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RRH</text>
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Sharp &amp; Dohme formed their pharmaceutical partnership in 1860, expanding to large scale manufacturing by 1865. Their Chicago branch opened in 1888, and an amber bottle made by Sharp &amp; Dohme was found at the Charnley-Persky House in 2015 (see below). A 1914 advertisement showing their seven branches across the U.S. is below. Sharp &amp; Dohme merged with Merck in 1953, renamed as March Sharp &amp; Dohme. Two years later, however, Merck had dropped the Sharp &amp; Dohme name, calling itself Merck &amp; Co. &#13;
RRH</text>
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                <text>Rebecca S. Graff (photograph)&#13;
Public Domain (advertisement)</text>
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Price Baking Powder Company was established in 1884, nearly twenty years after Vincent Price and Charles Steele first started manufacturing baking powder in Chicago. The company was most famous for its baking powder, but it also produced flavoring extracts, a bottle for which was found at the Charnley-Persky House in 2015 (see below). Price emphasized that his products were healthy, natural, and economical, as in the 1893 ad below. Price’s company was acquired by the Royal Baking Powder Company in 1899; Royal continued manufacture under Price’s name until 1917. &#13;
RRH</text>
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                <text>Rebecca S. Graff (photograph)&#13;
Public Domain (advertisement)</text>
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Brothers Benjamin and Samuel Foster brought young pharmacist Malcomb Fairchild into their drug manufacturing partnership in 1881. The company mostly sold digestive products, a bottle of which was found at the Charnley-Persky House in 2015 (see below).Their office is also below in an 1888 illustration. Fairchild Brothers &amp; Foster was acquired by the Sterling Drug Company in 1946.&#13;
RRH</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                <text>Rebecca S. Graff (photograph)&#13;
Chicago Tribune (Scherer image)</text>
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Andrew Scherer (pictured below in a 1941 Chicago Tribune article) opened his pharmacy on State and Division in 1886, five years after his first store. The pharmacy served many in the Gold Coast, and a bottle of Scherer’s was found at the Charnley-Persky House in 2010. Scherer’s Pharmacy suffered a massive fire in 1943, and, when Scherer died later that same year, the store was closed. Today, the building houses a CVS. &#13;
RRH</text>
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Roxbury Distilling Company produced liquor, most famously Roxbury Rye, from 1893 to 1910. The company’s founder, George T. Gambrill was convicted of fraud in 1910 and the company was shut down. Gambrill’s most famous product, Roxbury Rye, continued to be sold by other whiskey distributors until Prohibition, advertised below by Uncle Sam himself. A sherd of glass found at the Charnley-Persky House in 2010 bears the distillery’s name (pictured below).&#13;
RRH</text>
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RRH</text>
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Ryan J. Cook (photograph)</text>
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                <text>Ryan J. Cook (photograph)&#13;
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&#13;
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Founded in 1867, Armour quickly became one of the largest companies in the United States.Chicago and Union Stockyard quickly became the center of the American meatpacking industry; by 1880 Armour was Chicago’s leading industrial enterprise and employer. Armour also had an international reach, as evidenced by the 1911 French advertisement below. One of their milk glass jars was found at the Charnley-Persky House in 2010. Armour is still in business today, a subsidiary of Pinnacle Foods. &#13;
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                <text>Rebecca Graff (photograph)&#13;
Public Domain (advertisement)</text>
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                <text>Yergin's Russian Oil </text>
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                <text>1890-1922?&#13;
Frank Yergin sold his Paris, Illinois drugstore in 1890 with the intention of moving to Chicago to focus on manufacturing his own products. An advertisement for his Russian Oil is shown below; tin 1916, his wife is listed as the proprietor of Yergin’s Pharmacy. Frank died in 1920, his wife in 1922; the pharmacy likely closed soon after.&#13;
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                <text>1897-1922?&#13;
John J. Schmitt became a pharmacist at the turn of the 20th-century, opening his own drugstore at the corner of Clark and Arlington Place as early as 1897. He remained in the same location (pictured below in an undated photograph) at least until the early 1920s.&#13;
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                <text>Burley &amp; Company</text>
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                <text>1871-1923&#13;
In 1871, A. G. Burley &amp; Co. (established 1838) became Burley &amp; Tyrrell, importers of glassware and china; the retail business was sold to a nephew in 1883, calling itself Burley &amp; Co. (advertised below in 1902). The companies existed side by side until 1907, when they were rejoined; ceramic bases with makers’ marks from Burley &amp; Tyrrell and from Burley &amp; Co. were found at the Charnley-Persky House (See below). The company was sod to Albert Pick &amp; Co. in 1923. &#13;
RRH</text>
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="952">
                <text>Ryan J. Cook (photograph)&#13;
Public Domain (advertisement)&#13;
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                <text>An advertisement for The Consumers Company (1913), and a photograph of a porcelain bottle stopper from the company's Hydrox table water. </text>
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                <text>n.a. (1913). The Reform Advocate 45(1): 696.</text>
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                <text>University of Michigan Publishing (advertisement)&#13;
Ryan J. Cook (photograph)</text>
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="620">
                <text>Public Domain (advertisement)&#13;
Ryan J. Cook (photograph)</text>
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                <text>1852-present&#13;
E. H. Sargent was established in 1852; a bottle embossed with the company’s name was found at the Charnley-Persky House in 2010. In 1875, Sargent began marketing through a catalog, the first recorded mail order solicitation for laboratory supplies; a page from their 1910 catalog is below. In 1968, Sargent combined with Welch Scientific Company, becoming Sargent-Welch Scientific Company, which is still in business today.  &#13;
RRH</text>
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                <text>Public Domain (page from catalog)&#13;
Ryan J. Cook (photograph)&#13;
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                <text>Pim-Olas Ad</text>
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                <text>An advertisement for the Seville Packing Company's Pim-Olas olives.</text>
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                <text>http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/advertisement-for-pim-olas-olivette-relish-by-the-seville-news-photo/159641840</text>
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