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Mason jar

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A collection of Mason jars filled with preserved foods

A Mason jar, also known as a canning jar, preserves jar or fruit jar, is a glass jar used in home canning to preserve food. It was named after American tinsmith John Landis Mason, who patented it in 1858. The jar's mouth has a screw thread on its outer perimeter to accept a metal ring or "band". The band, when screwed down, presses a separate stamped steel disc-shaped lid against the jar's rim.[1][2]

After Mason's patent expired, numerous other companies began manufacturing similar jars. Over the years, the brand name Mason became the genericized trademark for that style of glass home canning jar, and the word "Mason" can be seen on many Ball and Kerr brand jars. The style of jar is occasionally referred to by common brand names such as Ball jar (in the eastern US) or Kerr jar (in the western US) even if the individual jar is not that brand.[3][4][5]

In early 20th-century America, Mason jars became useful to those who lived in areas with short growing seasons. The jars became an essential part of farming culture, while being used at fairs to display jams and pickles for judging and awards. This was a reflection of the labour that went into making the jams. The jams, pickles, and sauces would be given and exchanged as gifts during the holidays as a canned preserved good was of much value. The peak use of Mason jars came during World War II, when the U.S. government rationed food, encouraging the public to grow their own. As migration to cities occurred, along with the rise of refrigerators, the more efficient transport of goods made fruit and vegetables available year-round, reducing the need for food preservation. Contemporary industrial preservation transitioned to the use of plastics like bakelite and nylon and billions of containers were produced instead.[6]

On August 15, 2017, the registrar at National Day Calendar proclaimed National Mason Jar Day to be observed annually as a national holiday on November 30, beginning in 2017.[7]

History

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Before Mason

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Nicolas Appert's jar

French chef Nicolas Appert invented the method of preserving food by enclosing it in sealed containers. Among the earliest glass jars used for home canning were wax sealers, named in reference to the sealing wax that was poured into a channel around the lip to secure a tin lid. This process, though complicated and error-prone, became popular in the late 1830s or early 1840s and was still used to seal fruit jars until about 1890. The wax sealing process was largely the only one available until other sealing methods were developed.[8]

John Landis Mason

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John Landis Mason, inventor of the Mason jar

In 1858, a Vineland, New Jersey, tinsmith named John Landis Mason (1832–1902) invented and patented a screw threaded glass jar or bottle that became known as the Mason jar (U.S. Patent No. 22,186.)[1][2] From 1857, when it was first patented, to the present, Mason jars have had hundreds of variations in shape and cap design.[8] After Mason's patent expired, many other manufacturers produced glass jars for home canning using the Mason-style jar.[9]

Early closure style, zinc lid over glass liner

The initial form of closure for the glass canning jar was a zinc screw-on cap, the precursor to today's screw-on lids. It usually had a milk-glass liner, but some of the earliest lids may have had transparent glass liners.[8] The cap screwed down onto a rubber ring on the shoulder of the jar, not the lip.[10] Between 1860 and 1900, many other patents were issued for Mason jar improvements and closures.[11] In 1903 Alexander Kerr introduced lids with a permanent rubber seal. His improved design in 1915 used the modern design.[12] Jars are closed with two-piece metal lids that seal on the rim. The jar lid has a rubber or rubber-like sealing surface and is held in place by a separate metal band.[8]

Mason sold the patents for the Mason jar to the Sheet Metal Screw Company of Lewis R. Boyd in 1859. Boyd had patented a white "milk-glass" insert for the zinc screw lids to theoretically lessen the chances that food would be tainted by contact with the metal lid. In 1871, Mason partnered with Boyd in the Consolidated Fruit Jar Company which licensed Mason jar patents to numerous glass makers.[12] Letters of patent issued to Mason on May 10, 1870, for improvements to his fruit-canning jar was determined to be invalid as a result of a patent infringement case brought before the Southern District of New York on June 11, 1874. The court acknowledged that Mason invented the jar in 1859, but he did not apply for a patent for an improved version of the fruit jar until 1868. In the meantime, several others had patented designs and Mason had known these jars were being produced and sold. The court ruled that Mason's delay in protecting his patent indicated he had abandoned his invention in the intervening years between 1859 and 1868 and had forfeited his patent. The court's decision allowed other manufacturers to patent, produce, and sell glass jars for canning.[13]

