Jamestown England established
Jamestown in its
Colony of Virginia in May 1607. Slightly over one year later, an attempt was made to produce glass in the colony. At the time, glassmaking back in England failed to thrive because the use of wood as fuel for glassmaking furnaces was discouraged and eventually prohibited. While England would later develop the first glassmaking furnace powered by coal, it was still in the early stages of development. This fuel problem led England to become dependent on
Venice and other European cities for its glass needs. In contrast,
North America appeared to have a massive number of forests, having great potential for glassmaking. Captain
John Smith, explorer and leader of the colony, discussed the difficulties of making glass in the new colony. The site of the Jamestown glass works was described by Smith and mentioned by writer
William Strachey. Ruins were discovered in 1931, leading to the belief that the
Jamestown glass works was located about from Jamestown at a place now known as
Glass House Point. Some structural and artifact evidence was discovered in the 1920s. Although still speculative and lacking good evidence, it is theorized that bottles or beads were produced. Glassmaking began shortly after the first glassworkers arrived, with the supply ship carrying sample glassware on its return voyage. It is believed that production of glass ended during the difficult winter of 1609–1610, a period known as the
Starving Time. In 1621, plans were made to revive glassmaking at Jamestown. The plan was for beads and "drinckinge Glasse" products to be produced by four Italian men who would come to Jamestown with their families. The glassworkers sailed for Jamestown in late August 1621. A glass house was constructed, but the
Massacre of 1622 and sickness delayed progress. No glass had been produced by June 1622. The exact location of the glass works used in 1622 is unknown, with no definitive evidence of the type of glass produced. It is known that beads were traded with the local Native Americans, so it is possible that glass beads were the intended product. There is evidence that the furnace was working during March 1623, but due to issues with the quality of sand, output was said to be near zero. After the winter of 1623–1624, the glass works became inactive. In April 1625 it was decided to end the glassmaking project. Production failure was attributed to inadequate security, food supply, quality of sand, and disagreement among supervisors and glass workers. Although glass was produced at Jamestown, longer term success did not happen in 1608 or during a second attempt in the 1620s.
Northern colonies The
Colony of Massachusetts Bay was located north of Jamestown. There, in 1639, colonists
Obadiah Holmes and
Lawrence Southwick formed a partnership to start a glassmaking facility. A year later, they were joined by glassman Ananias Concklin. Together, they received funding from the town of
Salem, Massachusetts, in 1641. According to a Southwick family descendant, "hollow ware and bottles" were made at the glass works in "light green, dark green, blue and brown glass." They also described "bulls eyes for windows and doors" that were made, which implies the Crown method was used for making window glass. Some historians believe the works operated sporadically until as late as 1661, while others believe it shut down earlier in 1642 or 1643. During the 1620s, the
Dutch colony in North America maintained the
New Amsterdam trading post and settlement in what is now the lower part of
Manhattan in
New York City. Everett Duijcking established a glassmaking facility in the colony around 1645. Duijcking was a German from
Westphalia, although his native town was close to the border with the Netherlands. Jacob Melyer took over Duijcking's glass works in 1674. Johannes Smedes, another New Amsterdam glassmaker, received a portion of land in 1654 adjacent to what became known locally as "Glass-makers Street". In 1664, the same year Dutch occupation ended, Smedes sold his glass works and moved to Long Island. His products were believed to be window glass, bottles, and house wares. The
Free Society of Traders built a glass factory close to Philadelphia in the
Province of Pennsylvania during the early 1680s. The works, located at
Frankford, was managed by Joshua Tittery, who was also a potter. They produced bottles and window panes for several years under the guidance of English glass blowers. Glass making was not a productive endeavor in the Pennsylvania Colony; Tittery had more success producing pottery. A 1684 letter written by Philip Lehman, secretary to
William Penn, the founder of the colony, confirms the demise of the glass factory: "[The] Glasshouse comes to nothing". Pressure from investors led to the abandonment of glassmaking by 1685.
Future glassmaking Over one dozen glass works operated in the British colonies and after the
American Revolution, during the 18th century, as several milestones were achieved. German-immigrants
Caspar Wistar,
Henry William Stiegel, and
John Frederick Amelung were responsible for three of these successes. In the
Province of New Jersey, Wistar's glass works was the first to achieve large-scale, long-term success. In the 1790s, the O'Hara and Craig glass works was the first glass works in Pittsburgh, and this works was another early user of coal as a fuel for its furnaces. By 1800, it is thought that roughly ten glass works were operating in the United States. Challenges for American glass works revolved around labor, raw materials, and imports. European nations made immigration to the United States illegal for glassmakers as part of an effort to keep their glassmaking knowledge from spreading. The labor problem began to be solved in the early 19th century when Boston businessman
Deming Jarves began to keep records for glass recipes and procedures. Raw materials for crystal glassware were also an issue. England controlled the only known supply of
red lead, an ore necessary for the production of fine lead crystal glassware. This meant that American crystal cost more than that made in England because prices for red lead were kept high. Jarves solved the red lead problem in the early 19th century when he developed a way to make red lead using domestic sources. Finally, high quality sand was necessary to make high quality crystal glassware. England controlled the supply of high quality sand, and brought it to the United States as ballast in their ships. After the
War of 1812, local sources of high quality sand were found in the
Berkshires,
Monongahela River, and New Jersey. ==Notes==