Charleston Bottling Works

Charleston Bottling Works is synonymous with Henry Rummel. Though his earliest bottles are not embossed as such, instead bearing some version of his name, the bottling operation itself always was Charleston Bottling Works. This was the case for three or so decades, until they began bottling Coca-Cola, at which point Charleston Bottling Works became the Coca-Cola Bottling Company.

Charleston Bottling Works circa 1913. Henry Rummel is the man in the center. Notice what they are bottling, and the crates of what would be straight-sided Coca-Cola bottles.

Henry Rummel

Henry Rummel was born in Meigs County, Ohio on July 27, 1847 the son of a German immigrant. Rummel learned the bottling trade in Pomeroy, Ohio before moving to Charleston to start his own operation in 1871. His first plant was downtown, currently where the Federal Courthouse is, then moving to a plot by the Elk River. By 1874-1875, he had moved his plant to West Charleston while selling sarsaparilla and mineral water (J.S. Sheppard & Co., 1875). In 1876 he moved again to Capitol Street, then again in 1881 to Summers Street (Laidley, 1911). The book that information is from notes it was his present location, so I am presuming the address of 119 Summers Street in 1907 is the one referenced (R.L. Polk & Co., 1907). In 1909, Charleston Bottling Works—Henry Rummel, manager—was located at 909 Capitol Street (R.L. Polk & Co., 1909).

Charleston Coca-Cola Bottling Works/Co.

References

Laidley, W.S. (1911). History of Charleston and Kanawha County, West Virginia and representative citizens. Richmond-Arnold Publishing Company.

R.L. Polk & Co. (1907). R.L. Polk & Co’s Charleston Directory 1907, Volume V.

R.L. Polk & Co. (1909). R.L. Polk & Co’s Charleston Directory 1909.

J.S. Sheppard & Co. (1875). Sheppard’s Charleston, W.VA. City Directory 1874-5. Volume I.