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Chats on Old Silver

Chapter 2: PREFACE
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A practical guide for collectors that explains how to identify, date, and authenticate antique silver through hallmarks and assay-office systems. It surveys domestic and ecclesiastical forms, regional stylistic variations, and factors affecting value and rarity, while cautioning that marks indicate date and standard more than artistic merit. Illustrated tables and reproduced marks and shields support hands-on identification, and chapters offer guidance on common shapes, provenance research, and using museum and trade records to evaluate and appreciate silver pieces.

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Title: Chats on Old Silver

Author: Arthur Hayden

Release date: January 23, 2019 [eBook #58757]

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHATS ON OLD SILVER ***

CHATS ON
OLD SILVER


BOOKS FOR COLLECTORS

With Frontispieces and many Illustrations.

CHATS ON ENGLISH CHINA.
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON OLD FURNITURE.
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON OLD PRINTS.
(How to collect and value Old Engravings.)
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON COSTUME.
By G. Woolliscroft Rhead.

CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK.
By E. L. Lowes.

CHATS ON ORIENTAL CHINA.
By J. F. Blacker.

CHATS ON OLD MINIATURES.
By J. J. Foster, F.S.A.

CHATS ON ENGLISH EARTHENWARE.
(Companion volume to “Chats on English China.”)
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON AUTOGRAPHS.
By A. M. Broadley.

CHATS ON PEWTER.
By H. J. L. J. Massé M.A.

CHATS ON POSTAGE STAMPS.
By Fred. J. Melville.

CHATS ON OLD JEWELLERY AND TRINKETS.
By MacIver Percival.

CHATS ON COTTAGE AND FARMHOUSE FURNITURE.
(Companion volume to “Chats on Old Furniture.”)
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON OLD COINS.
By Fred. W. Burgess.

CHATS ON OLD COPPER AND BRASS.
By Fred. W. Burgess.

CHATS ON HOUSEHOLD CURIOS.
By Fred. W. Burgess.

CHATS ON OLD SILVER.
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON JAPANESE PRINTS.
By Arthur Davison Ficke.

CHATS ON MILITARY CURIOS.
By Stanley C. Johnson.

CHATS ON OLD CLOCKS AND WATCHES.
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON ROYAL COPENHAGEN PORCELAIN.
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON OLD SHEFFIELD PLATE.
(Companion volume to “Chats on Old Silver.”)
By Arthur Hayden.

CHATS ON OLD ENGLISH DRAWINGS.
By Randall Davies.

CHATS ON WEDGWOOD WARE.
By Harry Barnard.


BYE PATHS OF CURIO COLLECTING.
By Arthur Hayden.
With Frontispiece and 72 Full page Illustrations.

LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN, LTD.
NEW YORK: F. A. STOKES COMPANY.



CHATS ON
OLD SILVER

BY
ARTHUR HAYDEN

AUTHOR OF “CHATS ON COTTAGE AND FARMHOUSE FURNITURE,” ETC.

WITH FRONTISPIECE AND
NINETY-NINE FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS

TOGETHER WITH
ILLUSTRATED TABLES OF MARKS

T. FISHER UNWIN LTD
LONDON: ADELPHI TERRACE


First published1915
Second Impression1917
Third Impression1919
Fourth Impression1922
Fifth Impression1925

(All rights reserved)


TO
ALFRED DAVIES,
IN REMEMBRANCE
OF OUR FRIENDSHIP


PREFACE

The study of old silver usually begins when the inquiring possessor of family plate sets himself the task of ascertaining the date and the probable value of some piece long in his family and possibly lately bequeathed to him.

With old china, and probably with old furniture, the taste for collecting is oftentimes an acquired one, but it is in the Englishman’s blood to ruminate over his old plate, and the hall-marks of the assay offices in London and in the provinces, in Scotland and in Ireland, have been placed thereon with aforethought. The plate closet is cousin to the strong-box, inasmuch as the coin of the realm and gold and silver plate have been subjected to stringent laws extending over a period of five hundred years. The technical word “hall-mark” has become a common term in the language synonymous with genuineness. The strictest supervision, under the parental eye of the law, has upheld the dignity of the silversmiths guarantees. Hence the pride of possession of old silver. Pictures and furniture and engravings whose ancestry is doubtful thrust themselves in the market without fear of the watchful official eye. But old silver bearing the hall-marks of ancient and honourable guilds of silversmiths, stamped at the accredited assay offices, is, with few exceptions, what it purports to be. It is a proud record and a splendid heritage.

In dealing with the subject of old silver in a volume of this size sufficient details have been given to enable the collector to identify his silver if it be in the main stream of silversmiths’ work. On the whole, except where it is necessary in certain fields to illustrate the only examples, sumptuous specimens have been avoided in the illustrations as being outside the scope of this volume and the public to whom it is intended to appeal.

