Bidding advice
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Placing a Maximum Bid
Use the "Set your bid limit" button on the left side of the bidding panel to enter the highest amount you're willing to bid on a lot. Our system will then automatically raise your bid in set increments if you’re outbid, up to your maximum. If someone bids above your set limit, we’ll notify you by email so you can choose whether to increase your bid.
Placing a Single Bid
Alternatively, place a single bid by selecting the button on the right side of the bidding panel. The button displays the amount needed for the next increment. For example, if the current highest bid is £50.00, the button will show "+ £55.00" (reflecting a £5.00 increment).
Incremental Bidding Explained
Our system increases bids based on preset increments, as shown in the table below, whether you set a maximum bid or make a single bid.
Bottle Details
Gallant Knight 1917 Bottled in Bond Whiskey / Prohibition Era Bottling
A fantastic example of a Prohibition era bottling of American whiskey. Although the Volstead Act of 1920 had banned all production, sale an consumption of alcohol in the US, a few select companies were able to acquire medicinal licenses that allowed them to continue bottling their warehoused stock. These medicinal bottlings could be prescribed by medical professionals, and bakers were also entitled to a weekly ration to cook with.
One of these companies was the Frankfort distillery. Built in 1902, the distillery was one of six companies to be granted a medicinal license in 1920, along with Brown-Forman, Schenley, the A. Ph. Stitzel distillery, the American Medicinal Spirits Company, and James Thompson & Brother. Like the others, Frankfort Distillery secured its stocks for the next decade by buying up the stocks from many of those who did not. In 1922, they company was bought by Paul Jones & Co, which subsumed itself into the newly named Frankfort Distilleries in order to use its license to continue production of its now legendary Four Roses brand. The distillery did not re-open after Prohibition, and with stock stretched thin due to its expanded portfolio by the end of 1920s, they contracted A. Ph. Stitzel to supply them with more from their ageing stock. This partnership saw Frankfort Distilleries eventually acquire the Stitzel plant in 1933, with its former owners opening the legendary Stitzel-Weller in Louisville two years later. In 1943 the Frankfort Distilleries company was acquired by Canadian giants, Seagram, who ran it a a subsidiary until dissolving it in the 1960s.
This whiskey was distilled in Indiana at the Greendale distillery. Warehouse transactions date the distillery to around the late 19th century, and like most it did not re-open again after closing in 1920. The whiskey was bottled in 1933.
Auction results
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Frequently asked questions
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