Design variations

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Variations of the Mason jar include the "Improved Mason," which sealed on a shoulder above the thread instead of below, and the Atlas Strong Shoulder, with a reinforced shoulder area (as the original design was subject to cracks from the stress at the sealing point). A new type of Mason jar known as a "bead" jar was introduced c. 1910–1915. These continuous screw-thread jars were designed with a bead between the screw threads and the shoulder as a sealing surface. The Ball Corporation's "Perfect Mason" jar, one of the most common jars of this style, was introduced c. 1913 and produced until the mid-20th century. It had several variations, including a square-shaped jar.[8][14]

Ball Corporation brands

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The Ball Corporation, which once dominated the market as the largest domestic manufacturer of home-canning jars, spun off its home-canning business in 1993. In 1939 the company manufactured 54% of all the canning jars made in the US.[15] Ball ceased production of canning jars when its subsidiary, Alltrista, became a separate company in 1993.[16] Ball Corp. acquired certain Kerr assets, including factories, in 1992 and the Kerr brand of glass home canning jars was absorbed into Alltrista in 1996.[4] Alltrista was renamed Jarden Corporation in 2002.[17] Newell Brands acquired Jarden Corporation in 2016.[18] As of 2022, Newell manufactures canning jars under the brand names Ball, Bernardin, Golden Harvest, and Kerr.[19]

Contemporary jar design

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An array of Mason jars in varying sizes

A complete Mason jar is composed of a tempered glass jar, a flat self-sealing lid, and a metal band.[20]

The jars are made with either a wide mouth (3 inches (76 mm)) or regular mouth (2+38 inches (60 mm)) opening. They come in a variety of sizes, from 4 ounces to a gallon. The half-gallon size and larger are not recommended for canning purposes. The most typical sizes used in canning are quart, pint, and half-pint. The jars typically have their brand name embossed on the side, though jars may also have a decorative design such as a quilting pattern or may be completely blank and smooth. Jars may be washed and reused so long as they have no chips or cracks.[20]

In the illustration, the left half are wide mouth and the right half are regular mouth. From left to right: wide mouth half-pint, pint, 1+12 pint, quart, then regular mouth quart, pint, half-pint, quarter-pint. The lids and bands are also shown. The two rightmost jars are quilted.

The lids are made of metal with a ring of sealing compound which acts as a gasket against the jar's rim. New sealing compound is only good for about five years from date of manufacture, so older unused lids should be discarded. Lids may not be used more than once.[20] New lids are slightly domed (convex). During processing, air is vented from the jar and the food shrinks. While cooling, a vacuum is created inside the jar, sucking the dome downward (concave) – an indication that a seal is good.[21] Processed jars should be stored in a manner where the lids are not disturbed and the seals remain intact.[22]

The metal screw bands are used to properly align the lids onto the jar, and to hold the lid in place during processing. They should be removed after processing and may be reused many times as long as they are kept rust-free and undented.[20]

Collecting vintage jars

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Ball and Kerr brand antique Mason jars

The value of a jar is related to its age, rarity, color, and condition. A jar's age and rarity can be determined by the color, shape, mold and production marks of the glass, and the jar's closure. Mason jars usually have a proprietary brand embossed on the jar. Early jars embossed with "Mason's Patent November 28th 1858" that date from the late 1850s to early 1860s closely match the illustrations of Mason's 1858 patents. Mouth-blown (or hand-blown) jars embossed with a version of "Mason's Patent November 28th 1858" were made about 1857 to 1908 and often had a ground lip as well. By 1908 semi-automatic machines manufactured the majority of these jars. Machine-made Mason jars that originated around 1909 have a sealing surface on a bead ledge below the threads. This type of jar dominated the market by the mid to late 1910s. Manufacturers continued to make jars with the beaded seal after the mid-twentieth century.[8] Ball's "Ideal" canning jar, which first appeared around 1915 and was discontinued in 1962, is one of the company's best-known jars and is popular among collectors.[23]

Most antique jars that are not colorless are aqua or "Ball blue," a blue-green shade that was named for the Ball Corporation, a prevalent jar manufacturer. Most mouth-blown Mason jars embossed with some type of 1858 patent date were produced in aqua glass. The Ball brand of Mason jars were manufactured in several colors, but the most common color was the distinctive "Ball blue," which the Ball Corporation used in its jars from about 1910 to 1930. Mason jars with this particular color of glass may be attributed to Ball, since "virtually no other bottle or jar was made in that color."[8]

