Anchor Hocking makes tempered soda-lime glassware at American plants in Lancaster, Ohio and Monaca, Pennsylvania, where the company has produced drinkware, bakeware, and storage since 1905. Every piece is pressed from recycled-content glass, fire-polished for a smooth edge, and oven-, freezer-, dishwasher-, and microwave-safe. The glass doesn’t absorb flavors, stains, or odors the way plastic does, which makes it a staple for food storage, baking, and everyday drinkware.
Four 1-quart glass jars with bamboo lids and silicone gaskets that stack neatly on the counter or in a pantry cabinet. Sized for coffee, sugar, rice, granola, pasta, and dried herbs, and airtight enough to keep ingredients fresh between uses. The bamboo lid adds a natural warm tone to the classic clear-glass body, which reads well against white counters, wood shelves, or tile backsplashes.
The Anchor Hocking Company traces its roots to 1905 Lancaster, Ohio, where a small glassware operation grew into one of the largest American glassmakers still running. Today’s Anchor Hocking operates furnaces in Lancaster and Monaca, Pennsylvania, employing American glassworkers, machine operators, and finishers who press, cut, and pack every piece domestically. The Monaca plant originally belonged to Phoenix Glass Company and joined Anchor Hocking in the mid-20th century.






