Glass Gems

There is a fascinating story behind the relationship between the Fenton
Art Glass Company and the Allan B. Wrisley Company in the late 1930's.
This article will explore this association and the subsequent production
of hobnail vanity items for Wrisley, which were very unique. This foray
into the hobnail line would prove crucial to Fenton's financial well
being during a very difficult economic time for the company.

Although Fenton's first piece of hobnail was a Ruby Overlay lamp font
made in 1935 for Lightolier, it was not until several years later that the
company was induced to manufacture hobnail glass in larger quantities. In
1936, L.G. Wright Glass Company approached Fenton with some old
hobnail moulds. Heacock states in his book, "Fenton Glass - The Second
Twenty-Five Years", (page 44, item #246), that this Wright hobnail mould
found in Indiana, PA was probably made around 1900 by The Northwood
Glass Company from an old Hobbs, Brockunier & Company mould.

Frank L. Fenton (the original founder of Fenton Art Glass) just happened
to have a sample of this Wright bottle on his desk when Fenton's Chicago
representative, Martin Simpson, stopped by Frank's office. Martin asked
Frank if he could take the bottle with him and he returned with it to
Chicago. It was sitting on his desk when a buyer from the Wrisley Perfume
Company spied it. Apparently they were looking for new marketing tools to
increase sales of their perfume. It seems that often the perfume bottle sold
the perfume.
Typical Hobb's ground
and polished pontil on
canary bottle.
This web article is an update
to an earlier version hosted on
John Gager's web site:
The Fenton Company was approached to determine if they could produce a
facsimile of this bottle for Wrisley. Frank Fenton told them that they could,
but the bottle would have to be modified in order to make the production
costs feasible. The neck was shortened and the neck interior was widened to
accept the wooden and cork stopper that replaced the metal or porcelain
stopper that was on the original Hobbs "Dewdrop" design bottle from the
1890's. Wrisley asked for a test run and decided they did not want the more
expensive bottle produced for Wright.
L to R: Fenton Cranberry opalescent
hobnail barber bottle for L.G. Wright,
Canary hobnail bottle by Hobbs and
Brockunier, white opalescent hobnail
bottle by Hobbs.
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L to R: Original long neck on L.G.
Wright bottle, modified neck for
Wrisley.
The Early History of Fenton Hobnail
and associated perfume production of the 1940s/1950s.
By Michael and Lori Palmer