I suspect that most of us still vividly recall finding their first pre-pro shot glass. For me, it was an antique show set up in the aisles of the Hilldale shopping mall in Madison, Wisconsin. The glass was high on a set of open shelves that defined the perimeter of the dealer's booth. The glass was delicate and pristine and the label intricate, with a monogram, grain stalks and the distillers name “Detrick” emblazoned across the face. Of course I NOW know Detrick glasses to be one of the ten most common pre-pro's and that’s taken away much of the pride in what would otherwise be considered a prized find. But that first buy did set me wondering about who made pre-pro glasses and why. Back in the days before the term “research” became equated with typing a phrase into a Google search box, finding answers to such questions was difficult. I spent much time in libraries and in conversation with dealers at bottle shows, all to no avail. Ultimately, it was Vic Kroll, a dealer in brewerania, who provided an answer. I found him through his brother Pete who, back in the late '80s, was running a snail-mail auction service called Glasses, Mugs & Steins. The auctions seldom had more than a handful of pre-pro glasses, but back in pre-eBay days, we were grateful for any reliable source (the hand-written notations in blue in the scan below are auction closing prices, in $).
Vic kindly
send me a flyer advertising a new book and
price guide entitled Historic Shot Glasses: The Pre-Prohibition Era,
written by Barbara Edmonson.
It’s difficult to adequately express in words the impact that this “guide” and its successor had -- and continues to have -- on those of us who collect old shot glasses. As one of our collecting colleagues recently wrote me, “did she know how many people hung/hang on her every word?” Sadly, Barbara Edmonson died in November 2004, shortly after reaching her 92nd birthday and after a lifetime of career and personal achievements. Those of us who appreciate old glasses lost a great friend. |
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Barbara Edmonson was born Barbara Ann Turner on October 15, 1912 in Kansas
City, Missouri. She was the eldest of three children. Prohibition was enacted
when she was seven but even so, she recalled frequent lunchtime visits to
speak-easies with her father while her mother was back home brewing beer in the
kitchen! I was also amazed to learn that as a teenager, Barb became one of the
region’s first female pilots. After graduating high school, she moved on to
college, but quickly tired of it and returned home. She then joined her father
at his sporting goods store in the city, working as a traveling sales rep.
When the US was dragged into the Second World War, Barb joined the Foreign
Economic Administration and was sent to Turkey. The FEA was a government body
established in 1943 to oversee wartime imports/exports, foreign aid, and various
other activities such as economic warfare. When her service with the FEA was
over, Barb returned home and found herself a position working with young
children. She became interested in child psychology as a result and then began
a long period of academic training, securing first a B.A., then an M.A., and
finally a Ph.D. She also married Milton B. Edmonson during this time (1951),
though the couple divorced 12 years later.
Barb’s fascination for shot glasses surfaced while living in Columbus, Ohio.
After gaining her Ph.D., she joined the faculty of Ohio State University as an
Associate Professor teaching Psychology. In her free time, she would scour flea
markets for interesting collectibles that she would then resell at antique
shows. Paul Van Vactor remembers first meeting her when setting up a table next
to hers at a show in Ann Arbor, Michigan, sometime in the late 60’s or early
70’s. She had a special affection for pre-prohibition glasses, partly because
of the quaint names of the brands that they advertised and perhaps also because
they reminded her of her childhood years in Missouri.
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