Special Features
Certainly any place setting of the early pioneers-
Albert Coles, John Polhemus, Henry Hebbard, William
Gale, Wood & Hughes would have a special place in
a collection. Circa 1850 our much awaited third fork
appears for our set, the one shown here is clearly
for pastries. Since there was no way to ship lettuce
very far prior to the 1880's true salad forks are
very scarce. A smaller fork of the 6" variety with a
thick left tine could be use for salad, pastry or
fish. We will accept any of the three as the third
fork in our settings
Dating
Since George Shiebler purchased
the Polhamus patterns you will find these patterns
both with the J.P. and winged Shiebler marks. The
J.P. marks "J.P. Patent" would date the piece prior
to 1876. I have only J.P. pieces with "Sterling"
marks. However I would assume that the pieces exist
in coin, which would be dated earlier.
|
Size
|
My Cost
|
Notes
|
Teaspoon |
6" |
$30.00 |
|
Dessert Spoon |
7" |
$55.00 |
|
Dinner Fork |
7 1/2" |
$50.00 |
|
Luncheon Fork |
7 1/8" |
$40.00 |
|
Pastry Fork |
6" |
$60.00 |
|
|
|
Key Pieces
All pieces are readily available
with the exception of the pastry fork, which will
require patience and luck. Purists looking for true
Polhamus "J.P." marked pieces will have a harder time,
especially in really nice condition.
Comments
Corinthian is one of the first
collectible die cut patterns of the 1850's. While there
were several others of the era, their names have
disappeared, while Corinthian remained popular thru the
1890's and was preserved by Shiebler. See "Help with
unknown Patterns" post by "Trefid" In the Coin Silver
section of "The Forum". Has anyone seen items in
coin?
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