The collector of old silver must have a pretty taste and a fine judgment. It is not an absolute law that age determines beauty. Hall-marks, though they denote date, do not guarantee excellence of design. Everything that bears the hall-mark of the Goldsmiths’ Hall of London is not beautiful, whether it be old or whether it be new. The connoisseur must digest the fact that the assay marks of the lion, the leopard’s head, the date-mark, and the rest, are so many official symbols, accurate as to date and sufficient guarantee as to the standard of the metal, but meaningless in regard to the art of the piece on which they stand. The assay offices are merely stamping machines. What Somerset House is to legal documents so the assay offices are to silver and gold plate, and nothing more. Hence the necessity of placing such mechanical control under Government supervision.

The excellence of a piece of plate is governed by the same laws which control all other branches of decorative art.

Rarity is a factor not especially treated in this volume. Rare specimens are not necessarily beautiful even though they be unique.

In covering so wide a field in so small a volume, much has had to be omitted. There are many volumes on old English silver plate, but in regard to research, the work of Mr. C. J. Jackson, “English Goldsmiths and their Marks,” with over eleven thousand marks, stands alone and supplants all other volumes. Every collector must regard this work as the bible of silver-plate collecting.

I have given sufficient space to marks in the present volume to indicate those used by the London and other assay offices. Some marks are given which do not appear elsewhere, and the arrangement of the tables should enable the beginner to come to a definite conclusion as to the date of his silver. In especial, the Table of variations in the shapes of shields in the hall-mark and standard-mark employed at the London Assay Office from the accession of Queen Elizabeth to the present day, is a feature not before given in so concise a form in any other volume.

The marks on silver are stamped, the design thus appears in relief, while the edges of the shield on which it appears are sunk. The reproduction of this has offered a difficulty in illustration in all volumes on old silver. To print black letters or designs on a white background, although easy, is unsatisfactory. On the contrary, to print the raised design in white on a dead black background is not a realistic presentation of the mark as it appears to the eye. After many experiments I have reproduced the marks in a manner more closely approaching their actual appearance, and less suggestive of black-and-white designs on paper.

I have to express my thanks for the kind assistance I have received in regard to photographs and wax casts and drawings of marks, and for permission to include them in this volume as illustrations, to the following: the authorities of the Victoria and Albert Museum, the British Museum, and the Royal Scottish Museum, Edinburgh. By the courtesy of the Worshipful Company of Clothworkers and the Worshipful Company of Mercers I am enabled to reproduce some fine examples from their Halls. To Lord Dillon I am indebted for his courtesy in allowing the inclusion of an interesting example in his possession.

Messrs. Crichton Brothers have afforded me access to their records, including the use of copyright photographs of specimens which have passed through their hands, and courteous assistance in reproducing examples in their possession. Messrs. Elkington & Co., and Messrs. Garrard & Co., have similarly extended to me their practical aid; Messrs. John Ellett Lake & Son, of Exeter, have enabled me to do justice to the art of the Exeter silversmith, and Messrs. Harris and Sinclair, of Dublin, have enriched my chapter on Irish silver. I have also to acknowledge the kindness of Messrs. Carrington & Co. for the Frontispiece and for the fine design of an Irish Dish Ring shown on the cover. Mr. A. E. Smith, my photographer, has given exceptional care in obtaining good results.

It is, therefore, my hope that this volume will stand as an authoritative outline history of the subject of which it treats, that it may point the way to possessors of old silver to arrive at sound conclusions as to their heirlooms, and that it may indicate to collectors the salient features of their hobby.

ARTHUR HAYDEN.

January 1915.


CONTENTS

PAGE
PREFACE11
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS19
CHAPTER I
THE MARKS STAMPED UPON SILVER23
CHAPTER II
ECCLESIASTICAL PLATE65
CHAPTER III
THE MAZER, THE STANDING CUP, THE FLAGON, THE TANKARD, THE BEAKER, THE WINE CUP83
CHAPTER IV
THE SALT CELLAR139
CHAPTER V
THE SPOON177
CHAPTER VI
THE POSSET-POT, THE PORRINGER195
CHAPTER VII
THE CANDLESTICK221
CHAPTER VIII
THE TEAPOT, THE COFFEE-POT, THE TEA-CADDY239
CHAPTER IX
THE CASTER, THE SUGAR-BOWL, THE CREAM-PAIL, THE CAKE-BASKET267
CHAPTER X
THE CREAM-JUG299
CHAPTER XI
SCOTTISH SILVER311
CHAPTER XII
IRISH SILVER329
APPENDIX, CONTAINING TABLES OF DATE LETTERS. LONDON (1598-1835)347

TABLE OF DIFFERENCES IN SHIELDS. LONDON (ELIZABETH TO GEORGE V)

357

ILLUSTRATIONS OF MARKS: LONDON, PROVINCIAL, SCOTTISH, AND IRISH

359
INDEX411


ILLUSTRATIONS

George II Coffee Pot, 1741. Maker, Peter Archambo.Frontispiece
PAGE
Chapter II.—Ecclesiastical Plate

