John Blocki Explained

John Blocki
Birth Date:15 June 1845
Birth Place:Hansewalde, Prussia
Death Place:Chicago, Illinois, USA
Occupation:perfumer
Known For:flower-in-the-bottle floral waters and perfumes

John Blocki (15 June 1845 – 7 May 1934) was one of America's pioneer perfumers. His perfumes and cosmetics were widely sold and his unique presentation earned him a U.S. patent for perfumery packaging. He was well-known in the trade for his leadership and commitment to the advancement of the American perfume industry.

Early life and family

John Blocki was born on a feudal estate near Königsberg, Prussia in 1845.[1] His parents were Friedrich Wilhelm Blocki, a Prussian and Polish noble, and Emma (Doehling) of Pomerania.[1] In 1850, the Friedrich Blockis with their six sons, two daughters, tutor, governess and several servants left the turbulence in Prussia for America.[2]

The voyage took six weeks and ended in a shipwreck off the shore of Sheboygan, Wisconsin where the family decided to settle. The only item salvaged from the shipwreck was a piano. It was the first piano in the state and people would come from miles around to hear Emma Blocki play on Sundays.

Blocki was educated in the public and private schools in Wisconsin and afterwards moved to Chicago where he lived the rest of his life. He married an English woman, Emma Leadbeater, in 1867. They had two children, Frederick William and Jeanette (a twin, Irene, died very young).[1]

Chemist and perfumer

In 1859 when he was fourteen years old, Blocki apprenticed as a chemist with pharmacist F.A. Wheeler in Sheboygan.[3] Blocki's older brother, William, had moved to Chicago to begin his pharmacy career as a clerk for Edwin Oscar Gale; the Gale drugstore was founded in 1847 making it one of the oldest apothecaries in Chicago.[4] William Blocki became a full partner in the business which changed its name to Gale & Blocki and grew to several stores including a prime location in the historic Palmer House Hotel (now the Palmer House Hilton).[5]

Blocki moved to Chicago in 1862 and joined the drug firm of Fuller, French and Fuller; this was his first and only employer. On August 12, 1865, at the age of twenty, Blocki established his own retail and wholesale drug firm known as Blocki, Dietzsche & Co. The firm specialized in high quality chemicals, perfumes, essences and essential oils. The business was destroyed by the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 but quickly reopened at a new location in one of the few surviving business buildings in the city.

Having accomplished himself as a chemist, Blocki sharpened his business skills by calling on large retailers in a wholesale capacity. From 1885 to 1895 he was appointed to represent the old New York house of Lehn & Fink in Chicago and vicinity.[6] This endeavor was a success and Blocki became known as one of the best wholesale druggists in the country for his unusually strong ability to memorize market quotations.[7]

Early in his career, Blocki began to specialize in perfumes and toilet waters.[8] He gained a local reputation in Chicago for the excellence of his fragrance creations and opened a shop on Michigan Avenue for the exclusive sale of perfumery.[6] The perfume shop was connected to his laboratory. This was the first and only retail perfume store in Chicago at the time and eventually it had to be relocated to a larger space owing to its success.[9]

In 1895, Blocki and his son, Frederick, dropped the drug and chemical aspects of the business and focused entirely on creating and manufacturing perfumes and toiletries. The firm was named John Blocki & Son and it produced hundreds of fine perfumes and toiletries that were used by millions.[10] They formulated and manufactured products under the Blocki name and also for several other beauty brands, including the Franco American Hygienic Co. The father-son partnership met an untimely and unexpected end in 1919 when Frederick Blocki died of pneumonia due to the influenza epidemic of 1918-1919.[11]

In addition to being a trained chemist and perfumer like his father, Frederick was a politician having served as Commissioner of Public Works and City Treasurer during Chicago's formative years. He was well respected for his management of city finances and for actions such as lending the city money from his own account to pay police and firemen before Christmas.[11] Fred Blocki supervised some of the city's great public improvements, including construction of the first fixed trunnion bascule bridge in the United States, the Cortland Street Drawbridge.[12]

After Frederick Blocki's death, the firm was renamed John Blocki, Inc. and it continued to produce perfumes and toiletries for many years. Blocki died on May 7, 1934, at the age of eighty eight having been active in his business up to the end. He is buried in a family memorial room in the mausoleum at Rosehill Cemetery; a Victorian era cemetery that is the burial place of many well-known early Chicagoans. Blocki's daughter, Jeannette Peterson, operated the perfume company after his death but soon sold it to the Winter Group who eventually closed the business.[2]

