RS179c Merchant’s Gargling Oil Liniment medicine stamp, pink paper

$1,000.00

1994 Match and Medicine census reported 20 known copies, 10 of which were faulty.


The Celebrated Gargling Oil was launched in 1833 by George W. Merchant, a pharmacist of Lockport , New York . His Universal Family Embrocation was esteemed along the Erie Canal where it was used to heal the bleeding sores of the horses and mules that pulled the boats along the Canal. Word-of-mouth of approval led to the concoction then known as Merchant ‘s Gargling Oil to be used as a liniment “for man and beast” , and the early trademark displayed a horse receiving the oil application. Merchant ‘s formula was sold to M. H. Tucker in 1855, and John Hodge joined the firm, being elected secretary in 1858. It was John Hodge who used a steamboat bedecked with banners advertising Merchant’s Gargling Oil, and the peak of the publicity stunt was the trip of the steamboat through the rapids and whirlpools of Niagra Falls on September 6, 1883. The formula for Gargling Oil, which was changed from time to time, included crude petro­latum, ammonia, water, benzine, crude oil, tincture of iodine, soft soap and water. Merchant’s Gargling Oil was still made in 1933, 100 years after its introduction.
(Holcombe, Henry W., Scott’ s Monthly Journal, 21:164-169, 204-208, July-August, 1940; see also Gerald Carson, p.40)

Additional information

Catalog Number

RS179c

Condition

crease ending in small tear, corner thins

Date Issued

May 1869 to Feb. 1, 1883

Number Issued

969,026 (pink and watermarked)

Cancel

uncanceled

Catalog Value

1500.00

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