Imperial Glass Company

The Imperial Glass Company is located in Bellaire, Ohio with a factory located on 29th Street and the offices located on Belmont Street. The factory was razed in 1995 to make room for commercial development and the Belmont Street location was transformed into a museum known as the National Imperial Glass Museum.[2] The building was placed on the National Register on 1983-09-08.

Imperial Glass Company
The Imperial Glass Museum in Bellaire, Ohio
Location29th and Belmont Sts., Bellaire, Ohio
Coordinates40°0′41″N 80°44′49″W
Built1903
ArchitectForney, Harry E.
NRHP reference No.83001945[1]
Added to NRHPSeptember 08, 1983

History

The Imperial Glass Company was founded in 1901 by Edward Muhleman, with production beginning in 1904. The handmade glasswares were sold worldwide and were usually made of pressed glass patterns. The factory located at 29th Street was labeled as one of the largest glass factories under one roof.[3] The company's most famous product is their "Candlewick" series, which even has a street named for it in Bellaire.

The company hit rough times in the early 1970s and was close to bankruptcy. Imperial was saved by Lenox and turned to general manufacture, but low demand eventually led to its closure in 1984. The building on Belmont Street was eventually turned into a museum housing many pieces from the company's long run, as well as a history of the company.[4]

gollark: People disagree on politics more than... science things, I guess.
gollark: I mean, I'm just generally... in favour of free speech, not nazism or whatever?
gollark: If freedom of speech extends to freedom of *communication* too you should probably also ban, say, computer viruses.
gollark: That's also separate from being free to *believe* things you might not agree with.
gollark: It depends what you mean by "freedom of speech", really, it's a loosely defined term.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.