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tumbler
tumbler

tumbler

Object NameTumbler with Galleon
Maker Pairpoint Manufacturing Co.
Made FromLead Glass
Date1924-1930
Place MadeUnited States, MA, New Bedford
TechniqueMold-blown, enameled, grinding, polising
SizeH: 13.2 cm, D (rim): 8.9 cm
Accession Number70.4.64
Credit LineGift of Mrs. R. J. Parks
Curatorial Area(s)
Exhibitions
Mt. Washington and Pairpoint: American Glass from the Gilded Age to the Roaring Twenties
Not On View
Interpretive Notes
Tavern Glass was a sought-after collectible that was much less expensive to make than either the colored specialties or the cut and engraved pieces. It was probably inspired by imported 19th-century German beer tumblers, and it appealed to people who were interested in America’s history. Tavern Glass was first produced as tumblers (tumblers were used in taverns for drinking beer, hence the name of the glass). When the line became popular, it was expanded to include other shapes, such as vases, plates, candlesticks, and centerpiece bowls. The decoration is enameled or engraved.
Physical DescriptionColorless lead bubbly glass; mold-blown and enameled. Cylindrical with bands of black enamel at rim; black sailing ship with red and blue pennants enameled below rim; vertical flutes on lower half of body; ground and polished base with "D1565/L8L" in white enamel.
Provenance
Source Mrs. Robert J. Parks

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