Industry advocate

Blocki was an active advocate for the pharmaceutical industry and the burgeoning American perfume industry. He was a charter member and from 1909-1910 served as first vice president of the Manufacturing Perfumers' Association in New York (now the Personal Care Products Council).[13] He was also a founding member and permanent corresponding secretary of the Chicago Veteran Druggists Association and the first president of the Perfumery, Soap and Extract Makers' Association of Chicago.[14]

In the early 1900s, American perfumes began to increase in value and Blocki attributed this increase to progress made in the art by American perfumers.[15] Well trained chemists were essential to this progress and Blocki was an early supporter of the UIC College of Pharmacy being an active member since 1867. He donated several perfumery trade items to the school's pharmaceutical museum: a musk pod, two containers of East Indian buffalo horn packed with civet as well as an essay on the use of musk and civet in perfume, and a small model of a copper still like the type used to distill rose oil in the Kazanlak district of Bulgaria.[16] The copper still had been part of a perfumer exhibit at the St. Louis World's Fair.[17]

Blocki's engaging character, dedication to the industry and involvement in numerous social clubs won him many loyal friends. The golden anniversary of his business was celebrated at a luncheon on August 12, 1915 with members of the Chicago Veteran Druggists Association and the local perfumery trade.[18] Blocki's friend and American League President Ban Johnson gave a eulogy. Among the many telegrams with good wishes was one from Hugo Kantrowitz of New York, the chairman of the American Pharmaceutical Association (now the American Pharmacists Association).[18]

Blocki's devotion to the Chicago Veteran Druggists Association was evident when he asked that a steamer being built in Philadelphia to sail through the Panama Canal to California in February 1915 be named CVDA. Blocki had been selected to baptize the steamer due to his expertise in cracking perfume bottles for that purpose.[19] This was one of many voyages taken by Blocki; he was an avid traveler and spent many months at a time in Europe as well as trips to Cuba, South American and Minor Asia gaining inspiration and exploring new markets and materials for perfume.

Presentation and patent

In addition to being known for high quality fragrances, Blocki's perfumes and toiletries could be identified by their colorful and artistic presentations. His perfume boutique on Michigan Avenue was so large and had such a vast assortment of perfumes that it was referred to in the trade as a "perfume palace" that was worth a visit from any retailer.[20] Blocki frequently offered tours of his laboratory and showroom to visiting pharmacists and perfumers.

In 1907, Blocki obtained one of the first United States patents related to perfumery packaging: No. 840,105.[21] The patent claim involved placing a preserved natural flower of the same type as that of the odor of the perfume within the bottle. This was Blocki's solution to the problem of the loss or deterioration of perfume bottle labels as well as the evaporation of essential oils.

The resulting fragrance line was known as the Empress Floral Perfumes and Toilet Waters and also the Flower-in-the-Bottle perfumes. He created a vibrant holiday display for this line that included a colored felt mat, 2-foot tall etched display bottles, lithographed announcement cards and colored blotters.[22] He also created a sample set for this line that was in the form of a miniature book named "The Story of the Flower by Blocki" and contained four perfume samples each with a preserved flower.

The Flower-in-the-Bottle line bore Blocki's unique presentation style but he also produced several lines of perfume that followed the popular style of the times. His Regal and Bouquet lines of perfume that debuted in the early nineteen hundreds were typical of the Belle Epoque style. They were presented in classic flacons with cut glass stoppers and colorful, embossed labels depicting bold and beautiful women. Many of these perfumes were named after famous operas or historical figures; particularly Prussian and Polish noble families given his heritage.

Blocki also derived inspiration from his family and one of the more artistic results was a perfume named Psyche Rose. The fragrance was inspired by the White Rock Sparkling Water company's trademark Psyche logo; a nymph kneeling on an alabaster rock and admiring her reflection in pure spring water. White Rock was owned by Edwin Gale and Blocki's brother, William.[23] There are many famous stories about White Rock Sparking Water; one being that it was used by Charles Lindbergh to christen his plane the Spirit of St. Louis before its trans-Atlantic flight and another that it was served at the coronation of England's King Edward VII and was his preferred water for diluting wine.

