Historical Background
Glassblowers were among the founders of Jamestown in 1607, and early
glass manufacturing was also attempted in 17th-century Boston and Philadelphia.
Dutch colonists in the New Netherlands enjoyed painted oval or circular
medallions that bore the family's coat of arms or illustrated Dutch proverbs.
German colonists in the mid-Atlantic region also began early glass ventures.
Despite the availability of good natural ingredients, each of these early
American glassmakers eventually failed due to production and managerial
difficulties. As a result, colonists imported most of their glass from
England throughout the 17th and 18th centuries.
These interior foyer doors deliver dazzling daylight deeper into an 1880s house originally illuminated by gaslight. Photo: Neal A. Vogel.
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Social values as well as high costs also restricted the use of stained
and other ornamental glass. This was particularly true with regard to churches.
The Puritans, who settled New England, rejected the religious imagery of
the Church of England, and built simple, unadorned churches with clear
glass windows. Consequently, not much glass remains from the colonial and
early national periods. Less than 1% of the Nation's stained and leaded
glass predates 1700. Considering the enormous loss of 17th-, 18th-, and
early 19th-century buildings, any window glass surviving from these
periods is very significant. Every effort should be made to document
and preserve it.
Despite many failed starts, the War of 1812, and British competition,
American glass production increased steadily throughout the 19th century.
Stained glass was available on a very limited basis in America during the
first quarter of the 19th century, but American stained glass did not really
emerge in its own right until the 1840s. The windows at St. Ann and the
Holy Trinity Episcopal Church in Brooklyn, New York, made by John and William
Jay Bolton between 1843 and 1848, are perhaps the most significant early
American stained glass installation. Other important early stained
glass commissions were the glass ceilings produced by the J. & G. H.
Gibson Company of Philadelphia for the House and Senate chambers of the
United States Capitol in 1859.
America's glass industry boomed during the second half of the 19th century.
(And although stained and leaded glass is found nationwide, the manufacturing
was based in the Northeast and Midwest, where good natural ingredients
for glass, and coal reserves for the kilns were available. Moreover, nearly
all of the nationally renowned studios were based in major metropolitan
areas of the central and northeastern states-near the manufacturers that
supplied their raw materials.) In response to this growth, the industry
formed self-regulating associations that established guidelines for business
and production. In 1879 the Window Glass Association of America was established, and, in 1903, The National
Ornamental Glass Manufacturers' Association, precursor of the Stained Glass
Association in America, was formed.