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	<title>Internet Antique Gazette &#187; kitchen &amp; household</title>
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		<title>Mustard</title>
		<link>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/kitchen_household/3167_mustard/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Nov 2019 14:23:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hcst</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[kitchen & household]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Mustard <p>The word mustard is thought to come from two words: &#8220;mustum,&#8221; a Latin word for young wine, which is called must, and &#8220;ardens,&#8221; a Latin word for hot. It was a hot condiment made by grinding mustard seeds up with must to form a paste, and still today as a condiment made from mustard seeds (whole, ground, or cracked) and mixed with a liquid like water or lemon juice to create a paste, [...] <b>Click <a href="http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/kitchen_household/3167_mustard/">here</a> to continue reading.</b>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Mustard</h2>
<p>The word mustard is thought to come from two words: &#8220;mustum,&#8221; a Latin word for young wine, which is called must, and &#8220;ardens,&#8221; a Latin word for hot. It was a hot condiment made by grinding mustard seeds up with must to form a paste, and still today as a condiment made from mustard seeds (whole, ground, or cracked) and mixed with a liquid like water or lemon juice to create a paste, is used around the world, from India and Bangladesh to the Americas, to Africa and Europe. It&#8217;s considered one of the most popular condiments in the world.</p>
<p>Mustard was cultivated in the Indus Valley more than 1500 years B.C.E., but likely first found use as a table spice with the Romans, who would have exported it, as by the 13th century, Dijon, France, had become known for mustard manufacturing, a tradition that would continue into the 18th century when Grey-Poupon&#8217;s partnership was formed and mustard manufacturing was automated. It was also popular in medieval England, where it was favored because it stored so well. Ground mustard mixed with flour and cinnamon and/or horseradish was lightly moistened and rolled into balls that were dried. They had enormous advantage because they would not spoil or lose their flavor if stored in a cool, dark place and could then be ground up again for use as a seasoning at the table.</p>
<p><center><br />
<img src=/item_images/medium/66/01/03-01.jpg></p>
<p>A George III silver crested mustard pot, Charles Aldridge, London, 1786-87. (See p4A Item ID <A HREF="http://www.prices4antiques.com/Mustard-Pot-Silver-George-III-Aldridge-Charles-Pierced-Drum-Form-Cobalt-Insert-3-E8929896.html" target=_blank>E8929896</A>)<br />
</center><br />
<br />
By the 16th century, earthenware mustard pots began to appear on tables, where the ground mustard could be mixed on the plate to an individual&#8217;s tastes, and they began to accompany cruets of vinegar, wine, and/or oil, which were commonly mixed with the ground mustard. By the late 1700s, castor sets with silver or glass bottles adorned tables, sometimes simple sets with just salt and pepper shakers but often larger and more elaborate sets with containers for vinegar and oil as well as sugar shakers and mustard pots. By the 19th century, mustard pots were rarely found separate from a larger cruet set that decorated fashionable dining tables and sideboards. The trend would begin to decline rapidly in the 20th century however, particularly after French&#8217;s introduction of their yellow mustard at the 1904 World&#8217;s Fair in St. Louis.</p>
<p>In terms of value, it depends greatly on the material and the age. Silver mustard pots made by a well-regarded silversmith will have strong value, of course, as will standalone jars or pots, particularly if they are early and in good condition. Cruet sets have been a tougher sell in recent years because they are rarely used now and many people are unfamiliar with them, while the individual pots often do better because they can be repurposed in some way.</p>
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		<title>Zoar, Ohio &#8211; Society of Separatists</title>
		<link>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/boxes/2284_zoar_ohio_society_of_separatists/</link>
