Nudity sells. Not just in today’s marketplace but also in pre-Prohibition times. Then the principal expression was through whiskey advertising signs that were designed for use in all-male drinking establishments. One of the most popular of saloon signs was for Tippecanoe Whiskey and Jake Pfeffer of Cincinnati was the distributor.
The Tippecanoe sign, shown below, disclosed an Indian maiden paddling a canoe with her breasts uncovered and very prominent. She is shown in a landscape of water and vegetation that bespeaks of pristine nature and unsullied wilderness. That image reenforces the labels asserting that this Kentucky whisky is “medicinally pure” and “recommended by physicians.”
Colorful and eye-catching, the sign had been lithographed on tin, giving it permanence. Note the holes in each corner. They allowed the saloonkeeper to tack it above his bar or on a prominent wall. The same nude image also was available on color lithographed paper, tastefully framed as shown below.
Pfeffer employed a different standard, some might contend a prudish (or hypocritical) standard for Tippecanoe images that might be seen by the general public. Thus the paper label of a Tippecanoe flask he issued showed the same Indian maiden and the same landscape, but — lo!” — the lady was all covered up. Even the most easily scandalized would find little to fault if they saw a bottled of whiskey sitting on a drugstore or grocery shelf that bore that image.
Although he claimed proprietorship of Tippecanoe “Double Fire Copper” Whiskey, Pfeffer was in fact the merchandiser, not the originator of the brand. The source was the Union Distilling Company, located in Cincinnati, that had adopted the motto “None Better.” This organization advertised as distillers but evidence is that it was getting its whiskey from Kentucky, including the Latonia Distillery in Kenton County. Union Distilling almost certainly was a wholesaler and “rectifier,” that is blending and mixing raw whiskeys to achieve certain taste and color. Like most dealers of this class, Union Distilling featured a blizzard of brands, using supplies from multiple sources and then slapping on its own proprietary labels. Among its brands was “Tippecanoe,” a name it trademarked in 1905.


Pfeffer had established his liquor business in Cincinnati in 1876, according to city business directories, the same year the German national became a citizen. His first address was at 733 Freeman Street but he soon moved to the southwest corner of Eighth and Depot in the 21st Ward. From there Pfeffer moved to Gest Street, a major Cincinnati thoroughfare that loops around the downtown. After three moves on Gest, the company in 1898 moved to 1216-1220 Gest where it remained for twenty years. In 1905 he incorporated the business as the Jacob J. Pfeffer Company and installed himself as president and manager. Andrew Hochstrasser was named secretary-treasurer.
Born in February 1853 in Endingen, Baden-Wurttemburg, Germany, Pfeffer had emigrated from his native Germany to the United States in 1870, when he was about 17. That was an age when many German boys left home. At eighteen years they could be drafted into the Prussian army where many recruits died in basic training. Jacob sailed on the steamship, Hamburg, into New York City and headed for Cincinnati, a city known for its strong German population and culture. My assumption is that he early went to work for one of the city’s many whiskey wholesalers, learning the trade.





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