Mullens
Wyoming County
[Raleigh] Coca-Cola Bottling Works
ca. 1930s
This was indeed a branch of Raleigh Bottling Works, as evidenced by a 1933 advertisement saying so (Raleigh Coca-Cola Bottling Works, 1933). To my knowledge, no bottles exist from this bottler with “RALEIGH” embossed on them as others under the brand do.
Deep Water Bottling Works
Coming soon.
Mullens Bottling Works
ca. 1920s
The only information I can find on this bottler is that, in 1922, Mullens Bottling Works doubled their stock from $25,000 to $50,000 (“State House Happenings”, 1922).
Nu-Grape Bottling Co.
Information needed.
Wyoming Ice & Bottling Co.
1917—1925
The Wyoming Ice and Bottling Company must have began in late 1917, as a newspaper from December of 1917 mentions it, while the September Dun & Bradstreet does not (“Ice Cream Men”, 1917). The November 1917 American Carbonator and American Bottler gives us that the “Magic Cola Ice & Bottling Co.” [sic], of Mullens, organized with incorporators B.D. Dunham, I.S. Fine, and H.S. Hancock (“West Virginia,” 1917). This is, almost certainly, Wyoming Ice & Bottling Company. Their last appearance is in 1925 in a legal advertisement page of The Charleston Daily Mail for companies delinquent on their corporate taxes, likely meaning this is the end of the company.
References
Ice cream men elect officers; close session with stunts. (1917, December 13). The Wheeling Intelligencer, 11.
Legal advertisement. (1925, February 16). The Charleston Daily Mail, 42.
State House happenings. (1922, May 31). The Wheeling Intelligencer, 4.
Raleigh Coca-Cola Bottling Works. (1933, January 19). Beckley Post-Herald, 9.
West Virginia (1917). American Carbonator and American Bottler, 37(11), pp. 70.