		<comments>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/boxes/2284_zoar_ohio_society_of_separatists/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Nov 2019 13:35:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hcst</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Zoar <p>In the 1810s, a group of German religious separatists left Wurttemberg in what is now southwestern Germany, after several decades of separation from the primary church in the region, the Lutheran Church. After years of persecution and oppression which included imprisonment and property seizures, the separatists, under the leadership of Joseph Bimeler (sometimes Baumeler), decided to flee to the United States in the hopes that they could establish a new community there.</p> <p>One [...] <b>Click <a href="http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/boxes/2284_zoar_ohio_society_of_separatists/">here</a> to continue reading.</b>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Zoar</h2>
<p>In the 1810s, a group of German religious separatists left Wurttemberg in what is now southwestern Germany, after several decades of separation from the primary church in the region, the Lutheran Church. After years of persecution and oppression which included imprisonment and property seizures, the separatists, under the leadership of Joseph Bimeler (sometimes Baumeler), decided to flee to the United States in the hopes that they could establish a new community there.</p>
<p>One can only imagine how uncertain things were for them, a group of nearly 200 native Germans, when they arrived in Philadelphia as immigrants in dire financial straits, but fortunately, they gained the attention of the Society of Friends, Philadelphia&#8217;s large Quaker population, and before long, Quakers had helped them to find jobs and some stability. After a time, they decided to relocate to eastern Ohio, at which point the Quakers loaned them money to purchase the land they found &#8211; 5,500 acres in Tuscarawas County.</p>
<p>A few members of the group headed west in the fall of 1817, where they began building before weathering their first Ohio winter, and the remaining members of the group joined them in the spring of 1818. They would name their community Zoar from the biblical story of Lot, who fled to Zoar from Sodom in Genesis, and they would become known as Zoarites.</p>
<p>The community became so tightly knit not by original intent but by necessity. The first few years of the settlement were very rough, so in the spring of 1819, the residents formalized what had essentially become a commune already by creating the Society of Separatists of Zoar and turning all property over to the Society. (Women were also permitted to sign, to hold office and to vote.) Over the next fifteen years, the arrangements would be further formalized.</p>
<p>Zoarites would eventually be self-reliant and prosperous. In addition to the community&#8217;s agricultural production, they would also operate mills and foundries, manufacture textiles and wagons, and run a variety of stores, supplying the community&#8217;s needs and selling any surplus goods to those beyond the community. They would later sign on to build a portion of the Ohio and Erie Canal, which would help pay off the last of the loans for the property and would bring profits from the canal boats they owned and operated as well as from the increased traffic in the vicinity of Zoar.</p>
<p>By the second half of the 19th century, communal spirit in Zoar began to decline. Joseph Bimeler died, prosperity had brought the outside world closer, and younger members, who had never experienced the religious persecution in Europe or the hardship and sacrifice of the early settlement, were less invested and connected. By 1898, the community voted to dissolve the society and divide up the property and assets, but Zoar continues to exist as a village and today several of the society&#8217;s original buildings have been restored and gathered into an historic site for visitors.</p>
<p><center><br />
<img src="/item_images/medium/61/28/04-01.jpg"></p>
<p>A carved schrank, Zoar, Tuscarawas County, Ohio, mid 19th century, cherry, walnut, and poplar.  (p4A item # <A HREF="/Furniture-Wardrobe-Schrank-Zoar-Cherry-Walnut-Molded-Cornice-1-Paneled-Door-Cant-E8977195.html" target=_blank>E8977195</A>)<br />
</center></p>
