Difference between revisions of "American Goldy Stopper Company"

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{{Infobox_Industry
 
{{Infobox_Industry
| primary_business=
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| primary_business=Seal Maker
| primary_town =  
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| primary_town = Oakland, California
| primary_dates=
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| primary_dates=-1914
 
| predecessors=
 
| predecessors=
| successors=
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| successors=[[United States Aluminum Company]]
 
| brands=
 
| brands=
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 06:29, 27 November 2014

Summary
Business

Seal Maker
Main Location

Oakland, California
Active

-1914
Successors

United States Aluminum Company

The American Goldy Stopper Company was an Oakland-based manufacturer run by Julius Landsberger, with offices in San Francisco and probably a plant at 1001 22nd Avenue in Oakland[1]. The company was founded in 1910 by Landsberger, using American rights to foreign patents[2]. The company was apparently was sold to the United States Aluminum Company in 1914[3].

Goldy caps or goldy seals used an aluminum cap to press a cork-lined disk against the top of a bottle; the aluminum was torn off in the initial opening. The seal was invented in 1897, but "did not gain real popularity until the standardization of machine-made bottles beginning in the early 1910's. It was particularly common for catsup bottles[4].

References

  1. 1915 Polk-Husted Oakland City Directory. American Goldy Stopper Company, J.A. Landsberger president. 1001 22nd Ave.
  2. With the Bottler in the Golden West: November 15, 1910 American Bottler
  3. Historic Aluminum Resources of Southwestern Pennsylvania
  4. Types of Bottle Closures: Society for Historical Archaeology: Bottle Finishes and Closures.