Three Rivers Glass Company
Three Rivers Glass Company
South Texas glasshouse that supplied Hoffmann-Hayman with the square one-pound and three-pound Crystalvac jars from 1932 onward. The supplier relationship is the project’s primary reason for tracking Three Rivers Glass; the company itself ran 1922 → receivership 1932 → brief late-1936 reopening → reorganization under George A. Ball Manufacturing Co. (December 1936) → formal dissolution of the Texas corporation in January 1937. Nine years later, in January 1946, former shareholders Charles R. Tips, W. L. Moody III, and Harry R. Rogers filed a $1,350,000 Sherman + Clayton Act suit in U.S. District Court (San Antonio) against Hartford-Empire Co., Ball Bros., and Owens-Illinois Glass, alleging the 1937 dissolution was caused by the glass-machinery patent pool’s “unlawful acts” — placing TRG’s demise inside the broader anti-trust story of United States v. Hartford-Empire Co. (decided 1945). The Texas filing was voluntarily dismissed in November 1947 so the suit could be refiled in U.S. District Court (Indianapolis, Indiana) under that state’s 15-year anti-trust statute of limitations; the Indiana disposition is undocumented on this site.
Company timeline
- Early March 1922 — chartered in Texas. Capitalized at $50,000.
- 17 March 1922 (Friday) — directors meet and elect officers for the first year:
- President: James Kapp
- Vice president: A. H. Morton
- Secretary–treasurer: Charles R. Tips
- General manager: H. S. Warrick (period source — supersedes earlier “H. L. Warrick” rendering on this page; see 1922-03-19 *SA Light* “New Company Elects”)
- Additional directors: Adolph Wagner, William L. Stiles, D. J. Woodward (all San Antonio), H. T. Harber (Three Rivers)
- Construction ordered to start “at once,” target operating within 60 days
- Initial spec: 150 gross of bottles daily capacity, soda water bottles and milk bottles as the first product class, Texas and Mexican trade as the target market
- Plant uses Three Rivers natural gas for fuel; glass sand from local pits
- Warrick in St. Louis arranging machinery purchase at the time of the directors’ meeting (See 1922 incorporation event)
- 1923 — production approximately 4,000 gross (per 1930 retrospective).
- By August 1929 — corporate offices have moved from Three Rivers to Dallas. Charles R. Tips has been promoted from sec-treas to general manager.
- 8 August 1929 — TR Glass purchases the Bastrop, Louisiana glass factory from Frost-Whited Investment Co. of Shreveport and the Bastrop State Bank and Trust Co. Bastrop plant had been idle for “several years.” TR Glass plans $50,000–$75,000 in remodeling + new machinery, with operations to resume in fall 1929. Combined company capacity projected at 40–50 million bottles and jars per year. By this point the firm describes itself as “one of the largest independent glass manufacturers in the South.” Sales territory: Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas, Alabama, Mississippi, Kansas, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Mexico, and several Central and South American countries (1929-08-09 The Times (Shreveport)).
- September 1929 — TR Glass launches “intensive sales campaign” coinciding with new automatic-machine installation.
- 1929 (calendar year) — orders received: 133,905 gross (vs. 70,936 gross in 1928 — +88.77%); actual Three Rivers factory production: 107,736 gross (vs. 77,447 in 1928 — +39%). Sales campaign first-month new orders +700% vs. same month 1928.
- By February 1930 — TR Glass operates sales offices at Three Rivers + San Antonio + Dallas + Oklahoma City + Memphis + New Orleans + Houston, with shipments to “nearly every Southern and Middle-Western state and to Cuba, Colombia, Panama, etc.” Opens San Antonio Headquarters Office. 1930 sales target: over $750,000; production capacity projected to 25,000,000 bottles. Industries served: dairy, carbonated beverage, food packing, export (1930-02-16 SA Light “Glass Plant Reports Big Output Gain”).
- September–October 1930 — Three Rivers plant shut for ~6 weeks for extensive remodeling. Furnace rebuilt; all machinery overhauled. Resumed operation with three shifts (1930-10-12 SA Express-News “Three Rivers Glass Factory Remodeled”).
