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wine glass

Object NameDecanter with Stopper and 6 Wineglasses
Manufacturer Boston & Sandwich Glass Company (active 1825-1888)
Made FromGlass, Silver Stain
Dateabout 1860-1875
Place MadeUnited States, probably MA, Sandwich
TechniqueBlown, engraved, silver-stained
Size(A) Decanter with Stopper H: 28.9 cm, Diam (max): 10.2 cm; (B-G) Average Wineglass H: 12.6 cm, Diam (max): 6.4 cm
Accession Number2013.4.24
Credit LinePurchased with funds from Kenneth R. Treis
Curatorial Area(s)
Not On View
Interpretive Notes
This set consists of a colorless glass decanter with matching stopper and six matching wineglasses. The components were all decorated with silver stain and then engraved with a floral motif featuring roses and grapevines. The wineglasses and the decanter also feature the letter “H,” engraved within a silver-stained oval and surrounded by an engraved floral wreath. The set is attributed to the Boston and Sandwich Glass Company, from which the Museum holds many examples of pressed glass but few blown, stained, and engraved objects. The elegant shape of the decanter, with its ovoid body, domed foot, and tall and slender neck, is very similar to that of a set of decanters made by Christian Dorflinger’s Brooklyn, New York, firm, Greenpoint Glass Works, for the Lincoln White House in 1861. The lighter style represents a departure from the heavily cut, squat globular or tall and narrow forms that were popular in the first half of the 19th century. Like the Lincoln service, this set reflects the height of fashion for glass tableware at the time. The decanter and wineglasses were likely a special order because of the additional labor and expense of the silver staining and engraving. Customers placed orders through a retailer, usually a jewelry store, and could specify the pattern and monogram or initial. Like today, personalized items were often purchased as gifts for occasions such as weddings or christenings, or to honor prominent citizens. While we do not know for whom the “H” initial was meant, the choice of a grapevine motif was very common for glassware for serving and drinking wine. Inscribed: “H” initial, engraved. Unpublished. For more information about Boston and Sandwich stained and engraved glass, see Raymond E. Barlow and Joan E. Kaiser, The Glass Industry in Sandwich, Windham, New Hampshire: Barlow-Kaiser Pub. Co., 1983–1999, v. 5, p. 50. For information about the Lincoln decanters, see Jane Shadel Spillman, White House Glassware: Two Centuries of Presidential Entertaining, Washington, D.C.: White House Historical Association in cooperation with the National Geographic Society and The Corning Museum of Glass, 1989, pp. 67–95.
Physical DescriptionDecanter with Stopper. Colorless glass, yellow silver stain; blown, engraved, silver-stained. (a) Decanter with ovoid body, long narrow neck, flared rim with three cut pulls, and circular domed foot. Body decorated with three yellow silver-stained ovals: one showing engraved "H" monogram in floral wreath, one showing three engraved roses and leaves, and one showing engraved grape bunch with leaves and vines. Engraved floral drops situated between each silver-stained oval. Neck decorated with three engraved floral drops and two engraved bands of dots at base. Foot decorated with engraved band of dots around edge. (b) Hollow inverted teardrop-shaped stopper with matching engraved and silver-stained decoration.
Provenance
Source Ian Simmonds - 2013-04-10
decanter
Boston & Sandwich Glass Company
about 1860-1875
wine glass
Boston & Sandwich Glass Company
about 1860-1875
wine glass
Boston & Sandwich Glass Company
about 1860-1875
wine glass
Boston & Sandwich Glass Company
about 1860-1875
wine glass
Boston & Sandwich Glass Company
about 1860-1875
wine glass
Boston & Sandwich Glass Company
about 1860-1875