Overview
The form (stacked bulbous tiers with ground glass joints and a decorative finial stopper) and wheel-cut floral/vine motifs are characteristic of late 19th to early 20th-century pharmacy window show globes.
Identification
Photo reference
1 uploaded photo
Overview
The form (stacked bulbous tiers with ground glass joints and a decorative finial stopper) and wheel-cut floral/vine motifs are characteristic of late 19th to early 20th-century pharmacy window show globes.
Story
These iconic vessels served as the 'neon signs' of 19th and early 20th-century pharmacies, filled with colored water to signal the chemist's presence to the public. Prominent American makers included Whitall Tatum, though many were produced by regional glasshouses without signatures. Apothecary show globes have a dedicated collector base within medical and pharmaceutical antiquities. High-end wheel-cut and multi-tier examples command strong premiums at specialized Americana and medical auctions.
Maker / Origin
Unattributed
Condition & Value
The visible wheel-cut floral motifs and stacked bulbous form appear intact in the provided imagery. However, the critical ground-glass joints where the tiers stack and the stopper rests are highly susceptible to chips, flakes, and bruising, which cannot be fully evaluated from the current photos.
Full Research
Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.
Apothecary show globes have a dedicated collector base within medical and pharmaceutical antiquities. High-end wheel-cut and multi-tier examples command strong premiums at specialized Americana and medical auctions. Plain or later examples trade softly, but ornate Victorian pieces remain highly decorative and sought after by both specialists and interior designers.
▲ Elaborate wheel-cut floral and vine motifs elevate the piece above standard plain-glass pharmacy globes.
▲ Classic multi-tier stacked form with decorative finial stopper aligns with highly desirable Victorian apothecary aesthetics.
▼ Unverified dimensions — a smaller overall height would anchor the value closer to the lower end of the estimate.
▼ Unverified joint condition — any hidden chips, flakes, or roughness on the frosted stacking joints would significantly depress collector value.
▼ Unverified base and stoppers — a missing maker's mark or patent date would keep the piece in unbranded territory.
Best Venue
List with a specialized Americana or medical antiquities auction house (such as Jeffrey S. Evans). Prior to consignment, carefully inspect and photograph the ground-glass joints and measure the total height to accurately position the piece for buyers.
Upside Potential
If the globe is exceptionally large (e.g., over 24 inches tall), confirmed to be in pristine condition with no joint chips, and reveals a desirable maker's mark such as Whitall Tatum upon closer inspection, the value could push past the $900 mark, aligning with top-tier Americana auction results.
Authenticity Risk
mediumWhile standard plain show globes are rarely forged, ornate wheel-cut and multi-tier examples have been reproduced in the mid-to-late 20th century for decorative markets. The current photos show appropriate stylistic motifs, but physical verification of the glass weight, wear patterns on the base, and authentic ground-glass joint frosting is recommended to rule out modern reproductions before a high-value sale.
Also found — market-range context
Surfaced during research but not used to anchor the valuation — wrong form, species, era, or no published price. Shown so the market range around this item is visible.