- By February 1931 — Col. Charles R. Tips is now President of Three Rivers Glass (promoted from general manager between Feb 1930 and Feb 1931). Reported at the National Canners’ Association convention in Chicago: 1930 sales +35% over 1929, against an industry-wide sales decrease (1931-02-19 San Saba News and Star “Texas Man Sees Return of Good Business for Year”).
- June 1932 — H&H Crystalvac retail line launches, with initial order of 250,000 jars from Three Rivers Glass (see Crystalvac brand page). This was the dominant H&H retail format for the next decade, even as the supplier itself entered receivership the same year.
- 1932 — Three Rivers Glass enters receivership (date later cited by 1936-12-05 The News “Three Rivers Glass Plant Reorganized”, which states the plant “had been in the hands of receivers since 1932”). The financial collapse is consistent with the 1946 anti-trust petition’s framing that the company’s annual gross sales exceeded $500,000 only “from 1922 to 1929 and 1930” — i.e. roughly the first eight years — after which sales declined under what the petition characterized as “unlawful acts” by the glass-machinery patent pool.
- April–May 1934 — Three Rivers plant closed for 4 weeks for repairs; resumed full-time operation week of 21 May 1934 (1934-05-15 SA Light “Glass Factory to Resume Operations”). Confirms intermittent operation under receivership through at least mid-1934.
- c. 1933/34–1936 — Three Rivers plant closed for approximately three years per the 1936-11-14 Courier-Gazette (McKinney) “Factories are still opening up” item (“recently we noticed where the Three Rivers Glass Factory has again resumed operations after a three year close-down”). The exact closure date isn’t pinned by primary source, but reconciling the 1934 resume note above with a Nov 1936 “three year close-down” suggests the plant ran briefly in summer–fall 1934 before shutting again. Crystalvac jars in the H&H collection from this window are most likely either earlier-production inventory or sourced from a parallel supplier.
- Early–Aug 1936 — Tips Glass Sales Corporation (separate sales entity, Charles R. Tips president) reports YTD beverage-bottle sales through August 1 are more than double the entire 1935 total, and higher than any year since 1931, with full-year projected to exceed any prior year (1936-08-07 SA Light “Firm Doubles 1935 Sales”). The figures cover containers sold by Tips Glass Sales but manufactured by the Three Rivers Glass factory — the report frames the entities as separate, with Tips selling everything the factory makes. (Resolving how this 1936 sales surge squares with the “three year close-down” narrative is open — see Open Questions; one read is Tips selling accumulated inventory plus a brief 1936 reopen-burst.)
- November 1936 — Plant resumes operations after the multi-year closure: 100 men returned to work on a 24-hour, 7-day-a-week schedule, with “sufficient orders received to insure maintenance of the 24-hour daily schedule for several months to come” (1936-11-14 Courier-Gazette (McKinney) “Factories are still opening up”). The McKinney trade-press framing was “the return of normalcy” — a deliberate Depression-recovery beat.
- 5 December 1936 — Reorganization announced. Local attorney William C. Church announces (after a conference with L. L. Bracken, representative of the George A. Ball Manufacturing Company of Muncie, Indiana) that the Three Rivers plant has been purchased out of receivership for $130,000 and reorganized under the new name “Ball Glass corporation.” Plant inventory underway; production to resume within days. Output target: >$500,000/yr in glassware for liquid-foodstuffs distributors across Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana. Described as “the only glass manufacturing plant in South Texas.” (1936-12-05 The News “Three Rivers Glass Plant Reorganized”). The acquiring entity here is named as George A. Ball Manufacturing Co. rather than the parent “Ball Brothers Glass Manufacturing Co.” — likely George A. Ball acting through a Ball-family entity; see Ball Brothers page for the corporate-naming reconciliation.
