Community Finds: LuAnn’s Magnificent 15-Year-Old “Bourbon de Luxe” Prohibition Pint with Original Cutout Carton
Every now and then, a piece of Prohibition history surfaces that looks like it was plucked straight from a 1920s pharmacy window display. Reader LuAnn sent in an absolute stunner of a find: an intact, pristine medicinal pint of Bourbon de Luxe “Vintage for Connoisseurs” that has remained tucked away inside its original retail box.
What makes LuAnn’s submission so remarkable is the presence of the incredibly rare, original cardboard outer carton—a delicate piece of ephemera that seldom survives the decades.

The Genius of the Die-Cut Carton
The presentation in the box highlights exactly how medicinal whiskey was marketed to the public during the dry era. The front of the box features a custom die-cut window designed specifically to frame the bottle’s main label while keeping the glass protected.
The box graphics are highly deliberate. It features bold red text running down the sides: “For the Convenience of Druggists” and “Affix ℞ Label Thru Opening.” This allowed pharmacists to slap the doctor’s prescription script directly over the glass without having to discard the branded packaging, letting the patient take home a premium, fully-dressed luxury item.
Decoding the “Glorious Sunshine” Vintage
When you look at the bottle outside of its box, the sheer poetry of early 20th-century spirits marketing takes center stage. The label boldly boasts that the liquid within represents the “Glorious Sunshine of a Thousand Ages” and summarizes it as “The Zenith of Possibility in Whiskey Quality.”
Beyond the sweeping romance of the text, the federal compliance markers tell a concrete story:
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The Age Statement: A prominent, curved paper banner sits directly over the main label declaring the whiskey was “Made 15 Years Ago.”
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The Timeline: A close look at the green federal Bottled-in-Bond tax stamp over the cap reveals a distillation date of Spring 1914. Combined with the 15-year age banner, this tells us this exact bottle was packaged in 1929—right at the peak of the dry era.
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The Proof: True to federal bonded regulations, it sits at a perfect 100 Proof.
An American Medicinal Spirits Masterpiece
The bottom of the main label bears the hallmark of the absolute king of the Prohibition whiskey trade: The American Medicinal Spirits Company (AMS).
Following the Concentration Act of 1922, AMS consolidated hundreds of thousands of orphaned pre-Prohibition barrels into high-security government warehouses. Brands like Bourbon de Luxe—which would later become a massive mid-century staple under National Distillers—were packaged using these elite, well-aged stocks from 1914 to keep the nation’s pharmacies supplied with genuine, high-purity medicinal bourbon.
With an incredibly high fill line, pristine paper labels, and a near-flawless die-cut outer carton, LuAnn’s 1914-vintaged pint is an absolute museum-grade artifact of American distilling history. A massive thank you to LuAnn for sharing it with the community!
Found a vintage spirit that’s still tucked away in its original packaging?
Don’t let a rare piece of retail ephemera or an old boxed bottle keep its secrets forever. Snap a few pictures of the labels and the carton, and send them over to our Whiskey Bottle Evaluation Form to uncover the heritage inside!







