{"title":"[Nursing bottle]","altern":[],"creato":[],"contri":[],"publia":[],"date":"[between 1800 and 1899?]","dateb":[],"sort":"1899","descri":"A clear pressed glass nursing bottle.  <br><br>Marks: 8-pointed star enclosing circle with ornamental monogram in centre '(? P T P & Co.?) Acme Nursing Bottle'. The aperture measures 4 cm in diameter.","physia":"1 nursing bottle : glass ; 7 cm high x 16 cm long","subjec":"Infants--Care--History ; Infants' supplies","subjea":[],"person":[],"genre":"Feeding Bottle","type":"Still Image","format":"image\/jpeg","langua":[],"notes":"Pressed glass nursing bottle with long tubular nipple and internal glass tube, of a type known as Siphonia. These feeders made their appearance in mid 19th century (attachments not original). Teats made of cloth-covered sponge, glove fingers and specially prepared Calves' teats were replaced by rubber at about the same time as glass nursing bottles made their appearance. The most hygienic of these were of India rubber attached directly to to the neck of the nurser, but these were too hard in texture to make sucking easy. The long rubber tube with nipple attached was an effort to overcome this difficulty, but it posed serious problems because of the virtual impossibility of keeping it clean.<br><br>Gift of Miss Alice Wright, 1966.","ubc":[],"identi":[],"digita":"IFC-027","forms":"History of Nursing in Pacific Canada","reposi":"Original Format: University of British Columbia. Woodward Biomedical Library. Infant Feeders Collection. Charles Woodward Memorial Room. Item no. 27","datea":"2006","publis":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","rights":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","licens":[],"transc":[],"catalo":[],"projec":[],"aip":[],"file":[],"doi":"1.0132852","dmcreated":"2012-12-06","dmmodified":"2019-10-10","dmrecord":"36"}