- January 1937 — Three Rivers Glass Co. formally dissolved as a Texas corporation, per the 1946 anti-trust petition: “the Three River[s] Glass Co. continued in business until its dissolution in January, 1937, as a result of insolvency proceedings resulting from the unlawful acts of the defendant[s]” (1946-01-03 The News “$1,350,000 Suit Is Filed Here”; paired-day coverage 1946-01-04 SA Express-News “Texans Charge Violations of Anti-Trust Act”). This resolves the prior 1937-vs-1938 closure ambiguity in favor of January 1937 for the formal corporate dissolution (the physical plant continued to operate under Ball ownership at least into late 1937 per the H&H Light features below — “closure” of the Texas corporation in Jan 1937 ≠ closure of the physical factory).
- November 1937 — Crystalvac glass jars still in active distribution per primary-source attestation in the 21 Nov 1937 San Antonio Light (“the firm was the pioneer in the Southwest in vacuum packing glass jars, it’s ‘H & H Crystalvac’ enjoying a wide distribution throughout the state”). The supply relationship persisted through at least Nov 1937 — note that this is mid-Ball-ownership (Nov 1937 is more than a year after the 1936 acquisition).
- June 1937 — H&H installed vacuum-can closing equipment at the Delaware Street plant, per the 3 Nov 1937 News trade-news feature. The mid-1937 metal-can adoption may or may not be related to TRGCo supply uncertainty under Ball; the timing is suggestive but the causal link is not in the primary record.
- 1937 — physical plant continues operating under Ball ownership at least through November 1937 (per the H&H Light features above); secondary collector accounts place the final factory closure in 1937 or 1938. The 2017 collectors’ show was framed as the 80th anniversary of the closure. (2017 show event.)
- 12–13 December 1938 — Three Rivers Glass surfaces in U.S. Senate monopoly committee (TNEC) testimony in Washington. R. T. Bufford Jr., secretary and counsel for Hartford-Empire Co., reads from a Hartford-Empire internal memorandum characterizing “The Three Rivers Glass Company has been a perpetual thorn in the side of all the manufacturing companies” of the glass-machinery patent pool, and confirming that Hartford-Empire took its machinery out of the Three Rivers factory when the Texas firm couldn’t pay. Hartford-Empire president F. G. Smith testifies the same day to the firm’s patent-pool control over the glass-container industry. (1938-12-13 SA Express-News “Glass Container Business Bottled Through Patents” — pages 1 and page 2.) See also 1938 TNEC Hartford-Empire testimony event.
- 3–4 January 1946 — $1,350,000 anti-trust suit filed in the U.S. District Court (San Antonio) by former Three Rivers Glass shareholders Charles R. Tips, W. L. Moody III, and Harry R. Rogers against Hartford-Empire Co. (Hartford, CT), Ball Bros. Co. (Muncie, IN), and Owens-Illinois Glass Co. (Toledo, OH). The petition alleges violations of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act and the Clayton Act, “unlawful conspiracies, unlawful monopolies, and combination in restraint of commerce,” and asks that the $1,350,000 actual damages be trebled (i.e. ~$4,050,000). Plaintiffs represented themselves as among more than 50 former shareholders of the dissolved Texas corporation, which had ultimate paid-in capital of $550,000 (Jan 3 The News) or $500,000 (Jan 4 Express-News — small per-paper discrepancy), of which approximately $250,000 was in plant, works, and equipment. The petition explicitly attributes the January 1937 dissolution to the defendants’ unlawful acts. (1946-01-03 The News “$1,350,000 Suit Is Filed Here” — page 1 and page 2; 1946-01-04 SA Express-News “Texans Charge Violations of Anti-Trust Act”.) See 1946 antitrust suit event.
