Updated: Jan 15
The FOHBC put on an amazing, once-in-a-lifetime event at Houston24
An upcoming issue of the FOHBC (Federation of Historical Bottle Collectors) magazine, Antique Bottles & Glass Collector, will do a very comprehensive review of all the great things that happened at their national bottle expo held in Houston, Texas, earlier this month - in the 48-year history of the FOHBC, this was the FIRST national expo held in Texas! I just want to share with you some of my own observations and highlights. Every corner of this event was defined by colors, shapes, varieities, and rarities - from the bottles and events to the people and the purchases - as I will now demonstrate to you:
Bottle Exhibitions at the Museum
No matter whatever type of bottles you collect, there were priceless beauties there that you would love. The American Antique Glass Masterpieces exhibition took over the breathtaking display hall where Faberge treasures had previously been on exhibit and those bottles had all the color, glitter, and glamour of the hall's previous occupants. The David P. Wilber and Anthony Gugliotti Barber Bottle Collections, the second special bottle exhibit at the Houston Museum of Natural Science, was a real surprise for me because I knew nothing about barber bottles but quickly learned that the range of shape, color, and subject matter is absolutely amazing. Fabulous large format "coffee table" books of these two exhibits are available through the FOHBC website and they are well worth the investment. (Unfortunately, my many photos of these two exhibitions have disappeared from my computer, but these two books more than make up for those losses!)
The Bottle Shows
Even before the official Houston24 at Hotel ZaZa, a first-ever, outdoor tailgating event, called "Glass in the Grass," happened at the home of Ferd and Elizabeth Meyer. From dealers selling out of their trunks to free breakfast tacos and the unparalleled collections of the Meyers that we were allowed to go see, it was an awesome start to the events that started the next day. I had a great time there and hope they do it again every year!

The Houston24 Bottle Expo was filled with great bottles and glass for sale. Dealers from something like 38 states and four foreign countries were set up and selling! I loved hearing Australian and British accents wafting through the air!
I managed to find a bunch of things to buy that filled my need for that next great find! First, I bought the exhibition books mentioned above as well as the cobalt Drake's Plantation Bitters - mine starts out dark cobalt from the lip and neck down to about the first row of shingles, then it thins out to medium blue, then back to cobalt blue on the bottom third of the bottle, plus it has a swirl or two of cobalt here and there. Even though it's a commemorative bottle, it's one of just 250 made so quite limited - and it's my very first figural bitters, so that makes me happy too. There was also a reproduction label provided with each bottle and I couldn't resist putting it onto my new cobalt Drake's Bitters! Talk about a taste of the past!
I also purchased a bottle of Carboline for the Hair with full label, full contents, complete box, and box booklet included - I will show and discuss this find in a future blog post! I then purchased a bunch of advertising trade cards (I have collected these for years) and found some real beauties very reasonably priced. I love this American Eagle Tobacco card and am happy to show it off as an example from the dozen-plus cards I purchased.

The Displays
I got to work with all of the displayers - 17 in all (that's got to be close to the most displays at a National) - and it was a great experience to work with them; what a great bunch of collectors and subject matter experts, willing to go through significant effort and expense to set up displays of their finest items with no other compensation than to educate and entertain all who wanted to come look and learn. Every display was exciting and beautiful, and each was very different from the others, which made it even better.
I was one of the displayers and was honored to be voted to have the "Most Educational" display and also to be the "Best of Show". Pictures of my two awards are shown on the "About" page that you see at the top of this page. For those who were unable to make it to the show, I'm posting images below of the four major sections. It took us 13 1/2 hours to set it up and I promised my family we'll never do that again(!), so these photos will have to be the lasting memory of the effort.





The Seminars
The Houston24 seminars ranged from 17th century witch bottles and pairings of precious glass and minerals to the "Holy Grail" Cobalt of cobalt bottles (the Fish Bitters / Old Homestead Wild Cherry Bitters / and the Sazerac Aromatic Bitters) and digging for bottles in Galveston. I gave the first seminar and I was so gratified by the many, many questions and compliments that were shared with me over the rest of the show. Given all the interest, I have published a blog entry, 'Weaponized Witch Bottles" (see "My Blog" posted on 10 August).
The Auction
I had one more big surprise coming when my hand went up for what turned out to be the winning bid on the very first lot of the auction! Every day since, I have become happier and happier to have been the winning bidder for this beautiful reverse painting on glass Hostetter's Stomach Bitters sign. It's one of six stunning reproductions of the original that has decayed almost completely over the last several decades. I just looked over my shoulder once again while writing this and I just can't believe it's on my wall. It was a great splurge after months of effort to build my display, prepare my seminar, and help the FOHBC recruit all the other seminar presenters and display exhibitors.

