This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.
It was a hot summer day in June 1915, Chapman J. Root
and three or four others were discussing a letter just received from the
Coca-Cola Company. This was a form letter which had been mailed to glass
manufacturers throughout the United States. The Coca-Cola Company wanted a
bottle, unique in shape and a design that would be recognized at a distance, a
bottle which could be recognized even if felt in the dark. At the time,
practically all soft drink bottlers were using the ordinary straight sided soda
bottle with a pasted label or lettering in the mold to identify the beverage.
Earl R. Dean recalls: "The question came up as to what Coca-Cola was made of.
Mr. Root had his chauffeur, Roy Grimsly, take T.C. Edwards and me to the
Fairbanks Library to see what we could find. It so happened we found in a book
of reference, an article and a very good illustration of a pod that contributes
to the flavor of Coca-Cola. I was very much interested in the shape of the pod.
It had a very short neck at the stem end and the body had four different
diameters and vertical ribs which I incorporated into my first drawing to show
Mr. Root the next morning. Mr. Root was well pleased and asked me if I could get
a mold made in time to get a few sample bottles made before the fire went out,
which would be 12:00 noon on the last working day of June. I told him that I
would do the best I could. It turned out to be a very close schedule and it was
necessary to work on the mold the second day starting at 4:00 am till 2:00 am
the next morning which added up to twenty-two hours. I could then see that I
could complete the lettering and design cutting within the four hours. I would
have the next morning to get it in the machine in time to be heated up and get
the sample bottles made. The Coca-Cola Company accepted this new designed bottle
at once, but we could see there would have to be alterations on the lower and
middle diameters in order to make the bottle practical. Mr. Root advised the
Coca-Cola Company why it was necessary to make these alterations and that sample
bottles would be made for their approval. About a year or so after alterations
were made on the first bottle, I came across two of the first samples that I had
placed in my locker. I took one of them into the main office and it was
agreeable that I keep the other one. The patent attorney came to Terre Haute
from Indianapolis. He was handed a drawing showing the front and back view of
the Coca-Cola bottle. He cut them apart and handed one to me saying he needed
only one to send to Washington. I kept the bottle and drawing for many years and
as I was getting up in years I gave them to my son in California and he valued
them highly." -Excerpts from a letter written by Earl R. Dean to the Florida
Coca-Cola Bottling Company, April 9, 1971