<p>A number of artifacts of the early settlement still survive, primarily furniture with Empire and Biedermeier influences, but other items like coverlets and earthenware pottery occasionally turn up as well. (Furniture pieces are frequently seen with diamond panels, fairly typical of Midwestern Germanic furniture, but especially so of Zoar furniture.) Although their popularity is rather regional, Zoar-related objects are quite sought after, both by collectors who still live in Zoar and have an interest in local items and by collectors of Midwestern material. Provenance often makes firm attributions, but as there were a number of Germanic separatist communities throughout the Midwest, particularly in Ohio and Indiana, all heavily influenced and deeply rooted in Germanic craft traditions, further scholarship is necessary to draw clearer distinctions between the communities&#8217; wares.</p>
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		<title>Tibbits, Captain Hall Jackson</title>
		<link>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/autographs/3184_tibbits_captain_hall_jackson/</link>
		<comments>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/autographs/3184_tibbits_captain_hall_jackson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Nov 2019 13:31:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hcst</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Captain Hall J. Tibbits (American, 1797 to 1872) <p>This article about the life and career of Captain Tibbits by Eric C. Rodenberg appeared on the 4 November 2013 front page of Antique Week&#8217;s National Section. Used by permission. http://www.antiqueweek.com.</p> <p>1800s Sea Captain&#8217;s Life Told Through Collection</p> <p>At 6 foot, 4 inches tall and &#8220;powerfully built&#8221; Capt. Hall Jackson Tibbits would brook no foolishness.</p> <p> After his &#8220;religious principles&#8221; were violated by passengers dancing on [...] <b>Click <a href="http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/autographs/3184_tibbits_captain_hall_jackson/">here</a> to continue reading.</b>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Captain Hall J. Tibbits (American, 1797 to 1872)</h2>
<p>This article about the life and career of Captain Tibbits by Eric C. Rodenberg appeared on the 4 November 2013 front page of <i>Antique Week&#8217;s</i> National Section.  Used by permission.  http://www.antiqueweek.com.</p>
<p><b>1800s Sea Captain&#8217;s Life Told Through Collection</b></p>
<p>At 6 foot, 4 inches tall and &#8220;powerfully built&#8221; Capt. Hall Jackson Tibbits would brook no foolishness.</p>
<p><center><img src="/item_images/medium/69/02/69-01.jpg" width=350></center><br />
<br />After his &#8220;religious principles&#8221; were violated by passengers dancing on the main deck, he threatened to drive spikes into the deck &#8220;should such unholy practices continue.&#8221;</p>
<p>After a trip around Cape Horn, from New York to San Francisco soured and passengers began to complain, he threatened to fire the ship&#8217;s powder magazine and &#8220;blow it all to hell.&#8221;</p>
<p>Characterized by his detractors as &#8220;habitually intoxicated and mentally deranged,&#8221; the Captain suffered few complaints from passengers or crew.</p>
<p>After sending a &#8220;disease-racked&#8221; sailor aloft to the crow&#8217;s nest during a gale, a passenger idly commented that it was a wonder the sailor ever survived. &#8220;Aye,&#8221; said Capt. Tibbits. &#8220;I never have sick crewmen for long.&#8221;</p>
<p>Although Tibbits was normally a China trades shipper, the gold strike in California in 1849, proved to be a boon to business. And Capt. Tibbits was all about business.</p>
<p>In January of that year, the owners of the 532-ton square rigger <b><i>Pacific</b></i>, Tibbits and Frederick Griffing, advertised for passengers to make the &#8220;trip around the Horn,&#8221; leaving New York and arriving in San Francisco. It was a perilous three-to six-month journey, with tempestuous storms and gales rounding The Horn of South America, piracy and uncertainties at every port.</p>
<p>However, the genial Captain assured his first-class passengers that for $300, he would provide an ample table, comfortable &#8220;staterooms&#8221; and superlative service.&#8221;</p>
<p>However, Tibbits could not resist the temptation of &#8220;overbooking&#8221; the passage, particularly after he sold officials from the New England Mining and Trading Co. a block of staterooms for $275 each. Supposedly the passage was limited to 50 staterooms; however, 72 first-class tickets were sold, according to an account in <b><i>Forty-Niners &#8216;Round the Horn</b></i> by Charles R. Schultz.</p>
<p>Once the passengers learned they had been hoodwinked, they filed a lawsuit. But, Capt. Tibbets &#8211; not to be dry-docked by any lawyer &#8211; quietly slipped the <b><i>Pacific</b></i> out of New York in the late afternoon &#8220;to escape any further problems with the lawsuit.&#8221;</p>
