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Vineland Flint Glass Works

Artist Info
Vineland Flint Glass WorksAmerican (Vineland, NJ), 1892 - 1933

History of Durand Art Glass Vineland Flint Glassworks

1892 - 1933

Vineland, NJ.

The Durand Art Glass Co. never existed. Durand Art Glass was produced by Vineland Flint Glassworks owned by Mr. Victor Durand, Jr. and later for a short time after Durand’s death by Kimble Glass Company, Vineland Flint Division.

Victor Durand, Jr. was born in Baccarat, France. As several generations before him, Victor, at the age of 12, went to work in a local glassworks. Victor’s grandfather and father worked for Cristalleries de Baccarat, a famous glassworks that was established in 1764. In 1882, Victor Durand, Sr. immigrated to the U.S. Victor, Sr. worked for Wheaton Glass Works and Whitall-Tatum and Company.

In 1884, Victor, Jr. (then 14 yrs. old) and the rest of his family joined his father in the U.S. Victor, Jr.’s first U.S. glass job was for Whitall-Tatum. Then he worked for Wheaton Glass Works. The next decade he worked for several glass factories in Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Canada. During this time, Victor was expanding his glass knowledge.

In 1897, Victor, Jr., with the help of his father, leased a small glassworks then known as Vineland Glass Manufacturing Co., founded in 1892. The company originally made bottles and jars. Victor built a new furnace and started producing glass tubing, rods, and clinical thermometer tubes. The new company started out with only 25 employees. In 1899, Victor, Jr. bought out his father’s shares to become sole owner. His father was semi-retired, however his brothers (Henry, Paul, and Charles) worked for the company, although not in executive positions. The plant built of wooden construction and was destroyed by fire in 1904. Later it was rebuilt of iron and brick.

In 1909, New Jersey Clay Pot Company was founded and Victor Durand, Jr. was President and majority stockholder. He also solely owned Vineland Flint Glass Works. By 1920, Victor added a new title, President and majority stockholder of the Newfield Glass Company.

Victor, Jr. still had one burning desire despite his financial success and that was to make art glass. So in 1924, he convinced Martin Bach, Jr. to establish an art glass shop. Martin, Jr. had grown up in his father’s business, the Quezal Art Glass Decorating Company in Brooklyn, New York. Quezal was started by Martin Bach, Sr. and Thomas Johnson. Martin Bach, Sr. had previously worked for Tiffany Furnaces as a batch mixer, thus he knew all of Tiffany’s formulas. In 1924, Martin Bach, Sr. died. The Quezal Company, already in financial difficulty, closed. Martin Bach, Jr. agreed to go to work for Victor Durand. Thus Durand’s “Fancy Shop” was born. The Fancy Shop’s team was entirely ex-Quezal glassworkers: Martin Bach, Jr. was superintendent, metal maker and art decorator; Emil J. Larson was the gaffer or shop foreman and designer of prototypes; William Wiedebine was the decorator; Harry Britton was servitor; and his brother, Percy Britton, was the gatherer. Ralph Barber was a plant superintendent for Vineland Flint Glass Works. Mr. Barber, who was famous for blowing Millville Rose paperweights, would also occasionally blow glass for the Fancy Shop. It did not take long for this team of glass artists to produce new, unique glass color effects and designs. Within two years of the founding of the Fancy Shop, Durand Art Glass was awarded the Medal of Honor at the Sesquicentennial International Exposition in Philadelphia.

The Fancy Shop was not always profitable and was supported by Vineland Flint Glass Works. However, in 1931, Victor Durand, Jr. died from injuries sustained in an automobile accident. At the time of his death, Durand was in the middle of a merger with Kimble Glass Company for the second time. The second merger was left to be completed by Victor Durand’s widow. It also left the new company without the influence of Victor Durand. The Great Depression was gripping the U.S., and there was not much of a market for high quality art glass. The last new art glass introduced by Fancy Shop was “powder glass,” similar to Steuben’s Cluthra. Kimble’s Cluthra, as it is now known, continued production for about a year. These pieces carried the Durand name. However, historians are not sure if the Fancy Shop had anything to do with its production. By 1933, the remaining stock of the Fancy Shop and Kimble’s Cluthra were either sold or disposed of. This was a sad ending to a great, but short-lived, art glass manufacturer.

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Moorish Crackle pattern
Object Name: Lamp
Durand Glass Works division of Vineland Flint Glassworks
1924-1932
Object number: UM2000.86ab
Object Name: Vase
Vineland Flint Glass Works
1924-1932
Object number: UM2016.490
Vase
Object Name: Vase
Vineland Flint Glass Works
Object number: UM2000.85