Early 1800s Order From The Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary

Ken Lopez
Posted by Ken Lopez on Jan 17, 2021 11:41:10 AM

Here is yet another historic Alexandria document from the OurHistoryMuseum collection full of mysteries. This document is an early 1800s order from the well-known Stabler-Leadbeater apothecary shop, now a truly delightful museum. Honestly, I cannot make out the date, and I can't figure out who the order is from.

The clues I have are these:

  1. I know the apothecary opened in 1792.
  2. The Leadbeaters were not involved in the business until 1844.
  3. The last name on the order is clearly "Ball."
  4. It appears to be dated 18-something, maybe 1827?
  5. There is a reference to Dr. Mason, presumably a prescribing physician or another pharmacist.

Everything else is just a guess, and even the part about there being a prescribing physician is just a guess. With that said, my best guess is that this document reads as follows (I place a bracketed number where there is a word that I just can't read. My hope is that someone else can read one of these words from the context and leave it in the comments below.):


Front: 

[1] May 31

Will Mr. Stabler send one this morning by Dr. M's [2] the bundle which he had for me – item

Several ounces of Senna  (Mr. Mason will tell you how much).
Alum (in powder if he has it in that state, if not the lump Alum) 2 pounds
Half a dozen empty [4] with covers if he has them to spare
“"""pillboxes """"""
And oblige his respectfully by
[5] Ball

 

Rear:

Order
[6] Ball
[7] 31st
18[8]

Messrs Wm Stabler & Bro.
Fairfax St
Alexandria

Favoured by
Mr. Mason

StablerDrugsBallLtr-letter

more below...

StablerDrugsBallLtr-Env

 

If you've never been to the museum, I highly recommend it. It's unique in the way time was preserved upon the apothecary's closing in the 1930s. Here's a bit of the apothecary's history from Wikipedia:

"Edward Stabler came to Alexandria after apprenticing in the apothecary business with his brother in Leesburg, Virginia. A devout Quaker and savvy businessman, he rented space in 1792 at the corner of King and S. Fairfax to start his business and by 1796, he began renting 107 S. Fairfax. Nine years later, he took ownership of the building and turned it into a bustling apothecary business. By 1829, he had purchased 105 S. Fairfax and incorporated the building into his operation.

Edward Stabler sold to a variety of city and country residents – from Martha Washington to Robert E. Lee, the local doctor to the local farmer. The typical products Stabler sold included medicine, farm and garden equipment, surgical instruments, dental equipment, soap, perfume, Buffalo and Bedford mineral water, cigars, window glass, paint and varnish, artists' supplies, combs and brushes. Much of the medicine he sold was created on-site, using plant and herb materials.

By 1806, Stabler began traveling extensively to Quaker church meetings throughout the region, leaving oldest son William to run the business in his absence. After his father's death in 1831, the business passed to William. Keeping with the family-run tradition, William brought several of his brothers and also his brother-in-law, John Leadbeater, into the business between 1832 and his death in 1852. John Leadbeater, a trained apothecary and dentist, purchased the business from William's wife, as the couple had no children, and changed the name of the business from William Stabler and Co. to John Leadbeater.

Once the Civil War erupted, Alexandria was quickly occupied by Union troops – a fact noted in the Leadbeater business' daybook. After the First Battle of Manassas, Union troops poured into Alexandria and the Apothecary's books reported that many soldiers stood in line to buy "Hot Drops", a cough expectorant containing paprika and alcohol. The drops sold for a cent each and sold over $1,000 in one day!

In 1865, the business was operated by John's son Edward and soon supplied to nearly 500 pharmacies throughout the Washington DC area. At its peak, the Leadbeaters employed 12 salesmen throughout Virginia, West Virginia, and North Carolina to promote their wholesale and mail order businesses. The company operated in 11 buildings in Alexandria, including the two main buildings on Fairfax Street, offices on King Street, warehouses on Lee and Prince Streets, and an office in Washington, D.C.

By the turn of the century however, the family business was beginning to feel the effects of the growing commercial pharmacies and synthetic drug companies, as well as the downturn in the economy, and the business declared bankruptcy in 1933, just days before the death of its owner, Edward S. Leadbeater, Jr.

Spurred into action to save the historic collection for future generations, a plan was crafted by concerned Alexandria citizens and the American Pharmaceutical Association to purchase the collection and archives with private buyers. The majority of the contents and archives were purchased at auction on July 19, 1933, by L. Manuel Hendler, a Baltimore ice cream merchant with an affinity for the history of pharmacy. The following year, the newly formed Landmarks Society of Alexandria purchased the buildings at auction. Hendler then donated the contents and archives to the Landmarks Society.

With the buildings and collection secured, the structures were conjecturally returned to their 18th-century appearance by noted restoration architect, Thomas Tileston Waterman. The museum was officially re-opened in 1939, free of charge thanks to the financial support of the American Pharmaceutical Association. After an extensive renovation adding a fire suppression system, and re-stabilizing the structure, the Landmarks Society donated the museum and its important contents to the City of Alexandria in November 2006."

I think it's interesting that they have gone to the trouble to digitize their collection of documents and those are online and fully searchable:

https://imaging.alexandriava.gov/weblink/Welcome.aspx?cr=1


Who knows? Maybe one of our readers will find a reference to this very order being filled. Wouldn't that be exciting?


 

Topics: Fairfax Street, Letter, Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary, William Stabler, Pharmacy, Places

Leave Comment

About OHM

OurHistoryMuseum is a crowdsourced and virtual history museum that anyone can contribute to. We are prototyping with our hometown first — Alexandria, Virginia. The app will be available nationally soon. In the meantime, sign up for our blog or follow OHM on social media (both at the bottom of this page) to keep updated.

Free Subscription to This Blog

Enter your email.
One-click unsubscribe anytime.

Recent Articles

Most Popular Articles

Post By Topic

See all