Older styles of home canning jars are "Not Recommended" by the U.S.-based National Center for Home Food Preservation, the United States Department of Agriculture, and University Extension Services. These include: those using a zinc cap and a rubber jar ring, and those using a glass lid, wire bail, and rubber sealing ring. These provide "no definitive way to determine if a vacuum seal is formed".[24]

Other uses

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Aside from canning, mason jars are also sometimes used as dessert containers.[25][26]

The jars have been used for a variety of household functional and decorative purposes. Mason jars have been turned into items such as oil lanterns, soap dispensers, speakers and vases.[6]

See also

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  • Fowler's Vacola jar – Australian product, glass jar sealed with a rubber ring, metal lid, and a spring fastener
  • Kilner jar – British canning jar brand; rubber-sealed, screw-topped jar
  • Weck jar – German product, glass jar with glass lid, rubber seal, metal spring clips

References

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  1. ^ a b "John Landis Mason". National Inventors Hall of Fame. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  2. ^ a b Edmund F. Ball (1960). From Fruit Jars to Satellites: The Story of Ball Brothers Company, Incorporated. New York: Necomen Society in North America. p. 8.
  3. ^ Canning — On the Ball? Do you Kerr? It's all straight from the Jarden, October 5, 2020
  4. ^ a b Kerr Glass Mfg. Co., History and Marks by Society for Historical Archaeology
  5. ^ Kerr Mason Jars
  6. ^ a b Kelly, Ariana (2015-09-24). "How the Mason Jar Went From Farmers to Hipsters". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
  7. ^ "NATIONAL MASON JAR DAY – November 30". National Day Calendar. October 6, 2017.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Bill Lindsey. "Fruit/Canning Jar Closures". Society for Historical Archaeology. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  9. ^ Ball, pp. 12–13.
  10. ^ Food Bottles, The Society for Historical Archaeology
  11. ^ Bill Lindsey. "Bottle Finishes & Closures, Part III: Types of Bottle Closures". Society for Historical Archaeology. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  12. ^ a b A PRIMER ON FRUIT JARS Archived 2016-11-22 at the Wayback Machine, Dave Hinson, Bottles and Extras, The Federation of Historical Bottle Collectors, 1996
  13. ^ "The Consolidated Fruit Jar Company vs. James T. Wright. In Equity" in Samuel Blatchford (1875). Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Second Circuit: 1845–1887. Vol. 12. Auburn, NY: Derby and Miller. pp. 149–56. OCLC 68813078. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  14. ^ William F. Brantley (1975). A Collector's Guide to Ball Jars. Muncie, IN: Rosemary Humbert Martin. p. 55. OCLC 3104299.
  15. ^ Frederic A. Birmingham (1980). Ball Corporation: The First Century. Indianapolis, IN: Curtis Publishing Company. pp. 139–40. ISBN 9780893870393.
  16. ^ "Alltrista Corporation History". Funding Universe. Retrieved 2016-03-25.
  17. ^ Alltrista Changes Name to Jarden Corporation June 3, 2002
  18. ^ Newell Brands acquires Jarden Corporation for $16 billion, April 2016
  19. ^ Newell - The Home Canning Giant
  20. ^ a b c d Complete Guide to Home Canning: Guide 01: Principles of Home Canning by National Center for Home Food Preservation, pages 13–16
  21. ^ Cooling Jars and Testing Jar Seals
  22. ^ Storing Home Canned Foods: Testing Jar Seals
  23. ^ Brantley, pp. 39–40.
  24. ^ Patti Griffith, University of Wyoming Cooperative Extension Service, in her reference to the use of older versions of Mason jar closures, explains, "Jars requiring a zinc cap and jar rubber or jars requiring a glass lid, wire bail, and jar rubber have not been recommended since 1989 because there is no definitive way to determine if a vacuum seal is formed". See Patti Griffith. "The Time is Ripe for Summer Melons" (PDF). Canner's Corner: Enjoying Summer's Bounty. MP-119-2 (2). Laramie, WY: University of Wyoming Cooperative Extension Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-04-18. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
  25. ^ Li, Johanna (2022-06-16). "25 Mason Jar Desserts – Recipes for Dessert in a Jar". Country Living. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
  26. ^ "Mason Jar Desserts That Leave Bowls Behind". Better Homes & Gardens. 2017-02-23. Retrieved 2022-08-25.

General references

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