<p>Many of cash-paying customers were left ashore, helplessly jumping and screaming. In the end, those left on land would count themselves fortunate.</p>
<p>&#8220;The first disillusionment experienced by the passengers aboard the <b><i>Pacific</b></i> was the attitude of one Capt. Tibbets, who trod the quarterdeck,&#8221; according to an account published in the <i>Oakland Tribune</i>. &#8220;The jovial mariner who previously extolled the service of his craft, the bounty of its table and the conveniences of travel aboard the ship, proved a relentless tyrant as soon as land was left behind.</p>
<p>&#8220;Thirty days out of New York, the passengers were miserable with seasickness and cold. Snow confined them in verminous quarters. The food consisted of raw mush, preserved meats, dubbed &#8216;old junk,&#8217; and beans. Some of the passengers asked why pickles and vegetables were not served with meals, and the Captain blandly explained these items as being saved against the time when the passengers developed scurvy.&#8221;</p>
<p>Once the ship made port in Rio de Janerio, the passengers scurried to the U.S. Consulate with their allegations of cruel and inhumane treatment. Despite protesting vigorously against what he characterized as &#8220;the abuse of authority and the outrages committed upon me individually,&#8221; Tibbits was relieved of duty by the American Consul. Another captain was appointed to commandeer the ship the remainder of the journey. Tibbits was left aground in Brazil, according to a 1958 account by maritime historian W.Z. Gardner, and had to make his own way to San Francisco to re-claim his ship.</p>
<p>Although the debacle of the <b><i>Pacific</b></i> during his latter years of command left a black mark on the Captain&#8217;s legacy, he was widely regarded among his peers as a loyal old salt with an intimate knowledge of the seas.</p>
<p>Despite tyrannical tendencies, Capt. Tibbits was a true &#8220;son of the sea.&#8221; He went to sea young, with his father who captained a three-masted square-rigger running the China trade route from New York to Canton.</p>
<p>By the time of his father&#8217;s death, the 24-year-old Tibbits was one of the youngest shipmasters in the China trade. &#8220;Young Hall was physically strong, mentally alert and keenly interested in mastering the mysteries of navigation,&#8221; Gardner wrote.</p>
<p>During the ensuing years, Tibbits would own and command several clipper ships, trading tea and silk on a trade route between America, China and South America. He bought the Baltimore clipper ship, <b><i>Architect</b></i>, and after sailing it around the Horn discovered &#8220;she was too cranky and hard to handle,&#8221; according to son, George&#8217;s account, recorded by Gardner. In 1854, he sold the ship in Hong Kong, &#8220;at a considerable financial loss.&#8221; The favorite of the Captain&#8217;s ships was the <b><i>Southerner</b></i>, a three-masted, 670 ton ship which initially carried ten guns to discourage piracy. Built in 1834 in the shipyards of New York, she responded to the Captain&#8217;s subtle and learned touch until retiring in 1851.</p>
<p>But, the <b><i>Southerner</b></i> did not always carry Tibbits to &#8220;fair seas.&#8221;</p>
<p><center><img src="/item_images/full/69/05/17-01.jpg" width=350></center><br />
&#8220;Four months before his son Robert was born (1840), the Captain was back on the Canton-New York run in the <b><i>Southerner</b></i>, according to Gardner&#8217;s account. &#8220;The Captain was saddled with a mutinous crew which seized the ship off the west coast of South America, near Chile, and put the Master ashore on an island. He was picked up by a passing ship bound for Canton.<br />
Meanwhile, the <b><i>Southerner</b></i> was brought home and the Captain reported &#8220;lost at sea&#8221; by being swept overboard in a storm. His widow went into mourning, as was the custom, but did not re-marry. Four years later, Capt. Tibbits came home. His son, Robert, who had never seen his father until then, was considerably frightened and announced he &#8220;didn&#8217;t like that great big man.&#8221;</p>
<p>Trade with the Far Eastern Empire was lucrative in the era of 1830-1860, with Chinese furniture, silk and tea in high demand in the West. But the &#8220;price&#8221; was to be paid; engaging in the China trade was not for the faint-hearted. Trade and diplomatic relations between the Chinese and the West were fragile at best; at the worse, culminating in the Opium Wars (1839-1842 and 1857-1858).</p>
