Somewhere in Tennessee, a regional bottler competed in the crowded cola wars of the 1950s with Double Cola—a brand that never achieved national reach, which makes it all the more valuable to collectors today. This 12oz bottle represents a moment when independent bottlers still claimed shelf space against Coca-Cola and Pepsi, when local preferences mattered and regional brands had genuine followings.
Double Cola bottles from this era are increasingly scarce. Most were recycled, broken, or simply discarded after use—the fate of nearly all beverage bottles from the mid-20th century. Finding one with graphics still legible transforms it from trash into testimony. This bottle sat in someone’s icebox, was carried to picnics, appeared at family dinners. The faded graphics aren’t damage; they’re evidence of actual use across decades.
For collectors of vintage soda bottles, regional advertising, and mid-century American commercial history, Double Cola represents the smaller stories—the brands that didn’t survive the consolidation wars but mattered deeply to the towns where they were bottled. It’s a tangible record of American beverage history beyond the household names.



