Special Features
Lily 1902 by Whiting is one of Americas most popular
and beautiful old patterns. With exquisite sharp detail
it looks as good from the back as it does the front. )
See photo above. Like many of the classic patterns from
old companies that Gorham has acquired, Lily has
enjoyed a revival as the beautiful art of the turn of
the century is back in style today.
Dating
Gorham acquired Whiting in 1924, and with it the Lily
patterns. Remakes of the pattern have re appeared with
Gorham marks and are still being produced today. The
vast majority of our pieces have not only the Whiting
stamp but also "PAT 1902 R'D 1902" and one has just the
Whiting stamp.. One might presume that the PAT 1902
versions were produced for the first 14 years of the
pattern, and then the 1902 stamp was dropped. But it
could have been continued indefinitely. I am not sure
if Gorham continued to produce Lily with the Whiting
marks, or discontinued it after 1924, to be reborn
again in the sixties with Gorham marks ("Gorham"
spelled out). Turner does not list it as obsolete in
1929.
Pieces Available
As a turn of the century pattern every conceivable
device known to the table was available in Lily. Shown
below are:
|
Size
|
My Cost
|
Notes
|
Demi-Tasse |
4" |
$39.00 |
|
Flat Butter |
5 3/4" |
$53.00 |
|
Teaspoon |
5 7/8" |
$39.00 |
|
Oval Soup |
7" |
$80.00 |
|
Dinner Knife |
9 3/4" |
$65.00 |
|
Dinner Fork |
7 7/8" |
$125.00 |
|
Luncheon Fork |
7" |
$48.00 |
|
Salad Forkk |
6 1/4" |
$135.00 |
|
|
click on image to enlarge
|
Key Pieces
The great challenge of Lily has
traditionally been salad forks. When we were looking
for ours, one dealer told us he had seven and would put
us on the waiting list. There were 50 ahead of us. The
new Gorham version is actually quite a bit bigger and
is really a fish fork, so the real 6" salads are at a
premium. However the sleeper is the dinner fork. It
must be that Lily was one of those flowery patterns
that m'lady used for luncheon but not dinner because
dinner forks are made out of unobtainium. Midwest
always has a couple around because they keep them
priced at $185!!
Comments
For patterns such as Lily it would
be wonderful to interview some old Gorham employees
that could give us the real history. What happened
after 1924? Were the Whiting lines dropped? Did they
continue on being actively marketed? Or just making
replacements for people? Was Lily ever discontinued?
When did Gorham begin the line with the Gorham stamp?
It seems we know so little.
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