In addition to perfumes, Blocki had an extensive line of toiletries and cosmetics that were sold under the Esprit d'Amour trade name in apothecaries and beauty shops throughout the country.[24] He created a perfume with this name in 1916 along with scented sachets and powders. By the 1920s, this line grew to include night cream, face creams for different skin types, nail polish, shampoo and other cosmetics. The presentation was in dark blue tins with a floral design and gold accents. The tins were made by the American Can Company of New York and paper boxes were made by the Buedingen Box and Label Co. of New York.

List of creations

Blocki was one of America's pioneer perfumers and one of the largest manufacturers of perfumes and cosmetics of his time; his perfumes and toiletries were sold throughout the United States and abroad. A sample of Blocki perfumes includes [25] [26] [27]

Notes and References

  1. Leonard, John William. The Book of Chicagoans: a biographical dictionary of leading living mean and women of the city of Chicago. Chicago: A.N. Marquis & Company 1917. Page 68
  2. Baker, Linda Blocki. "The Gale & Blocki Drug Store; History in a Perfume Bottle". Perfume Bottle Quarterly. Spring 2006, volume 18, number 3, pages 5-7.
  3. "Obituary of John Blocki". American Perfumer and Essential Oil Review. May 1934, page 145.
  4. Gale, Edwin O. Reminiscences of Early Chicago and Vicinity. 1902. Fleming H. Revell Company.
  5. Andreas, Alfred Theodore. The History of Cook County, Illinois: From the Earliest Period to the Present Time. 1884 A.T. Andreas. Google Book Search. Web. 24 July 2014.
  6. "Notable Successes and How Achieved". The Practical Druggist and Pharmaceutical Review. June 1914, volume 32, number 6, page 232.
  7. "An Interesting Sketch of Two Members of CVDA". NARD Journal. 7 April 1910, volume 10, page 18. Google Book Search. Web. 26 July 2014.
  8. "Weekly Luncheon CVDA". NARD Journal. 24 June 1920, volume 30, number 12, page 546. Google Book Search. Web. 26 July 2014.
  9. American Druggist and Pharmaceutical Record. Volume 43. 1903. Reprint. London: Forgotten Books, 2013. Page 293.
  10. "Honorable Frederick W. Blocki". The Broad Ax. Chicago. 22 December 1917.
  11. "Obituary Notes; Fred W. Blocki". The American Perfumer and Essential Oil Review. March 1919, volume 14, number 1, page 19.
  12. "Frederick W. Blocki Democratic Candidate for Board of Review". The Sentinel. 5 April 1912, volume 6, issue 1.
  13. "Manufacturers see Bright Future for American Perfumery". The Pharmaceutical Era. May 1910, volume 43, page 493. Google Book Search. Web. 24 July 2014.
  14. "Perfumery, Soap and Extract Makers' Association of Chicago". Soap Gazette and Perfumer. 1 January 1914, volume 16, number 1, page 15.
  15. "Perfumes and Toilet Articles". The Western Druggist. February 1905, volume 27, number 2, page 87.
  16. "Colleges of Pharmacy". The Practical Druggist and Pharmaceutical Review. May 1920, volume 38, number 5, page 46. Google Book Search. Web. 24 July 2014.
  17. "Meetings of the American Pharmaceutical Association Branches". The Druggists Circular. January 1912, page 38.
  18. "News Happenings in Drugdom; Chicago Chatting". NARD Journal. 26 August 1915, volume 20, number 21, page 1128. Google Book Search. Web. 24 July 2014.
  19. "Bodemann's Aphorisms". The Practical Druggist and Pharmaceutical Review. February 1915, volume 33, page 32.
  20. "Sketches of States, Cities and Mercantile Representatives". The Western Druggist. October 1904, volume 26, number 10, page 551.
  21. Google Patent Search. Web. 26 July 2014.
  22. "This Spells Christmas". NARD Journal. 7 December 1916, volume 23, number 10, page 434. Google Book Search. Web. 26 July 2014.
  23. Web site: Gale and Blocki Chicago, IL.
  24. "Trade Notes". The American Perfumer and Essential Oil Review. March 1916, volume 11, number 1, page 25.
  25. Ninth Annual Meeting of The Manufacturing Perfumers' Association of the United States. New York. 1903. Page 195
  26. Trade Names of Perfumes and Toilet Articles. The Manufacturing Perfumers' Association of the United States. Seventh Edition 1908, page 100-101
  27. Perfume Intelligence: The Encyclopedia of Perfume. Volume B. Web. 4 September 2014.