Glass Window Blinds (361)

Glass Window Blinds by Brooklyn Flint Glass Works or Corning Flint Glass Works
Stop Number: 
361

Brooklyn Flint Glass Works or Corning Flint Glass Works
U.S., Brooklyn or Corning, New York
1866–1870
Non-lead glass, pressed and assembled in a frame
Each panel: L: 92 cm, W: 21.5 cm
(69.4.271)

Elias Hungerford received a patent for these glass window blinds in 1866. They were designed, he said, “to give light which enters the room any desired tint to correspond with the color of wall paper and carpets or furniture, thus giving to the room a most pleasing and harmonizing appearance.”

Hungerford insisted that his blinds would never require painting or varnishing, and that they could be produced very inexpensively. Amory Houghton Sr., president of the Brooklyn Flint Glass Works, agreed to manufacture the blinds. They were not a commercial success, and only a few sets survive.

In 1868, Hungerford and some local investors persuaded Houghton to move to Corning and to rename his factory the Corning Flint Glass Works. The set shown here came from Hungerford’s house in Corning.