<p>In his latter years, his son George explained his father&#8217;s sea-born skill with a simple statement: &#8220;You have to have a &#8216;sense of the sea and of the sky.&#8217; The Captain could tell a storm was coming three days in advance.&#8221;</p>
<p>After standing at the helm of the large three-masted square rigged ships of the high seas since 1821, the Captain &#8211; as many old salts &#8211; began to yearn for a more tranquil life in the country. In 1852, not quite the Ancient Mariner at 55 years old, the Captain bought a 127-acre farm on Sands Point, Long Island. Initially built by Capt. John Sands in the early 1700s, the house ultimately was expanded to 24 rooms. Nestled on the Atlantic shore, one of the Captain&#8217;s first projects was construction of a 90-foot porch fronting the ocean. During the next 20 years, Capt. Tibbits paced the porch, often posting himself behind a 3-foot-long telescope (marked Dolland, London, Day or Night) keeping vigil on his sea. When he moved into the old house, Tibbits brought with him an extensive collection of curios and paintings from his trips to China. He had a library full of sea-related literature and, as additional comfort, scattered around him the compass, chronometer, telescopes and barometer that had helped him navigate the globe for three decades. He also placed in his library a miniature folding writing desk, he used at sea, in addition to a large mahogany settee jettisoned from his quarters in the <b><i>Southerner</b></i>. Especially made to accommodate his large frame, the settee measured seven feet. Ship models made for him by crew members surrounded his home, in addition to several examples of exquisite Chinese craftsmanship in silk and ivory gathered during his travels. He also retained several antiques passed down through his family.</p>
<p>In 1872, the Captain died. His son, George, came from San Francisco to be with his mother. The home remained in the family until the spring of 1959 when it was sold. Prior to selling the home, all of Capt. Tibbit&#8217;s China Trade and nautical memorabilia were moved to a descendant&#8217;s home and large barn in Wading River, New York. There, it has remained for more than 50 years.</p>
<p>When Ron Pook, founder and owner of Pook and Pook Auctioneers and Appraisers come upon the China Trade trove, he was, at the least, stunned. &#8220;It was like stumbling onto a big time capsule; material piled up and virtually untouched for 150 years,&#8221; he said. &#8220;It&#8217;s unbelievable. This is the most important China Trade collection in existence. There hasn&#8217;t been one like it and, I&#8217;ll guarantee you, there won&#8217;t be another.&#8221; [It includes] the old nautical devices, Chinese art, the porcelain, ivory, sailors&#8217; scrimshaw work, old leather-and-brass-tacked sea trunks (one with the name, Capt. Hall J. Tibbit), ship models, lacquered-veneer furniture &#8211; &#8220;it&#8217;s all there,&#8221; Pook said.  Included among the items for sale are a portrait of the Captain and a painting of his favorite clipper, <b><i>Southerner</b></i>. Despite their age, both look as if they&#8217;re ready to sail again.</p>
<p>Information courtesy of Pook &#038; Pook, Inc., January 2014.</p>
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		<title>Bill and Florence Griffin Collection, Provenance &#8211; Brunk 5-30-09</title>
		<link>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/architectural/2598_bill_and_florence_griffin_collection_provenance_brunk_5_30_09/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Jul 2016 07:08:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hcst</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Collection of Florence P. and William W. Griffin <p>Bill and Florence Griffin met at an Atlanta Bird Club meeting in 1945. Bill was a published amateur ornithologist; Florence was interested in all of nature &#8211; she knew the names of all the plants as well as the birds.</p> <p>Both were from Georgia, and soon began to see their state changing before their eyes as the New South swept away the Old. They quickly became [...] <b>Click <a href="http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/architectural/2598_bill_and_florence_griffin_collection_provenance_brunk_5_30_09/">here</a> to continue reading.</b>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Collection of Florence P. and William W. Griffin</h2>
