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Date: | Sun, 11 Nov 2001 18:47:28 -0500 |
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I'll cast my vote for the "whim" or expedient disposal area of trash -
having done so myself many times just so I could keep working and not have
to litter the place and pick it up later. When I tore up a c. 1930s
concrete patio once we found that the whole underlayment was trash
consisting of bottles, wire, blocks of scrap wood, paper, coal ash, etc. -
it made great fill.
Dan W.
At 04:48 PM 11/11/01 -0500, you wrote:
>UPSIDE DOWN BOTTLES
>
>For those of you who followed the garage-concrete rock faced construction
>block discussion interesting you might also be interested in our most
>recent find.
>
>We are still excavating the garage foundation walls make of concrete
>blocks. Each block has two internal holes or cavaties. On Friday we
>found two whole bottle had been placed in one of these holes upside
>down. The bottles(6" high) which are identical, are clear glass, medicine
>form, empty but with remnants of corks still in place. The only embossed
>lettering is on the base:
>
> C - Cedar
> 10
> MADE IN USA
>The "e" in Cedar is set inside the larger "C".
>
>Two Questions:
>
> (1) can anyone help with the bottle identification?
>
> (2) does anyone know of other examples of early (probably
>late teens or early 1920s) 20th century traditions of builders or workers
>putting such items in open spaces, especially in foundations? It may not be
>magic, perhaps just a whim, but it was certainly done
>on purpose.
> Bob Schuyler
>Robert L. Schuyler
>University of Pennsylvania Museum
>33rd & Spruce Streets
>Philadelphia, PA l9l04-6324
>
>Tel: (215) 898-6965
>Fax: (215) 898-0657
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>
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