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This advertisement ran on March 17, 1929 in the Chicago Sunday Tribune. |
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Glenbrook property with Chas. H. Phillips Chem. Co. mfg. plant |
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Chas. H. Phillips Chemical Co. plant blueprint |
Charles H. Phillips invented "Milk of Magnesia", a laxative, in 1873. He named this substance (
hydrate of magnesium, 8% solution with water) based on its milky appearance. Phillips manufactured and distributed this medicine through
the Chas. H. Phillips Chemical Company, the pharmaceutical company he founded in 1819, at his Glenbrook manufacturing plant in the city of Stamford, Connecticut. Phillips' Milk of Magnesia was manufactured solely at this location beginning in 1880 until 1976 (see maps/ diagrams to the right).
In 1923, Sterling Drug, Inc. acquired Chas. H. Phillips Chemical Co., and subsequently added three new products to the Milk of Magnesia line: Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Toothpaste in 1924, Phillips' Dental Magnesia & Tooth Powder in 1925, and Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tablets in 1931.
In 1995, Sterling Drug, Inc. was acquired by Bayer HealthCare, which still manufactures products in the Phillips' line today.
Phillips' Milk of Magnesia began embossing its trademark (see images above) on its bottles beginning in 1906 when it was patented. Bottles manufactured before this year are often seen with differing Phillips logos. For example, in an earlier rendition of the Phillips' Milk of Magnesia bottle, the logo appears as "C.H. PHILLIPS / NEW YORK" surrounding the double circled monogram in the center, followed by the text "PATENTED / APRIL 29th & JULY 22nd / 1873" below the logo. Also, it should be noted that some of the earliest Milk of Magnesia bottles had no embossments at all and made do with paper labels only.
In addition to the Phillips' Milk of Magnesia trademark, the Chas. H. Phillips Chemical Company trademark, a facsimile of Charles H. Phillips' signature (see image below), could be found on the bottle's label towards the bottom.
A general rule of thumb in dating these bottles, as there seems to be no identifying marks to assist in that job, is to look at the bottle's construction--particularly the closure type of the finish--and its trademark embossment on the body. The newest glass Milk of Magnesia bottles usually won't have any embossments at all on the body, and will have only the glass maker's marks on the base to help with the dating.
Bottles from 1906 to the 1920s usually have text embossed underneath the main logo stating its registration and/ or patent number.
Bottles manufactured from the '20s to the '60s will generally have the "traditional" logo seen previously embossed on the body of the bottle, with older ones including the text "TRADE MARK" above the monogram in the logo within the other circle.
The following are a collection of advertisements that the Chas. H. Phillips Co. ran from the 1920s to the 1950s.
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Ad - 1928 |
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Ad - 1929 |
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Ad - 1933 |
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Ad - 1932 |
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Ad - 1935 |
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Ad - 1947 |
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Ad - 1953 |
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Ad - 1948 |
Did the early bottles ever have a glass top?
ReplyDeletebottle diggers visited our town of Dayton, WA ~15 yrs ago and asked to excavate the old outhouse holes. among the prized finds were 2 cobalt blue Phillips MOM bottles with the glass dial-a-dose caps. searching tonite to find similar online referenced and cant find a single thing even mentioned about glass caps until reading your question regarding the glass top
ReplyDeleteI found my bottle digging a hole in the backyard. It has some milk of magnesia logo on a front it says the Chas H Phillips Chemical Company Glenbrook Connecticut. It has an m on the bottom on one side and looks like the number 3 on the other side. Any idea when the bottle was manufactured?
ReplyDeleteAugust 21 1906
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ReplyDeleteI have a 3" brass award to Charles Philips for Milk Of Magnesia 1873. If someone is interested or a family memeber wants it.
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ReplyDeleteI'm working on a book project about pharmaceutical history and we are interested in some of the Phillips' Milk of Magnesia advertisements you present on this page. Please get in touch so that I can send a more detailed inquiry.
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Are the 1906 bottles worth anything?
ReplyDeleteThis is a question for Connie. I have a Phillips Milk of Magnesia bottle from Glenbrook, Connecticut and it has a misprint on the Trade Mark. It has an M a 6 and an L on the bottom. I'm very curious how I could find out more info on this bottle. Thankyou
ReplyDeleteI have a blue bottle that says Genuine Phillips Made In USA on the bottom and I believe what is a M and a 6 also on the bottom but not side by side. Any ideas on date or place it was manufactured. Found in a bottle dig in Mississippi!
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the bottle i have i found in the wood and im very curious when it was made it has a a and a 6 on the bottom and says made in usa
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