<p>Bill and Florence Griffin met at an Atlanta Bird Club meeting in 1945. Bill was a published amateur ornithologist; Florence was interested in all of nature &#8211; she knew the names of all the plants as well as the birds.</p>
<p>Both were from Georgia, and soon began to see their state changing before their eyes as the New South swept away the Old. They quickly became active in incipient Georgia movements advocating nature conservancy as well as historic preservation. They were instrumental in preserving one of Atlanta&#8217;s first structures, the 1840&#8242;s Tullie Smith house. The relocated house was surrounded with the gardens and furnished with the daily artifacts of its era. In the process, that era was brought to life as the everyday history of those who settled the state. The artifacts brought back the artistry and ingenuity and resourcefulness of a Georgia largely disappeared.</p>
<p>With a scientific discipline like that of ornithology, Bill and Florence sought out and collected the furniture, silver, tools, pottery, prints, and papers of this vanished Georgia. They traveled the state tirelessly, and enjoyed becoming friends with farmers, potters, dealers, and pickers, looking for the often-neglected artifacts of early Georgia and the South. Of special interest to them both was the work of the early naturalists, such as John Abbott and Mark Catesby. Everything was carefully cataloged; the effort was to understand and preserve. They shared their finds with wonderful friends in a growing community of enthusiasts. In 1984, an exhibition was mounted at the Atlanta Historical Society called <i>Neat Pieces: the Plain-Style Furniture of Nineteenth Century Georgia</i>, celebrating the material culture and social history of the period. The title of the exhibit came from a phrase in an 1838-9 Georgia journal owned by Fannie Kimball, &#8220;these are very neat pieces of workmanship,&#8221; neat defined by a period dictionary as &#8220;trim, tidy, free from tawdry appendages.&#8221;</p>
<p>Their scholarship led to articles for <i>The Magazine Antiques</i> and election to Friends of Winterthur, but for Bill and Florence the reward for their work was to live with the objects and know the stories they held. There is often in these objects a sense of integrity, economy, and proportion that carries across time from those that made and used them. Bill and Florence have helped us preserve their era and their values.</p>
<p>As Bill wrote, &#8220;These pieces are documents. They can convey to us non-verbal impressions of the past, which we can utilize now, or in the future.&#8221;</p>
<p>-William Griffin, Jr., April 2009<br />
<br />
(Son of Bill and Florence Griffin)</p>
<p><i>courtesy of Brunk Auctions, May 2009</i></p>
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		<item>
		<title>Newcomb College Art Pottery</title>
		<link>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/kitchen_household/1984_newcomb_college_art_pottery/</link>
		<comments>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/kitchen_household/1984_newcomb_college_art_pottery/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2015 22:56:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hcst</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[kitchen & household]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[paintings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pottery & porcelain]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[works on paper]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://1984-guid</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Newcomb College Art Pottery <p>Before it was revered for its art, and more specifically for its art pottery, Newcomb College was the country&#8217;s first degree-granting college for women within a major university. Its founder, Josephine L. Newcomb, envisioned an environment in which women would learn both practical skills and academic knowledge when she proposed the creation of the college in the memory of her daughter H. Sophie Newcomb, who died at 15. New Orleans&#8217;s [...] <b>Click <a href="http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/kitchen_household/1984_newcomb_college_art_pottery/">here</a> to continue reading.</b>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Newcomb College Art Pottery</h2>