- 1 November 1947 — Federal Judge Ben H. Rice Jr. dismisses the Texas anti-trust suit on plaintiff’s own motion, so it can proceed in U.S. District Court (Indianapolis, Indiana) under that state’s 15-year anti-trust statute of limitations (vs. Texas’s 2-year statute). The dismissal article names “Three Rivers Glass Co.” as the corporate plaintiff (with Charles R. Tips still as president), a different framing from the original Jan 1946 individual-shareholder caption — see the 1947 dismissal/refiling event for the corporate-vs-shareholder framing question. Trebled damages by this point are stated as $4,600,000 (up from the $4,050,000 implied by the original $1,350,000 × 3 in 1946). The article also documents two new primary-source facts: (1) the defendants “took physical possession of the Three Rivers glass plant in 1937 but have not operated it since,” and (2) “sale of the plant by the defendants had been ordered by the U.S. Supreme court” — the latter referring to United States v. Hartford-Empire Co., 323 U.S. 386 (1945) enforcement. (1947-11-02 SA Light “Damage Suit Off”.) Reconciliation flag: Tips’s “have not operated since [1937]” claim is in tension with the 21 Nov 1937 Light “Crystalvac in wide distribution” mention — see Open Questions; best read is that physical possession transferred Dec 1936 → plant ran briefly into late 1937 fulfilling existing orders → idle from late 1937 onward, and Tips’s 1947 court framing emphasizes the post-takeover idleness.
- 1973 — Texas Historical Commission dedicates a marker at the works site. (1973 marker event.)
- 1996 — Ball Corporation (successor to Ball Brothers) sells remaining glass interests to Saint-Gobain and pivots to metal packaging and aerospace. (1996 Ball exit event.)
Relationship to Hoffmann-Hayman
Three Rivers Glass supplied the jars for Hoffmann-Hayman’s Crystalvac retail line, launched in June 1932 (Crystalvac brand page). The 1932 launch had an initial order of 250,000 jars — described in period press as “revolutionizing the local coffee industry” and “first in Texas” for the vacuum-pack glass format. H&H’s Crystalvac packaging was the dominant retail format through the 1930s and into the early 1940s alongside metal tins.
Three Rivers Glass also supplied a mold-601-1 square one-pound jar variant that became the recognizable shape for H&H Crystalvac items in the collection (see artifact references throughout knowledge-base/artifacts/).
The field reference photograph of the Texas Historical Commission marker at the Three Rivers works site is catalogued as HH-REF-2017-0001.
Bottle identification mark
The Three Rivers mark commonly appears as:
- A “star” symbol (
3R*or3 Rivers*) on the base or heel of the bottle - Occasionally as a “large outlined star” on the bottom paired with the heel mark
- Rare overlap: pieces produced after the 1936 Ball acquisition can carry both the “3 Rivers” mark and the Ball logo, indicating short-overlap production (see Ideal Bottling Co. note below)
Bottle inventory (Smith’s Texas Glass)
The following list, items 1–75 plus addendum, is reproduced from the Price List on page 39 of Michael David Smith’s Texas Glass: An Illustrated History of The Three Rivers Glass Company as a working reference for identifying Three Rivers-marked bottles that turn up alongside H&H Crystalvac jars.
This is reference data — the page is the canonical home for the identification list. Items found in the H&H collection are cross-referenced in the “Items in the collection with 3R* marks” section below.
- Anderson’s Soda Water — Property of Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
- Austin Bottling Works — Austin, Texas
- Beer bottle (clear glass — classic “longneck” style)
- Beer bottle (amber glass — classic “longneck” style)
- Big Chief — Blackburn Bros. — Clarkesville, Texas
- Bluebonnet Beverages — Rusk, Texas
- Brandimist — Atlanta, Georgia
- Burns (no bottling location indicated)
- California — Dallas, Texas
- Carmine Bottling Works (no bottling location indicated)
- Coca-Cola Bottling Co. — Bastrop, Texas
- Coca-Cola Gills — Beeville, Texas
- Contents 6-1/2 Fl. Oz. — Uvalde, Texas
- Crown Bottling Co. — West (Texas?)
