Collecting Fire-King

Practical and Affordable Glassware

© Susan Cramer

Reproduction Jade-ite Batter bowl, s cramer

Fire-King produced a range of products in the 1940's that collectors love-and still use!

Inexpensive & Attractive

Designed to be inexpensive and attractive, Fire-King glassware was the result of a merger of the Anchor Cap and Closure Corporation and the Hocking Glass Company. Formed in 1937, Anchor Hocking introduced its popular line of Fire-King glassware in the early 1940’s. Fire-King products were designed to be not only inexpensive and attractive, but durable and versatile as well. A Fire-King casserole went from oven to table to refrigerator. Fire-King was the name of what was intended to be a single line of multiple offerings, but proved to be so popular that other lines became unnecessary.

Souvenir and Advertising

Fire-King is mass produced glassware that came in a variety of fired-on, painted on, or solid colors. The majority of offerings were in cookware, dishware and tableware, but they also made baby bottles, vases, ash trays and souvenir pieces. These souvenirs are mostly found in the form of mugs, bowls, plates and ashtrays. A line produced for Esso Gasoline included tumblers, pitchers, and trays and featured Esso’s smiling “Put a tiger in your tank” mascot. More recent advertisers include Bazooka, Burger King, A & W Root Beer, Stuckey’s and McDonald’s.

From Philbe to Jade-ite

Philbe dinnerware was Fire-King’s earliest release. It offered a series of dish and serving ware in ivory, clear, sapphire blue and a color Fire-King called Jade-ite. Soon after, Jade-ite became the company’s signature color, and the company came out with lines of restaurant dinnerware that are wildly popular today.

Jade-ite, Jadeite or Jade Green are all names for Popular!

Jeannette Glass of Pennsylvania may have been the first to produce the soft milky green color they named Jadeite, but Fire-King made it huge. The color became so popular that all manufacturers of consumer glassware such as McKee Glass, Fenton, New Martinsville, and Akro Agate had their own versions. Thanks almost single handedly to Martha Stewart, vintage Jade-ite made by Fire-King and others has seen a huge upsurge in popularity in recent years. Martha Stewart offers a line of her own “jadeite” pieces, and these and reproductions, fakes and fantasies frequently show up on eBay as vintage Fire-King. The market is still strong for unusual and verifiable Fire-King jade-ite, but weak for common items as well as those pieces known to have been reproduced. In 2000, Fire-King reissued some of their old pieces, and the bottoms are clearly marked with the date. These have bottom stamps as well as foil labels, and could be purchased at Meijer Stores for $14.99. For more information about Fire-King, go to FireKing.net. or the Anchor Hocking Museum.

Source: Fire-King An Information and Price Guide Joe Keller and Davis Ross, Schiffer Books 2002


The copyright of the article Collecting Fire-King in Collecting Ceramics/Glass is owned by Susan Cramer. Permission to republish Collecting Fire-King must be granted by the author in writing.


Reproduction Jade-ite Batter bowl, s cramer
Fire-King stamp 2000, s cramer
Ivory Swirl Mixing Bowl, s cramer
   


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