VARIOUS PROPERTIES
AN EXTREMELY RARE SILVER SPOON TRAY

细节
AN EXTREMELY RARE SILVER SPOON TRAY
MAKER'S MARK OF PHILIP SYNG, JR., PHILADELPHIA, CIRCA 1740

Elongated octagonal, with flaring border, the field engraved with a mirror cypher within a circular reserve, marked twice on reverse PS within heart-shaped punch
6½in. long
(4oz.)
来源
The spoon tray descended to Sarah Isabella Shaw (1834-1897) of Philadelphia, who married Richard Wood (1828-1903) of Bermuda around 1855. They changed their surname to Shaw-Wood, and moved to Oakville, Ontario, Canada in 1861.

拍品专文

The present spoon tray is the only known American example to survive. Ceramic or silver spoon trays were a popular item in the tea equipage of the first half of the 18th century, and Joseph Richardson's account books record that he made three spoon trays between 1737 and 1738. One, made for Philadelphian James Macca, was described as "a tea Spoon boat weight 3 oz 4 dwt" on August 20, 1737 (see Martha Gandy Fales, Joseph Richardson and Family: Philadelphia Silversmiths, 1974, pp. 100-101 and 294). The fine cypher on the present tray, based on English pattern books, may have been engraved by Laurence Herbert, an émigré from London employed by Syng and named in Syng's advertisement in The Pennsylvania Gazette, May 19, 1748 (see Ian Quimby, American Silver at Winterthur, 1995, p. 450).