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Marble mystery solved.

John 'n' W.Va

Active member
It is no big deal, but I solved a mystery that I had mentioned in one of my posts. I keep finding these large marbles in the area of the demo-ed houses. I lived in the area when I was 6-8 years old and would find these marbles. In my years of travel I have never seen them anywhere else. When I was MD'ing a demo-ed house an older man came over to see what I was doing. We talked about old times in the neighborhood. I showed him the marble I keep finding. He said that a man on the next street up worked at the O I glass plant that made coke bottles. He said the man would take some of the clear green glass that made the bottles and make marbles with it. He did it so he could give it to the kids in the neighborhood. That why there are so many of these marbles here.
Coke glass marbles.

[attachment 74864 12-1-07marbles.jpg]
 
How often do you get an answer to strange situation of the past. The greenish color makes sense, that really IS cool.
 
Ifound a couple of the green marbles when I went back home to WV. I was out with the ace 250 a few months ago and this old gentleman came by .He said "i see that you are hunting marbles". Well when I dig up pennies I find a lot of old marbles here in IN. The kids apparently played marbles for money. I hit on pennies dig pennies and marbles. those are some real nice ones!!!!!
 
Great story John , I never would have thought of that.
Sure wish that man would have lived near me when I was a kid , I could have used the sling shot
ammo ......marbles are much better than rocks :)

steve
 
Wonder how he made those? Look pretty uniform as far as size and shape.
I don't know how it's done.. Dropping drips of molten glass in water?
Or did he have a mold or something.. I dunno.. ?
MK
 
I have to agree. Really interesting!

Chris
 
[quote NM5K]Wonder how he made those? Look pretty uniform as far as size and shape.
I don't know how it's done.. Dropping drips of molten glass in water?
Or did he have a mold or something.. I dunno.. ?
MK[/quote]

I don't know how he did it. They make marbles by cutting off a piece of molten glass rod. The cut off piece falls between two rollers. As the rollers spin the molten glass becomes round. Marble!!
 
Cool story. I love talking to old timers. They are a wealth of information.:thumbup:
 
Found this information about marbles if anyone is interested.

The earliest marbles were rolled out of clay, and therefore did not offer any technological insight for glass marble makers. In fact, it was a man with a background in metal ball-bearings who was able to contrive a machine to shape marbles. Martin Christensen, in 1902, patented his invention of belts and rotating wheels as the first automatic marble maker. The globs of heated glass were individually melted off the end of cylindrical canes by hand, and placed in the machine, so only part of the process was automated. These marbles didn't have pontils, the nubs left over from where the rod was severed from the glob, so they rolled straighter in the game of marbles.

The machine was an improvement upon shaping marbles entirely by hand over a heatsource. James Leighton's work provided an intermediary step in mechanization in 1891. He patented a tool resembling tongs with a spherical mold on its end, based on an earlier German toymaker's method. While not automated in any way, the process sped up production.

Increasing demand during the 1920s and 30s could be successfully met by mechanized marble companies. Children and adults alike were caught up in the marble craze, collecting fancy "shooters" and entering tournaments. The game of marbles relies on flicking marbles at other players' marbles, within a boundary, in order to take them out of play.

In modern machines, lots of glass melts at once in a furnace around 1500 degrees Fahrenheit (815 degrees Celsius). Once the glass is freely flowing, it streams down a slide nicknamed the Gobfeeder, into the grooved mechanism. Swaths of colored glass can be added at this point. Each wheel's edge has a semicircular groove, and when matched up with another, the space between them is a sphere, just like Christenson's. The hot, bright orange gobs of glass are separated and rolled while they are malleable. When they have been rolled into perfect spheres and cooled sufficiently to maintain their shape, the machine pushes them out to a bin to be packaged and sold.

Marble-making is also alive among the fine arts community. Glass blowers and artisans still form marbles with tongs, a blow torch, a mold and a kiln, the way handmade glass beads are made. These talented people make stunning marbles with dragons or butterflies at their center in dazzling colors.
 
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