- Delaware Punch (no bottling location indicated)
- Diamond K Beverages — Kingsville, Texas
- DP Soda — Dr. Pepper — Uvalde, Texas (bottle has unique “melted” appearance)
- Dr. Pepper Bottling Co. — Eagle Lake (smooth bottle, large “#2” embossed on neck)
- Dr. Pepper — Good For Life (“10, 2 & 4” design — bottled at various locations)
- Dr. Pepper Bottling Co. — Laredo, Texas (bottle has crackled appearance)
- Dr. Pepper Bottling Co. — Mt. Pleasant (ribbed bottle w/diamonds circling the neck & base)
- Dr. Pepper — Paris, Texas (bottle has raised dots and vertical ribs)
- Dr. Pepper — Temple, Texas (cracked appearance and vertical ribs)
- Dragon — Dragon Bottling Co., San Antonio, Texas (embossed dragon on bottle neck)
- Edward’s (no bottling location indicated)
- Evangeline Pepper Sauce — Made in St. Martinville, La., U.S.A. (approximately 4-1/2” tall)
- F. J. Piwetz Bottling Wks — Fayetteville, Texas
- smooth bottle, earlier style
- diagonal design on neck and base of bottle
- F. J. Piwetz Bottling Wks. — Fayetteville, Texas (diagonal design on bottle, later style)
- Fizzon — Joy-Synth (no bottling location indicated)
- Gebhardt Eagle Chili Powder
- large size
- small size
- The Famous Milwaukee Drinks (no bottling location indicated)
- Giddings Coca Cola Bottling Co. (not classic “Coke” bottle design)
- Holt Beverage Co. — Waco, Texas
- H and H Coffee, One Pound Crystalvac Jars — San Antonio, Texas
- clear glass
- amber glass
- add if an “H & H” bottle has the original screw-on lid that reads “We Roast It — Others Praise It”
- H. Cuellar — Zapata, Texas
- Hondo Bottling Works — Hondo, Texas
- Ideal Bottling Co. (no bottling location indicated — this particular bottle was apparently produced after the Ball Bros. took over the Three Rivers Glass Co. because both the “3 Rivers” mark and the “Ball” logo appear on the bottle — very unusual)
- It — The Whole Tired World Wants It — San Antonio, Texas (a very distinctive bottle, but not uncommon — we have found several over the years)
- Julep — Pearsall, Texas
- Jumbo (no bottling location indicated — bottom reads “SBC” — possibly Southern Bottling Co. in Corpus Christi)
- Kist (no bottling location indicated)
- Klasek’s Bottling Works (no bottling location indicated)
- Kraus Bottled Purity — Fredericksburg, Texas
- Knightcap (embossed knight on bottle)
- Mexi-Pep (screw-type top)
- Milk bottles
- Quart (plain)
- Pint (plain)
- Half-Pint (plain)
- Mistletoe Creameries (half-pint)
- Lone Star Creamery — Houston, Texas (pint)
- Phoenix Dairy — Milk — The Ideal Food (quart)
- Roselawn Farms — Three Rivers, Texas
- Milwaukee Drinks (no bottling location indicated — this is a short, squat bottle)
- Mistletoe (no bottling location indicated)
- Nehi Beverages (this is the classic Nehi bottle that was used for over forty years — sometimes bottling location is indicated as Columbus, GA)
- Nicholson Brand — El Paso, Texas
- No. 1 in Quality and Size — Rodriguez Root Beer Bottling Co. — San Antonio, Texas (16 oz. bottle with large sun embossed on front)
- No. 1 in Quality and Size (this bottle is identical to above except in a 15 oz. size with no bottler information indicated — also, we have observed that the “3 Rivers” mark appears twice on this piece — both on the bottom [3R] and the side [3 Rivers])
- Orange Crush (some pieces indicate Kenedy, Texas as bottling location, some New Braunfels, Texas, and some have no bottling location indicated)
- Pepsi Cola — Austin, Texas
- Pickoff — Sign of Purity — Taylor, Texas (noted by a large “HP” enclosed by a circle)
- Reed Bros. — Luling, Texas
- Real Shine (2-1/2 oz. bottle — apparently a shoe polish container)
- Rio Rey (stippled surface with smooth band around center of bottle)
- Royal Crown Root Beer — Morgan City, La.
- San Benito Bottling Works — San Benito, Texas
- Sharry Prod. Co. — Mission, Texas (bottom reads “Rio Rey” — 6 oz. bottle with crackled effect)
- Sharry Products Co. — Mission, Texas (bottle has a composition stopper with a wire clamp)
- Southern Bottling Co. — Corpus Christi, Texas
- Southwest Ice Co. — Georgetown, Texas
- Staat’s Beverages — Property of Coca Cola Bottling Co. — New Braunfels, Texas
- Standard Bottling Works — “…Never Sold” — San Antonio, Texas
- Taylor Bottling Works — (Taylor, Texas?)
- Texas — Waco, Texas
- Threemor — Temple, Texas (6-1/2 oz. bottle with cracked appearance)
- Trappey’s Food Products (no bottling location indicated)
- Trappey’s Tabasco Peppers (no bottling location indicated)
- Trinity Bottling Works — Trinity, Texas
- Union B. Works — Houston, Texas
- Victory Bottling Works — El Paso, Texas — Phone M 2590
- Yoakum C.V.C. Co. — Yoakum, Texas
Addendum (beyond the 1–75 list)
- UNEEDA Bottling Works — Beaumont, Texas. Clear bottle, 9” tall; UNEEDA (shoulder), MIN. CONT. 8 FL. OZ. (heel), BOTTLING WORKS (near the shoulder), 3 Rivers “star” (heel), 8 FL. OZS. / W. (base).
Items in the collection with 3R* marks
Specific bottles in the collection, cross-referenced to the numbered inventory above.
- Beer Bottle, Clear (#3)
- 27-7
- 3 Rivers “star”
- Delaware Punch (#15)
- Patented March 4 1924 (neck base)
- Min. Conts. 16 Fld. Ozs. (body)
- Registered Trademark (heel)
- Diamond K Beverages (#16)
- Registered
- Min. Conts. 6 1/2 Fld. Ozs.
- Dr Pepper Bottling Co.
- 3 Rivers “star”
- Dr. Pepper (#19)
- Good for Life (body)
- 10, 2 & 4 Clock Face (body)
- 6 1/2 oz
- Dragon Soda (#24)
- Dragon Bottling Co., San Antonio, TX
- 3R “star”
- Capacity 15 FL OZ
- The Famous Milwaukee Drink (#31)
- Contents 8 FL OZ
- 3 Rivers “star”
- The Famous Milwaukee Drink (#31)
- Contents 8 FL OZ
- Reg U.S. Pat Office
- Nehi (#49)
- 9 Fluid Oz
- Columbus, GA
- Design Pat’d Mar 3, 23
- Trinity (#72)
- Bottling Works
- Trinity, Tex.
- 7 oz
- G.V.C. Co (#75)
- 8 FL OZ
- Yoakum
- 3 Rivers “star”
Suggestive but unmatched
Bottles in the collection whose Three Rivers attribution is suggestive but not yet matched to a numbered entry in Smith’s list.
- City Bottling Works (unknown)
- Con 6 1/2 FL OZ
- Coca Cola Bottling Works (unknown)
- Lockhart, Texas
- Smile (unknown)
- Patented July 11, 1922
- Contents 6 1/2 Fl Oz
- Glenmora, LA
- Unlabeled, Clear (unknown)
- Contents 6 1/2 Fl ozs
- 3 Rivers “star” (heel)
- Three “large outlined star” Rivers (bottom)
Open questions
- Closure date — corporate vs. physical plant. The January 1937 dissolution of the Texas corporation is now anchored to primary record (the 1946 anti-trust petition explicitly says “dissolution in January, 1937”). The physical plant picture is partially in tension: the 21 Nov 1937 Light shows Crystalvac in “wide distribution”; the 2017 Three Rivers Glass Show post asserts Ball “fulfilled existing orders until closing the factory in 1938”; but Tips’s November 1947 court filing per the 1947-11-02 Light “Damage Suit Off” characterizes the defendants as having “not operated [the plant] since” their 1937 physical takeover. Most likely reconciliation: physical possession transferred via the Dec 1936 reorganization → plant ran briefly into late 1937 fulfilling existing orders + processing accumulated inventory → idle from late 1937 onward (with collector “closed in 1938” framing referring to the announced/recognized shutdown rather than the last day of operation). The 1947 court framing is litigation-positioning emphasizing the post-takeover idleness. A 1937–1938 Texas newspaper clipping on the actual final operating day would resolve.
