Yes, a lot of it. Here are just a few, mostly offered for sale, which I've collected from the newspapers of the day. Notice that some are very early, and some offered as casks full of corks.Bloodroot said:- any documentation on the availability or use of cork in the 18th century?
1732 Those that send clean Bottles with good Corks, may have the best Beer for 4s. the Dozen, and Middling Beer for 2s. the Dozen.
1733 Paper, Parchment, Sealing Wax, Wafers; Vinegar, Lime-juice, Corks, &c.
1734 best London & Philadelphia Tobacco, Scotch Snuff, Stationary Ware, Casks of Corks, Rum, Lime-juice, Bottle Cyder & Muscovado Sugar, with sundry other Goods:
1734 powder blue & snuff, strouds, Indian trading Guns, Beeds and none so pretties, cotton checks, corks, New England Axes best sort, salt fish,
1734 Just imported and to be Sold by John Watson ... anchovies, capers, olives walnuts. Glew, Indigo, starch salt-peter, vinegar, train oyl, corks, shoes sundry sorts,
1735 JUST IMPORTED per Capt. Bishop & Shoebrick,... raisins, currants, spices, arrack, vinegar, corks, starch, indigo & powder blue, glue, shott, flag brooms, mopp heads,
1747 ....glasses from half a Minute to two Hours, Quadrants, Mops, tinder boxes with flints and steels, thrumbs, corks, cartridge paper, speaking trumpets, spy glasses,
1762 desk furniture, a parcel of neat cocking and squirrel pieces, bottle corks, &c. &c.
1766 half gallon case bottles, wide mouth bottles, sets of surveying instruments, seine corks, grindstones, hand millstones
1771 pistols of different sizes; sundry sorts of slate pocket books; ink stands; gun screws and flints; decanter corks....
Enter your email address to join: