The Bottle | |
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Unincorporated community | |
A 1924 picture of "The Bottle".
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Location within the state of Alabama | |
Coordinates: 32°40′34″N 85°29′11″W / 32.67611°N 85.48639°WCoordinates: 32°40′34″N 85°29′11″W / 32.67611°N 85.48639°W | |
Country | United States |
State | Alabama |
County | Lee |
Elevation | 761 ft (232 m) |
Time zone | CST (UTC-6) |
• Summer (DST) | EDT (UTC-6) |
GNIS feature ID | 153675 |
The Bottle is a community located in the northern corporate limits of Auburn, Alabama, United States. The Bottle is located at the intersection of U.S. Highway 280 and Alabama Highway 147, five miles (8 km) north of downtown Auburn, and adjacent to the Auburn University North Fisheries Research Complex.
The Bottle is located at 32°40'34"N 85°29'11"W; its elevation is 760 feet (230 m).
The Bottle is named for the bright orange wooden replica of a Nehi soda bottle which stood in the location for nine years during the 1920s and 1930s. It has frequently been noted on lists of unusual place names.
Built in 1924, and billed as "the world's largest bottle", The Bottle (sometimes referred to as The "Nehi Inn") was built by John F. Williams owner of the Nehi Bottling Company in Opelika, Alabama. The Bottle stood 64-feet (19.5 m) tall, and measured forty-nine feet (14.94 m) in diameter at the base, and 16 feet (4.88 m) at the cap. The ground floor was a grocery store and service station, and the 2nd and 3rd floors were living quarters and storage. The neck of the Bottle had windows so as to be used as an observation tower. The "bottle cap" was the roof. Inside there was a spiral oak stairway. The Bottle became a gathering place for tourists and locals alike to swap yarns and have parties every Friday night on the balcony above the service station.
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt stopped briefly at The Bottle after visiting Auburn, as did Grand Ole Opry comedian Minnie Pearl.
According to a 2001 account by W.A. "Arthur" Wood, The Bottle burned at 5:00 a.m. one morning in the fall of 1936. In Jill's book there is a photo that states The Bottle burned at 4:30 a.m. in fall of 1936. Another newspaper article by Betty Douglas that has burned in 1933 but the copy in Jill's book has a handwritten line and 1935 written in and from another by Denise Shealey has a summer morning in 1935. Jill located a newspaper article from 1937 that talks about the Bottle burning down last Thursday.