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Glass show highlights once-thriving Pa. industry

Post Time:Jul 21,2014Classify:Company NewsView:482

WASHINGTON, Pa. (AP) - Glass collectors will gather this weekend to celebrate what once was clearly a part of the region’s industrial heritage at the 39th annual Duncan & Miller Glass Show & Sale, July 19 and 20, at the Washington County Fair Ground and Expo Center.

 

The event raises funds for the National Duncan & Miller Glass Museum in Washington and provides enthusiasts with an opportunity to purchase collectibles and to learn how southwestern Pennsylvania once produced more than half of the world’s decorative and utilitarian glass.

 

The show is pretty spectacular,” says Arlene Ricker of North Strabane, a volunteer with the National Duncan Glass Society, which runs the museum and organizes the two-day event. “Thousands of pieces will be on display - a lot of it Duncan & Miller, but other makers, too. There will be plenty of people who love to talk about glass.”

 

Ricker became involved with the society through her own Duncan & Miller Glass Co. collection, including the signature swan.

 

They did a lot of interesting things over the years. They went through the same design phases the rest of the decorator world went through, but the swan is their iconic piece,” she says. “The production of each one required 14 skilled craftsmen.”

 

At its peak, Duncan & Miller was one of the region’s most successful glassmakers, out-competing dozens of neighboring companies in quality and design, says museum committee chairwoman Sherry Cooper of East Washington.

 

Duncan & Miller sold their glass at Bailey Banks & Biddle, Kaufmann’s, Shreve, Crump & Low in Boston - stores of that caliber. Like all the companies, they stayed alive by producing millions of items for barbershops and bars. But their forte was high-end tableware, on par with Orrefors, Baccarat and Saint-Louis.”

 

The company’s roots date to the mid-1800s, when glassmaking procedures were rapidly advancing and coal was readily available to fuel the furnaces used to melt sand to be made into glass. “It’s rumored that factory workers from some companies would simply dig coal out of nearby hillsides,” Cooper says.

 

George Duncan was a partner in Ripley & Co. at 10th and Carson streets on the South Side, Cooper says. “After Ripley died, Duncan bought out the heirs in 1874 and named the company after himself.”

 

He produced blown and pressed glass pieces and, with the rise of the middle class, began making tableware with a soda ash and calcium carbonate formula (soda lime) that yielded a cheap alternative to leaded glass.

 

After Duncan died and his South Side factory burned down, his sons moved operations to Washington, opening a state-of-the-art factory in 1893. Their renowned designer, John Ernest Miller, moved with them and became a partner in 1900.

 

Miller designed the iron molds that became pitchers, creamers and other items, and was excellent at it,” says Cooper. “There are a number of patents in his name.”

 

The company employed skilled craftsmen who could execute Miller’s work, she says. “Being able to blow glass into an iron mold and have pieces release cleanly without chipping or breaking is an art.”

 

It was a winning combination that would spawn generations of collectors.

 

The company was unbelievably successful. They shipped glass all over the world,” says Cooper, who once spied a Duncan & Miller swan at a London flea market

 

 

 

Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/jul/18/glass-show-highlights-once-thriving-pa-industry/?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS#ixzz383pOTa30

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Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/jul/18/glAuthor: shangyi

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