Night at the Museum
The great "Dinosaur Banquet" wasn't the last event but it's a great spot to end my review. Surrounded by enormous dinosaur skeletons leering down at us, with their big teeth readied to make US their dinners, it was an evening for my wife and I to remember.
Once again, to my surprise, I was given the 3rd Place award for Best Website - yup, the one you're reading right now. Please spread the word about my website and keep reading it yourself. Please, please post your comments when you've particularly enjoyed one of my blog posts so I know what kind of stories are resonating with my readers. Also remember to click on my book covers on the Home page so that you can go for free to all four volumes of my book. Read it, research from it; be surprised at what it contains. Just like this website, my seminar, and my displays, everything I do, I'm doing free for your enjoyment. If I know you're out there and enjoying it, I'll keep doing it.
Until next time, this is Promising Cures and I'm you're host --Andy Rapoza
Lynn Massachusetts history - History of medicine - 19th-Century Health Remedies - Vintage Medical Ephemera - 19th-century medicine
This is my personal invitation to you, my reader and my friend, to come to the most amazing assortment of bottles and glass that you’ll likely ever get to see in one place. But like watching for a meteor shower or a rainbow, you better be ready for it, before it’s gone forever. Give me a few minutes and I’ll tell you why this event will be something you’ll really enjoy.
It’s important to me that you understand right here and now that everything I’m going to tell you about this once-in-a-lifetime event are my own thoughts and feelings about it – nobody put me up to doing a blog post about it – I’m doing it because I really think my friends and readers would enjoy it immensely if they visited even one or two days of the event. Many of the members of the Montgomery County Historical Commission and the Conroe Community Cemetery Research Project

read this blog, so please consider this your invitation to catch a rainbow of colorful memories that will stay with you for the rest of your life. I’m also not trying to list everything there is to do and see at this show – at the bottom of this post I will attach a link to the Event Information Packet that does a great job telling you about everything this show has in store for you – I strongly encourage you to look through it.
Before we get too deep in the weeds, let me explain that I’m referring to the extravaganza that is being called Houston24 – the National Antique Bottle & Glass Expo. It’s a mega-event put on by the Federation of Historical Bottle Collectors (FOHBC), the nationwide organization for people who love antique bottles and glass. It’s being held at the Hotel ZaZa Museum District in Houston, on 1-4 August, so it’s just a month away! The Expo is being hosted and underwritten by the Houston Museum of Natural Science (across the street from Hotel ZaZa), which includes hosting two major bottle exhibitions at the museum during the Expo! Much more about what’s in it for you later in this blog post.
Most of my friends who read my blog do so because they enjoy history. Stories of days long past, usually before our own lives began. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but I capture this history primarily by looking at objects made of paper and glass – two of the most delicate, easily destroyed materials that man makes. Yet many paper and glass objects from centuries past survive into the 21st century. Paper items usually survive because they were tucked away in drawers, trunks, or books, but bottles are actually the “tough guys” of the antique world. I’ve been in many deep pits in the ground where only glass is found.
The 18th and 19th century person didn’t just throw glass into their trash pits and outhouse holes, but that’s often the only thing that survives. There’s nothing like finding a bottle – ridiculously, improbably thin glass protecting empty space inside its fragile walls – completely intact, despite the literal tons of dirt and stones on top of it, cars parked over it, or even buildings constructed above it. Just crazy.
Metal rusts and ultimately dissolves altogether; fabrics can’t stand up to moisture or bugs; leather rots and wood turns to mush in Mother Earth. Even we humans, who like to think of ourselves as the King of the Hill on this planet, so tough that we can beat anything nature throws at us, will someday end up in the ground where we will decay down to our bones – and eventually, as the Bible says, “unto dust thou shalt return.”
When it’s all over, cockroaches and bottles may be all that survive!
Of the two, I only admire and collect bottles.

Looking at an antique bottle is a transformative experience. You know you’re admiring a fragile old container that probably came out of the ground or from some dusty corner of a barn or attic, but there it is. Maybe the glass is a beautiful color that reminds you of honey, or strawberries, or the water in your swimming pool. Perhaps what catches your eye is the shape it was formed into – an old cabin, an ear of corn, or even a fish. You might even find yourself picking up a bottle that still has its ancient label promising the courageous customer to drink its contents for a cure of their annoying cough or even life-threatening cancer. Every one of them is a fabulous discovery with a story to tell. Look around – the tables at Houston24 are loaded with thousands of them. You find yourself standing in a living museum – a fantasy flea market of centuries-old treasures. You suddenly realize this is a great way to spend a day of your summer vacation!
So, as promised, here are the things I’d like to tell you about this amazing event – in my own words. Like the song goes, these are a few of my favorite things …