- “Ball found guilty of monopoly behavior.” The 2017 Three Rivers Glass Show post asserts Ball was “found guilty of monopoly behavior, including buying competitors in order to shut them down. Acting on inside information, Ball blocked a government loan to Three Rivers Glass Co. and purchased the company in 1936.” The newly-registered 1946 anti-trust suit (1946-01-03 The News) substantially corroborates the collector framing: former TRG shareholders alleged in U.S. District Court that Hartford-Empire, Ball Bros., and Owens-Illinois had violated the Sherman and Clayton Acts through monopolistic conduct that caused the 1937 dissolution. The 1938 TNEC testimony (1938-12-13 SA Express-News) provides the upstream evidentiary record: Hartford-Empire’s secretary R. T. Bufford Jr. read aloud an internal memorandum calling Three Rivers a “perpetual thorn in the side” of the patent-pool firms and confirmed Hartford-Empire physically removed its machinery from the Three Rivers plant. The 2017 collector phrasing is therefore collector-narrative compressed onto a documented multi-step pattern — not fabrication. What’s still missing: any disposition record for the 1946 suit (settlement, dismissal, trial verdict, judgment amount) and the period press coverage of United States v. Hartford-Empire Co. (1945) as it applied to the post-1937 Ball-owned Three Rivers operation. Federal court records (W.D. Texas, San Antonio Division) for the 1946 docket and 1945–1946 SA newspaper indices would resolve.
- 1946 anti-trust suit — Texas disposition documented; Indiana disposition open. The Texas-side disposition is now anchored: Federal Judge Ben H. Rice Jr. dismissed on plaintiff’s motion 1 November 1947 so the suit could refile in U.S. District Court Indianapolis under Indiana’s 15-year anti-trust SOL (vs. Texas’s 2-year). The Indianapolis refiling’s ultimate outcome (settlement, dismissal, verdict, judgment amount) is undocumented — see 1947 dismissal/refile event. S.D. Indiana federal court records 1947–1962 and 1947–1962 Indianapolis Star / News coverage would resolve. The U.S. Supreme Court had also “ordered” sale of the plant per Tips’s 1947 court statement — that order is the United States v. Hartford-Empire Co. (1945) decree enforcement; whether sale ever happened (and to whom) is undocumented.
- Plaintiff caption shift between 1946 (individual shareholders) and 1947 (corporate plaintiff). The Jan 1946 suit was filed by Tips, Moody, and Rogers individually as “former shareholders.” The Nov 1947 dismissal article frames the plaintiff as “the Three Rivers Glass co.” with Tips as president. The mechanism of that shift isn’t pinned down — corporate reorganization for standing? Loose 1947 Light shorthand? Recaption in the Indiana refiling? Federal docket records would resolve.
- Damages-amount increase: $4.05M (Jan 1946 trebled) → $4.60M (Nov 1947 trebled). ~$550K (~13%) increase between the original Texas filing and the 1947 dismissal article’s stated amount. Possibilities: amended actual-damages base, addition of interest/costs, or per-paper rounding. Federal docket records would resolve.
- W. L. Moody III and Harry R. Rogers — biographical record. Co-plaintiffs in the 1946 suit, characterized as “among more than 50 former shareholders” of the dissolved TRG. Moody is presumably William Lewis Moody III of the prominent Galveston Moody family (Moody National Bank, American National Insurance, Moody-Stewart), making the suit a notable cross-Texas-elite alignment with Tips and Rogers. Rogers is otherwise undocumented on this site. KB stubs for both are candidates if either turns up in additional H&H-adjacent sources.
- Tips Glass Sales Corporation — corporate structure. The 1936-08-07 Light names “Tips Glass Sales corporation, which sells all glass containers manufactured by the Three Rivers Glass factory” as a distinct entity with Tips as president. Whether Tips Glass Sales was a wholly-owned subsidiary of TRG, an exclusive-dealer entity owned separately by Tips and other principals, or an arm’s-length contractual sales agent isn’t pinned down. A Texas Secretary of State corporate-filings search for “Tips Glass Sales” 1933–1937 would resolve.
