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May 13, 2005

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Henry William Stiegel

(born May 13, 1729, near Cologne — died Jan. 10, 1785, Charming Forge, Pa., U.S.) German-born U.S. ironmaster and glassmaker. After arriving in Philadelphia in 1750, he quickly became a prosperous ironmaster. In 1762 he bought a huge tract of land in Lancaster County and built the town of Manheim, where he established American Flint Glassworks; there he imported Venetian, German, and English glassworkers to make utilitarian vessels and high-quality blue, purple, green, and clear tableware. He owned three mansions, where his comings and goings were announced by a cannon salute and band music, but his lavish style and adverse economic conditions eventually bankrupted him.

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Art Encyclopedia: Henry William Stiegel
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(b Cologne, 13 May 1729; d Charming Forge, PA, 10 Jan 1785). American manufacturer of German birth. He moved to Pennsylvania in 1750 and became associated with iron manufacturing through his marriage in 1752 to Elizabeth Huber, whose father owned an iron furnace in Lancaster Co., PA. At Elizabeth Furnace, near Brickerville, PA, Stiegel built in 1763 his first glasshouse, where window glass and bottles were made. Several of the craftsmen employed there had probably come from Caspar Wistar's operation in southern New Jersey. Beginning in 1762 Stiegel was involved with other investors in the creation of Manheim, PA, a village for his workers. In 1764-5 he built there on his own account a glasshouse, where he produced in addition some tableware.

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Biography: Henry William Stiegel
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Henry William Stiegel (1729-1785), a German-born American iron founder and glassmaker, is best known for the colorful blown glass associated with his name.

Henry Stiegel was born near Cologne and emigrated to Philadelphia in 1750 with his widowed mother and younger brother. After a year or so in Philadelphia, he went to work in Lancaster County for an iron founder, whose daughter, Elizabeth Huber, he married in 1752. By 1756 Stiegel had become a partner in the ironworks, which was run on a cooperative basis, and he renamed it Elizabeth Furnace. In 1760 he became a subject of Great Britain. By then he was an important community leader and a lay delegate to the Lutheran Ministerium of Pennsylvania.

Elizabeth Furnace was modernized, and a small company town was built around it. Under Stiegel's energetic influence the foundry produced stoves, heating devices, and almost every kind of object that could be made of iron. By the 1760s Stiegel had acquired a second ironworks, Charming Forge, near Womelsdorf, Pa., and a large amount of land at what later became the town of Manheim. His first wife had died, and he married again.

In 1763 Stiegel produced, on an experimental basis, his first glassware at Elizabeth Furnace. There were 10 craftsmen, supervised by his brother Anthony. The initial output of the factory - window glass and green bottles - sold quickly. Shortly thereafter Stiegel made a trip to England to study advanced methods and technology of glass production.

Upon his return to America, Stiegel and his partners lost no time in setting up a glassworks at Manheim. On Nov. 11, 1765, the enterprise went into operation. The first two seasons were fairly prosperous, but business subsequently declined until 1769, when Stiegel built a larger glassworks which was staffed with over 130 workers, including Venetians, Germans, Irish, and English. Distributing agencies were set up in a number of Pennsylvania cities and later in Baltimore, New York, and Boston as well.

With the glassworks prospering, Stiegel lived in great luxury. He might have survived his extravagance had times not been bad. Money became increasingly tight in the Colonies and taxes more oppressive. He mortgaged his two ironworks and real estate to build a second glass factory but continued to live beyond his means. By 1772 he was surrounded on all sides by debtors. In 1774 he was put in debtors' prison. When he was freed on Christmas Eve, all his belongings were confiscated. In 1776 the new owner of Elizabeth Furnace, which was making cannonballs for the Continental Army, gave him employment. When the battlefront changed, this manufacture was discontinued, and Stiegel was again jobless. He died in poverty on Jan. 10, 1785.

Further Reading

A full-length biography of Stiegel, and an analysis of the product he created, is Frederick William Hunter, Stiegel Glass (1914). He figures prominently in two general works on glassware: George S. and Helen McKearin, American Glass (1941) and Two Hundred Years of American Blown Glass (1950).

Spotlight: May 13, 2005
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From our Archives: Today's Highlights, May 13, 2005

Henry Stiegel, who became famous for his Stiegel glass, was born on this date in 1729. An iron and glass manufacturer, Stiegel made glass bottles, decanters, etc., in shades of green, wine, amethyst and blue. Stiegel's most distinctive pattern was the "Daisy Diamond," a daisy in square, or hexagon designs found only on his perfume bottles, small vases and salt shakers.
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Henry William Stiegel
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Stiegel, Henry William (stē'gəl), 1729-85, American iron and glass manufacturer, b. Germany. He emigrated to America, arriving in Philadelphia (1750). In 1758 he purchased his father-in-law's ironworks near Brickerville, Pa., where he manufactured iron stoves, developing the template type that served as a standard for many generations. About 1760, Stiegel laid out a town in Lancaster Co., Pa., which he named Manheim. In 1763 he brought glassworkers from England and built a plant at Manheim that was probably the first manufactory of flint glass in America. He is best known for the famous Stiegel glass, which he manufactured in colors ranging from light green to deep emerald, wine, amethyst, and blue, in the form of bottles, decanters, drinking glasses, and other wares.

Bibliography

See F. W. Hunter, Stiegel Glass (1950).

 
 

 

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From Today's Highlights
May 13, 2005

...who was the first person who stood by a pile of sand and said, 'You know, I bet if we took some of this and mixed it with a little potash and heated it, we could make a material that would be solid and yet transparent. We could call it glass.' ... you could stand me on a beach till the end of time and never would it occur to me to try to make it into windows.
- Bill Bryson

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