Milk Bottle

From the collections of PVMA • Digital image © Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Assoc. • Image use information

About this item

Before the mass produced milk bottle, people carried and held their milk in cans. The first known use of factory-produced milk bottles was by the New York Dairy Company in the 1870s. The first patent for a milk container was issued in 1878 for a “milk jar;” the first patent for a milk bottle was issued in 1880. By the late 1890s, increasing concerns about the sanitation of milk led to a number of state-passed regulations requiring better, more sterile methods of delivering milk.  Steam-sterilized, individually sealed bottles became the standard for distribution. Smaller dairies often could not afford the equipment for sterilizing bottles so they shipped their milk to larger dairies. In order to keep track of their bottles, these dairies commissioned glass bottles with their logos annealed on them. This example comes from Snow’s Dairy in Greenfield, Massachusetts, one of the more than 150 known milk dealers in Franklin County from the 1890s to the 1960s, and still in operation in 2002.

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Details

Item typeFood Storage Equipment
Date1950
PlaceGreenfield, Massachusetts
TopicFood, Cooking, Beverage, Alcohol
EraCounterculture, Civil Rights, and Cold War, 1946–1989
MaterialGlass
Dimension detailsHeight: 8.50 in
Catalog #1985.0024.007
View this item in our curatorial database →
Milk Bottle. 1950. Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, American Centuries. https://americancenturies.org/collection/1985-0024-007/. Accessed on December 25, 2024.

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