- Reconciling the 1936 sales surge with the multi-year close-down. 1936-11-14 Courier-Gazette says Three Rivers “again resumed operations after a three year close-down” — pointing to a roughly 1933 → late-1936 plant closure. 1936-08-07 Light reports Tips Glass Sales sales through Aug 1, 1936 more than double 1935 totals. Best read: Tips Glass Sales was selling accumulated factory inventory plus output from a brief 1936 plant burst that the Courier-Gazette caught on the late side. Alternatively, Tips Glass Sales’s “manufactured by the Three Rivers Glass factory” line could be loose 1936 marketing copy that didn’t actually require continuous factory production. A 1933–1936 SA Light / News search for Three Rivers Glass operating-status items would discriminate.
- Crystalvac post-1937 production: the 3 Nov 1937 News documents H&H’s installation of vacuum-can equipment in June 1937 — five months before the Light “wide distribution” Crystalvac mention. Whether the metal-can adoption was a deliberate hedge against TRGCo supply uncertainty under Ball, a separate response to consumer/format trends, or both, is undocumented.
- Plant address and physical layout at Three Rivers (the works site is marked but the structure is gone).
- Production totals and customer breakdown (how much went to H&H vs other Texas bottlers).
- Bastrop, Louisiana plant — operating period. Per 1929-08-09 The Times (Shreveport), TR Glass purchased the Bastrop, LA glass factory (formerly Frost-Whited Investment Co.) in August 1929, with operations to resume fall 1929. The Bastrop plant’s operational lifetime is undocumented — did it continue under TR Glass through the 1936 Ball acquisition? Did Ball Brothers acquire the Bastrop plant along with Three Rivers, or just Three Rivers? Was Bastrop already closed before the 1936 transaction? Louisiana newspaper coverage and Bastrop city directory entries would resolve.
- Charles R. Tips biographical record. Tips evolves from secretary–treasurer (1922) → general manager (by August 1929) → president (by February 1931) over a 9-year span. The 1931 San Saba News and Star piece styles him “Col. Charles R. Tips” (military title not yet documented elsewhere on this site). His role under Ball Brothers post-1936 acquisition is undocumented; whether he stayed on as a Ball employee, retired, or moved to another firm would close a meaningful biographical thread. A Tips KB person page is a candidate stub.
- Sales-office geography 1930+. Per 1930-02-16 SA Light, TR Glass operated sales offices in Three Rivers + San Antonio + Dallas + Oklahoma City + Memphis + New Orleans + Houston by Feb 1930. How long that network operated and which offices Ball Brothers retained post-1936 is undocumented.
- Whether any operational records survive at Ball Corporation archives or the Texas state archives.
- Fuller documentation of the 1936–1937 Ball-overlap production period (when both Three Rivers and Ball marks appear on the same piece — see Ideal Bottling Co. #37 above).
See also
- Hoffmann-Hayman Coffee Company — the Crystalvac customer
- Crystalvac — the vacuum-pack brand
- Crystalvac Jars — the jar line and Three Rivers supplier relationship
- Charles R. Tips — TRG officer 1922–1937, Tips Glass Sales president 1936, lead 1946 anti-trust plaintiff
- Hartford-Empire Co. — glass-machinery patent-pool monopolist; 1946 lead defendant
- Ball Brothers Glass — 1936 acquirer; 1946 co-defendant
- Owens-Illinois Glass — 1946 co-defendant
- Tips Glass Sales Corporation — separate sales entity that distributed TRG output
- 1938 TNEC Hartford-Empire testimony
- 1946 Three Rivers shareholders’ anti-trust suit
- 1947 Three Rivers suit dismissed in Texas, refiled in Indiana
- HH-REF-2017-0001 — field photograph of the Texas Historical Commission marker
- Smith, Michael David. Texas Glass: An Illustrated History of The Three Rivers Glass Company — the canonical reference book for the company and its marked output