Glass Discussion & Research. NO IDENTIFICATION REQUESTS here please. > New Zealand & Australia Glass

History of the Auckland Bottle Works (Penrose / Australian Glass Manufacturers)

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popawheelie:
Hello, I am a post-grad museum studies student doing some work on Agee preserving jars. I have a copy of Angela's NZ Glass (2nd Edition) but wanted to go deeper with my research re the early years of the Penrose factory. It seems that much of the information that was online, has disappeared since Visy bought the company in 2020. Ive looked at the National Library etc but have still come up short. Does anyone have any other suggestions for me please?

gaspy1:
I have a very small amount of information, gathered in my collecting of NZ Glass history. I've got more on Christchurch than Penrose, nothing on Agee jars, and it probably won't add to what you already know, but if I can help, let me know.  Stuart Park

popawheelie:
Thanks for engaging Stuart. In NZ Glass Angela writes that the glass at Penrose is (present tense?) made using silica sand from the far north. She tells us that from 1922 to 1927 the factory only produced amber beer bottles until they got their second furnace in 1927 and expanded. The particular jar Im looking into is an amber glass jar from the (i think) 1940s. My assumption is that the sand in the early days may have come from somewhere closer to home. I don't know much about glass making, but wonder why you'd pay for those transportation costs for silica sand from the far north, only to make amber glass. Any thoughts?

gaspy1:
The answer will be in the chemistry of the sand, rather than its colour.  Do you know James' Macks account of going with his father to the night shift at Penrose, where he worked.  As a 10year old James went to the factory and was fascinated to see the workers “pluck red hot beer bottles from the production line and fashion them into things fantastical.  Their best efforts were swan ashtrays, sensitively conceived but crudely rendered."

Some of the "fantastical" ashtrays I have are beer bottle brown, but some are clear. 

Anne:

--- Quote from: gaspy1 on March 23, 2022, 01:34:03 AM ---I have a very small amount of information, gathered in my collecting of NZ Glass history. I've got more on Christchurch than Penrose, nothing on Agee jars, and it probably won't add to what you already know, but if I can help, let me know.  Stuart Park

--- End quote ---

Stuart I've removed your email address from your post to prevent it being picked up by spambots that crawl the board. You have the email me function enabled in your profile, so anyone wanting to email you can click on the wee envelope below your name and send you an email that way safe from spammers.

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