Elizabethan Chalices

67

Elizabethan Chalice; Charles I Chalice

71

Charles II Cup; William III Flagons

75

Charles II and Queen Anne Patens

79

George II Communion Cup

81
Chapter III.—The Standing Cup, the Flagon, the Tankards, the Beakers, and the Wine Cup

Mazer, with inscription dated Exeter, 1490

87

The Leigh Cup and Cover, 1499

91

Cup and Cover, 1585

95

Stoneware Jug with Silver Cover and Foot, 1570

95

The Samuel Pepys Standing Cup and Cover, 1677

99

Flagon, 1572; Flagon, 1599

105

Tankards, Charles II, 1679, and William III, 1701

111

Charles II Tankards, York, 1684

111

Queen Anne Tankard, Exeter, 1705

115

Mug, 1733, and Tankard, 1748, Exeter

117

Beakers: James I, 1606; Charles I, 1631; Charles II, 1671

121

James I Wine Cup

125

Stuart Wine Cups; Seventeenth-century Candlestick

129

“Monteith” Punch-bowl, 1704

135
Chapter IV.—The Salt Cellar

Hour-glass Standing Salt Cellar, 1500

143

Bell-shaped Salt Cellar, 1601

147

Circular Salt Cellar, 1638

151

Octagonal Salt Cellar, 1679, “The Sumner Salt”

155

Lambeth Delft and Rouen faience Salt Cellars

161

Group of Small Circular Salts, Queen Anne, George II, and George III

165

Salts with Glass Liner, George III

167

Group of Oblong Salts with three feet, George III

167

Group of Salt Cellars, George III, showing transition

171

Group of Salt Cellars, George III, George IV, and William IV

173
Chapter V.—The Spoon

Seventeenth-century Spoons

181

Seventeenth and Eighteenth-century Spoons

185

Seventeenth and Eighteenth-century Spoons

189
Chapter VI.—The Posset-pot and the Porringer

Commonwealth Porringer, 1653

197

Charles II Posset-pot and Cover, 1662; Porringer, Silver-gilt, 1669

197

Charles II Porringer, 1666

201

Charles II Posset-cup and Cover, 1679

201

Posset-pot and Cover, 1683

205

Charles II Porringer, 1672

209

Queen Anne Porringer, Exeter, 1707

209

James II Posset-cup and Cover, 1685

213

Staffordshire Earthenware Posset-cup, dated 1685

213

Plum Broth Dish and Ladle, 1697

217
Chapter VII.—The Candlestick

Charles I Candlestick, 1637

223

Lambeth Delft Candlestick, dated 1648

223

Charles II Candlesticks, 1673

227

Snuffers and Tray, 1682

231

Candlesticks Queen Anne, 1704, 1706; George I, 1721

231

Candlestick, Sheffield, 1782

235
Chapter VIII.—The Coffee-pot, the Teapot, the Tea-caddy

Coffee-pot, Newcastle, 1737

243

Teapot (Honourable East India Company), 1670

243

Teapot, 1745

247

Kettle, with Stand and Spirit-lamp, 1746

251

Group of Coffee-pots and Teapots

255

Tea-caddies, Exeter, 1718; London, 1730

259

George III Tea-caddies

259

Pair of Tea-caddies and Sugar-box, 1760

263
Chapter IX.—The Caster, the Sugar-bowl, the Cream-pail, the Cake-basket

William III and Queen Anne Casters, 1701 and 1712

269

George II Caster, Exeter, 1728

273

Group of Casters, William III, George II, and George III

277

Centre-piece, 1761

279

Centre-piece, 1775

279

Sugar-bowl, Classic Style, 1773

283

Sugar-bowl, Pierced Work with Glass Liners (late Eighteenth Century)

285

Cream-pails, 1776, 1782

285

Bread-baskets, 1745 to 1775

289

Cake-basket, 1761; Wedgwood Cake-basket

291

Wedgwood Earthenware Dessert-baskets

295
Chapter X.—The Cream-jug

Jug, Paul de Lamerie, 1736

301

Group of Cream-jugs, George I and George III

305

Group of Cream-jugs, late George III

309
Chapter XI.—Scottish Silver

Scottish Quaich, Edinburgh, 1705

313

Mug, Edinburgh, 1790

313

Sugar-caster, Edinburgh, 1746

317

Coffee-pot, Edinburgh, 1769

321

Tea-urn, Edinburgh, 1778

325
Chapter XII.—Irish Silver

Caster, Dublin (George Lyng), 1699

331

Loving-cup, with harp handles, Cork, 1694

331

Centre-piece, Dublin, 1740

335

Cream-jug, signed by Jonathan Buck, Cork, 1764

339

Cream-jug, Dublin, 1740

339

Cream-pail, Dublin, 1770

343
Appendix to Chapter I

Alphabets of Date Letters used at London Assay Office

347-355

Table showing variations in Hall and Standard Marks

357

Series of Examples of London Assay Marks

359-385

Series of Examples of Provincial Assay Marks

387-399

Series of Examples of Scottish and Irish Assay Marks

401-409


I

THE MARKS STAMPED
UPON SILVER

I.THE HALL-MARK
II.THE STANDARD MARK
III.THE DATE MARK
IV.THE MAKER’S MARK
V.THE HIGHER STANDARD MARK
VI.THE DUTY MARK
VII.THE FOREIGN MARK
APPENDIX TO CHAPTER (pp. 347-409)
Illustrations of typical Marks