A Rare National Event. This National Bottle and Glass Expo is a rare and exotic bird in its own right – no other bottle show in the country is quite like it. Every few years it shows up in different spots all over the U.S.A.; I believe there have been 36 expos over the last 47 years. This year’s expo in Houston is the first anywhere in Texas in the history of the FOHBC; I’m 69, so I strongly suspect that this will be the only expo in Texas in my lifetime. This is a NATIONAL EXPO – not just another show. If you live in Texas, you really need to visit this expo, before it’s gone forever!
Displays & Seminars. There are going to be a bunch of folks selling an amazing array of bottles, but there will also be 7 top-notch seminars and 17 killer displays to see. Collectors from around the country are pouring out their heart and soul to show you the pride of their collections through their presentations and displays. They spend months selecting which pieces and putting together awesome displays and fascinating seminars so that you can enjoy looking at and learning about them. The displayers pack up, transport, unpack, set up, display, pack up again, and transport them all back home and not a one earns a single penny for doing all this – we do it out of love and pride in our collections and to share what we have and what we know with everyone who comes by for a visit. That’s pure love, my friends. How can you not want to see all that love and passion in one place?
Kids on Display. Before I get off the subject of displays, I’ve got to share something very special that will be happening this year: Display Table #1 will have a display called “Kids Digging Texas,” put together by Grayson, Crosby, and Lyla – two brothers and a sister, ages 13, 9, and 7! They go bottle digging frequently with their dad and they will be showing some amazing bottles they have found, along

with others they enjoy collecting. Crosby will even have his book, Old Bottles, on display that he wrote and illustrated for a school project! These kids represent the future of our hobby, so please make sure to visit and talk with them about their display. Their enthusiasm and excitement about bottles will be a great way for you to start your experience at the show!
Variety of People. Something else I’m going to love about this show is the variety of people that are going to be there. For example: our displayers are coming from California, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Florida, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Texas; our seminar presenters are coming from California, North Dakota, Wisconsin, and Texas; and we have attendees coming from more than half of the states in the U.S., plus Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and Great Britain. How much fun it will be to meet fellow collectors and bottle enthusiasts from all over the country and the world. I am genuinely looking forward to making a bunch of new friends in this great hobby. Normally it might be tricky for a guy from Australia to have a conversation with a guy from Louisiana, but they both talk the language of antique bottles, so that story will have a happy ending!

Variety of Bottles. Let me help my non-bottle friends to have their eyes opened a little bit – here’s a pop-quiz:
In 20 seconds, how many kinds of bottles can you list out loud? Answer: There are lots and lots of bottle types! Your list may have had liquor bottles, soda bottles, perfume bottles, beer bottles, and, if you’re an old guy like me, you might even remember milk bottles. Well, just a hundred years ago, there were no liquids in unbreakable cartons, and glass bottles carried everything from candy to fire extinguisher chemicals! There will be a huge selection of bottle types being sold on the show floor and I will be learning what the bottle dealers are bringing to Houston right along with you! But since I’m in charge of the displays, I can tell you that just among those 17 displays you will see soda water bottles, cabin-shaped bottles, an extremely rare Indian bitters bottle, pontiled snuff bottles, Texas pottery, cider bottles, soda bottles, reverse glass signs and bottles, barbershop bottles and much more!

Partnered with a Major Museum! The FOHBC’s Houston24 Expo was clearly going to be a really big event in Houston no matter what, but its relationship with the Houston Museum of Natural Science turns this into a classic, once-in-a-lifetime event. The museum is hosting TWO major exhibitions of antique bottles while Houston24 is being held across the street. A world-class collection of American antique bottles and another of stunningly beautiful barber bottles. There will even be full-color exhibition catalogs of both exhibitions for sale. So you can go to the museum to be inspired by great glass treasures and then walk over to the show across the street to buy a bottle and start your own epic exhibition!
Dinosaur Banquet. On Friday night, August 2nd, the FOHBC and the Museum of Natural Science are joining together again to have a banquet right in the middle of the museum’s dinosaur exhibit! How amazing is this going to be – eating your meal under the massive skeletons of these ancient monsters, staring down at you from their hollow eyes, with giant teeth sizing you up as the next meal for their very empty stomachs! There’s no way you’re ever going to forget this evening among the dinosaurs!
“Glass in the Grass”. The genius behind Houston24 – the Wizard behind our Oz – is the passionate bottle collector and expert, Ferdinand Meyer V. On July 31st, one day before Houston24 begins, he and Elizabeth, his brave and equally skilled life partner, have added still more to the festivities for antique bottle and glass enthusiasts, by opening their Texas hacienda to a first-ever “Glass in the Grass” event. Under the shade of their pecan trees, dealers will be selling their amazing bottles from the tailgates of their trucks and the trunks of their cars. This event is free to the public. I believe this will become a

new Texas tradition – the Houston version of a very popular tailgating event that was held for years in Connecticut in the autumn.
Some of the events, like the seminars and the Glass in the Grass are free and others cost just five bucks if you come on August 3rd or 4th (Saturday or Sunday). My seminar on Friday, for example, is one of the freebies – yup, I’m cheap – but I guarantee I’ll tell you some things about old bottles and history that you’ve never heard about before! Actually all three seminars on Friday and the two on Saturday are free to the public – and they’re all going to be extremely interesting!
For all the details click on the link below. From the Kids Digging Texas to the Dinosaur Banquet, this is going to be one very special, Texas-sized event. Please plan on visiting Houston24 – you really will be glad you did. See you there!
I am going to be one of the seminar speakers and a displayer at Houston24. I hope to see YOU there, taking in my free seminar or visiting my display – just two of the many things to see and do at this great Houston experience.
