold G. Duckworth
Object number
1965.98
Not on View
Collections
  • Glass
Published ReferencesMarsh, Tracy H., The American Story Recorded in Glass, Minneapolis, MN, author, 1962, p. 289, no. 237 (bearing the names of Rutherford B. Hayes and William A. Wheeler, the successful candidates for president and vice-president in 1876 and marked on the base "Adams & Co. Glass Works").

Ferson, Regis F. and Mary Fleming Ferson, Yesterday's Milk Glass Today, Pittsburgh, authors, 1981, p. 171, no. 674.

Wilson, Kenneth M., American Glass, 1760-1930: The Toledo Museum of Art, New York: Hudson Hills Press in association with the Toledo Museum of Art, [Lanham, Md.]: National Book Network [distributor], c1994; 2 v. (879 p.): ill. (some col.); 32 cm., 1994, p. 507, no. 847.

Label TextAt the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1876 Adams and Company pleased the children with toy mugs decorated with a bell in crystal (colorless) or opaque white glass. Opal (opaque white or so-called milk glass) became popular in pressed pattern glass about 1880 and continued in popularity until about 1900.
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1875-1880
Toy Mug
1880-1900
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Toy Mug
1855-1875
Dish and Cover
Indiana Tumbler and Goblet Company
1898-1900
Mug
1850-1860
Pitcher
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1910-1920 or 1931-1940
Canton Glass Company
1892-1895
Goblet
Bakewell, Pears and Company
1870-1881

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