Title:
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Welch's Grape Juice
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Description:
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Small advertisement, approximately 3 x 4 inches, for the Welch Grape Juice Company, Westfield, NY. In 1869, American physician and dentist, Thomas Bramwell Welch developed the method of pasteurizing grape juice to halt fermentation. Thus he was able to produce a non-alcoholic wine to be used for church services in his hometown of Vineland, New Jersey. His son, Charles E. Welch, who was also a dentist, eventually gave up his practice to promote grape juice. In 1893 he founded Welch's Grape Juice Company at Westfield, New York. The oldest extant structure associated with the company is Welch Factory Building No. 1, located at Westfield, and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.
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Subject:
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Advertising, Magazine
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Subject:
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Grape juice
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Subject:
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Periodicals -- Illustrations
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Subject:
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Welch Grape Juice Company
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Date:
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03/02/1905
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Type:
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Still Image
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Extent:
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3 x 4 inches
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Format/Medium:
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Advertisements
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Format/Medium:
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Illustrations (layout features)
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Source:
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Life, in Jen Library Archives and Special Collections, Savannah College of Art and Design.
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Relation:
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Catalog Record: https://library.scad.edu/record=b1122899
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Rights:
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Copyright is retained by the authors or artists of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
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Identifier:
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Volume 45, number 1166, page 262.
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