South Jersey's Antique Bottle & Glass Club's Annual Show at Batsto Village Sept 26

Date: 3 August 2004

The South Jersey's Antique Bottle & Glass Club will be holding their 21st Annual Bottle & Antique Show & Sale at Historic Batsro Village on September 26, 2004.Show Chairman Paul Delguercio explains, "this is an outdoor show set up around the Mansion at Batsto Village.

Batsto was an iron forge in the 1770's where cannon balls were made for the Revolutionary War. It then became a glass factory in the 1860's. The show features over 80 dealers, around half are bottle dealers and the rest have table top antiques and furniture."

Last year the show's attendance was over 6,000 people. The show runs from 9am to 4pm. Delguercio adds, "admittance is free and there is plenty of food available. Tables are also always available if dealers are interested."

The show is located (from the south off Rte 30) on Rte 542 Pleasant Mills Road, 7 miles north of Hammonton, New Jersey; and, (from the north) take exit 52 on the Garden State Parkway and follow signs (15 miles) to Batsto Village.

600450 South Jersey's Antique Bottle & Glass Club's Annual Show at Batsto Village Sept 26 glassonweb.com

See more news about:

Others also read

The glass sector has the increasingly widespread requirement of having an unlimited catalogue of parametric shapes and creating new ones in a simple way without being an expert in the field.
Glass Confusion is starting the New Year with Beginning Fused Glass group classes. The three-week course will be held Wednesdays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and again from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Shoaib Akhtar is going to be back on Indian TV screens. He is going to be featured in the new TV ad campaign for Asahi Glass.
Worldwide glass-substrate capacity is expected to continue to grow more than 40% each quarter through 2005, as a result of capacity expansion by existing glass-substrate suppliers and new companies joining the market, according to DisplaySearch.
Western Pennsylvania’s once-thriving glassmaking industry is dwindling, as did the domestic steel industry and for many of the same reasons: competition and cost.
Christmas got a little bluer for the local glass industry this week with the closure of yet another plant.

Add new comment