Container, FG Pickering, Milk Bottle, Twentieth Century

Historical information

Pickering's Dairy was located on the south Side of High Street, Kew, between Charles Street and Highbury Grove.

Significance

Kew was a major milk producing district in the Nineteenth and early Twentieth centuries, with three major dairy farms lining the Yarra between Studley Park in the west and Burke Road in the east. In addition to these dairy producers, there were also a number of accredited dairy retailers in the suburb. The largest and most enduring of these was the Model Dairy founded by the Kew pioneer James Venn Morgan. Milk bottles that include the name of the producer or retailer are historically significant as they represent a period in Kew's history before the mass production of milk in the second half of the Twentieth Century. A number of these named bottles have the additional attribute of rarity.

Physical description

Milk bottle - F.G. Pickering, Highbury Dairy, 344 High St., Kew.

Inscriptions & markings

Pressed inscription: "This bottle contains MILK Bottled for Sale by F.G. Pickering, Highbury Dairy HAW5538, 344 High St., Kew. Bottle is the property of the above. It is loaned and cannot legally be used by others". Reverse: "One Imperial Pint".

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