• Home
  • Travel
  • Articles
  • Create
  • About
    • FAQ
    • About
  • Shop
    Login/ Signup

    • Home
    • Travel
    • Articles
    • Create
    • About
      • FAQ
      • About
    • Shop
    Sign in Sign up
    On route and almost there !
    loading spinner outerloading spinner inner
    Enhanced drone pic of the south clock face
    Enhanced drone pic of the south clock face
    Vintage post card showing the bromo bottle atop the tower
    Vintage post card showing the bromo bottle atop the tower
    Your browser does not support the video tag.
    South face of the clock
    South face of the clock
    The tower lit at night, prior to 1936
    The tower lit at night, prior to 1936
    Lombard St view of the Bromo Tower
    Lombard St view of the Bromo Tower
    among the cures; "alcoholic excesses"!
    among the cures; "alcoholic excesses"!
    15th floor clock works
    15th floor clock works
    Today, the crown looks a little empty without that big blue bottle on top of it.
    Today, the crown looks a little empty without that big blue bottle on top of it.

    A Peculiar Baltimore Landmark Perfectly Repurposed After 100 Years

    In the summer of 1911, a new office building ushered in the skyscraper era in Baltimore.  Designed by Joseph Evans Sperry, the Emerson Drug Company headquarters tower was modeled after the Palazzo Vecchio  in Florence, but it’s imitation of the Italian renaissance was cursory.   The grandiose tower was crowned with an electrically lit blue Bromo-Seltzer medicine bottle which rotated every 2 minutes. That’s not something one would find in old Florence! The glow from 596 light bulbs could be seen for miles at night from across the harbor radiating out above the city.

    This audacious promotion for headache relief was financed by Captain Isaac Emerson, the inventor of Bromo Seltzer and the owner of Emerson Drug that promoted medicines for the masses.   The Bromo building was called “(…a) monument to Captain Emerson’s aggressiveness” (Baltimore Evening Sun April 14, 1911) and at 356’ above sea level, the tower would remain the tallest structure in the Charm City for 12 years.

    In 1936 the unique 51’ tall, 20-ton steel bottle was unceremoniously removed from the tower five years after Emerson’s death due to structural concerns.  Bromo promo remained, however, on the four clocks of the tower.  Designed by Seth Thomas, the 12 letters of B-R-O-M-O-S-E-L-T-Z-E-R marked the hours on the clock instead of the usual numbers.  The letters are five feet high, and the 24’ diameter clock faces are larger than those of Big Ben in London.

    Bromo Seltzer was named after Mount Bromo in Java, which Capt. Emerson had observed bubbling and steaming.  The inexpensive remedy was commonly known to relieve hangovers, and the company started advertising it in the 1970s for curing “that” headache.

    In 1969, The City of Baltimore acquired and raised the factory building attached to the tower for a new fire station.  In 1973, the tower was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  By 1975, sodium bromide, a toxic tranquilizer, was removed from the Bromo Seltzer formula, and Aqua-Seltzer began to dominate the fizzy aspirin market through aggressive television advertising.   

    The landmark tower fell into disrepair and was mostly empty when it was purchased by City of Baltimore in 2002.  It was re-opened by Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts in 2008 as an artists’ collective space.  The eccentric “Bromo Tower” now contains 30 studio spaces and several exhibit areas.  2011 was the last year that Bromo Seltzer was available in drug stores.  The gravity-driven clocks were restored in 2017 and still keep time!  The quirky nature of the building provides a unique energy to the art created there. The Bromo Tower is the flagship of the Bromo Arts District https://bromodistrict.org/  The Bromo Arts District covers 117 acres on the west side of Downtown Baltimore.

    You can visit the tower at the corner of Eutaw Street at Lombard Street on Saturdays and ride the elevator to see the clockworks on the 16th floor The tours attract about 2,000 visitors annually.  The Bromo Tower also houses the Emerson/MD glass museum,  brainchild of Ernest Dimler, featuring his collection of retail containers that used cobalt blue glass bottles and jars.

    This view is near & dear to my heart, because my great-grandfather was also a pharmacist in Baltimore, and he probably knew Captain Emerson.

    https://www.instagram.com/bromoartsdistrict/

    https://www.facebook.com/BromoArtsDistrict/

    Peter Evans MD Baltimore Nov 10, 2023 Architecture Arts History

    Next
    Location: Baltimore, MD

    creator image
    Peter Evans
    Nov 10, 2023
    follow button
    Share A Peculiar Baltimore Landmark Perfectly Repurposed After 100 Years
    SHARE

    SHARE
    0
    Like
    0
    I've been there
    0
    Comment
    0
    Share

    Profile Photo
    Peter created this post 1 year ago

    More Views For You!
    Card image cap
    Power Trip 2018 Conowingo Dam, Kerr Dam and more!
    Card image cap
    The Bridge of Lions 2019, St. Augustine, FL
    Card image cap
    Crossroads in Ashland, VA
    Card image cap
    Youthful Peacock St Augustine, FL
    Card image cap
    St Augustine Sunset
    Card image cap
    Castillo de San Marcos in St. Augustine, FL

    Have a story to tell? Create an account and get started. It's free!

    Top
    Show List See Map
    Trending Now Icon Generic placeholder image Generic placeholder image
    Posts View History

    Loading Views . . .

    Looking for something different?
    Go on a journey through East Coast States
    Go back destination: Current Screen:
    Browsing History

    Follow us on Social Channels

    GET IN TOUCH

    Question? Request? Issues? Get in touch with us here.


    `
    Contact
    • About
    • FAQS
    • Login
    • Shop
    • Register
    • Travel RT1
    • Privacy Notice
    • Terms of Use
    • About Route 1

    © 2025 Double Ohs Music, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    Route1Views
    Loading