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High Gate, Missouri.
Perhaps it’s two-sided, then?The odd-shaped Coke sign hanging between the two windows was originally a "hanger" -- it would have been suspended in a frame over the sidewalk, usually with a topper bearing the name of the store or one reading "Fountain Service." You can see the holes around the rim where it bolted into the frame.
I’d bet on the “better” Coca-Cola memorabilia holding its value through the foreseeable. It isn’t just us oldsters who want the stuff. Indeed, it’s likelier a younger person would decorate her abode with a 70-plus-year-old Coca-Cola sign.Definitely two sided.
The sheer amount of Coca-Cola signage produced over the last hundred and forty years beggars the imagination. By the 1890s, the company had literally blanketed the entire country with its logo to the point where it was pretty much impossible to turn your head in any town of any size without seeing a Coca-Cola sign of some kind. Every possible variation of size and shape was manufactured to fit every possible need or situation, and they were provided free to any store that would display them, usually with the name of the shop added as a "privilege" to the merchant.
That being so, it's not all that surprising there's such an ample supply of them available now for collectors -- the wonder is that there aren't more of them. There were plenty of cheap painted tin signs of the "country store" type, most of which have long since rusted away, but there were also plenty of porcelain-enamel ones that were pretty much indestructible, and these are still easy to find. Only the demand from collectors keeps the price high.
^^^^^
If I were in the neighborhood I’d offer ’em a hundred bucks for permission to cut out that sign and take the pieces with me.