<p>Before it was revered for its art, and more specifically for its art pottery, Newcomb College was the country&#8217;s first degree-granting college for women within a major university. Its founder, Josephine L. Newcomb, envisioned an environment in which women would learn both practical skills and academic knowledge when she proposed the creation of the college in the memory of her daughter H. Sophie Newcomb, who died at 15.  New Orleans&#8217;s Tulane University agreed to this unique arrangement in 1886. Newcomb&#8217;s innovation provided women with the same educational opportunities as men, but without having them attend classes together. For its first three decades, Sophie Newcomb Memorial College was housed in and around the Robb-Burnside Mansion, near but not on the Tulane campus.</p>
<p>In 1896, with the arrival of its first kiln and first director, Mary Given Sheerer from Rookwood Pottery, the pottery was launched. Although its formal name was Newcomb Pottery, the mark chosen was a stylized NC and its creative works are known today as &#8220;Newcomb College.&#8221; Designed as a &#8220;model industry,&#8221; the pottery workshop attracted students from local art and china-decorating clubs, especially those organized by William and Ellsworth Woodward. The brothers, who developed The New Orleans Art Pottery in 1888, were the first to suggest a pottery for the women&#8217;s college. Although Newcomb Pottery attracted notable master potters such as Joseph E. Meyers and George Ohr, the wares produced from 1896 to 1901 were, for the most part, experimental, naive and clumsy.</p>
<p>From the beginning, there was a division of labor at Newcomb Pottery. Ceramists and master potters hand-turned, hand-built, glazed and fired while undergraduates, graduate students and a few regulars who graduated from Newcomb College were responsible for decorated the wares. With the student&#8217;s trained hand, the pottery surface was gently incised (cut into), excised (cut away), modeled (made uneven or shaped) and/or colored (painted).</p>
<p>The first collectible pottery to emerge was underglaze slip decorated and underglaze painted biscuit ware. Colors were typically bright with a clear, transparent glaze.<br />
In 1901, according to the Louisiana State Museum Web site, a system of registration marks was initiated to help with the increased inventory of pots. &#8220;Alphabetic and numeric codes indicating the year of manufacture were stamped, incised or painted on the bottoms of pieces, along with the potter&#8217;s and decorator&#8217;s ciphers, and often a clay body or glaze symbol.&#8221;</p>
<p>Newcomb Pottery reached the pinnacle of success in its second period, 1902 to 1910. The distinctly Southern masterpieces created at this time are its most valuable and most collectible. Students sponged the surfaces to create texture. They incised lines and colored them black much like an Arthur Dow woodblock print. Their designs started at the top and ended at the bottom of a vase. The glazes were glossy with blue, green, black, cream and yellow the dominant colors. Today prices of Newcomb College vases, bowls, and other accessories from the &#8220;high gloss&#8221; period are only minimally affected by damage.</p>
<p><center><br />
<img src="/item_images/medium/43/00/82-01.jpg"></p>
<p>A Newcomb College pottery vase from the first period, decorated by Leona Nicholson and typical of works from the period. Note the incised and darkened outlines and the bold colors.  (p4A item # <A HREF="/Newcomb-College-Pottery-Meyer-Joseph-Nicholson-Leona-Vase-Trees-1902-12-inch-D9819917.html" target=_blank>D9819917 </A>)<br />
</center><br />
</p>
<p>With the arrival of ceramic chemist Paul Cox in 1910, Newcomb Pottery moved from glossy to matte and semi-matte glazes. This emphasis continued through 1919. The look of Newcomb pottery under Cox was radically different from its 1902 to 1910 designs.  Surfaces were now only excised, not outlined, and the dominant motifs were soft, muted low relief flowers and atmospheric Bayou scenes.</p>
<p>During the Cox era, Sadie Irvine decorated vases with a full moon behind Spanish moss draped live oak trees. They appealed to collectors then and now. Considered by Cox to be the college&#8217;s greatest designer, Irvine was active longer than any other member of the pottery, serving for fifty-two years as student, decorator, instructor, and finally as the head of the ceramics department from 1942 until her retirement in 1952. Despite Irvine&#8217;s stereotyped scenes and motifs, no Newcomb College pot was ever duplicated, unless requested by the buyer. The pieces were always hand-made or hand-built and hand-painted.</p>
<p><center><br />
<img src="/item_images/medium/48/96/81-01.jpg"></p>
<p>A Newcomb College pottery vase from the Paul Cox era decorated by Sadie Irvine and typical of works from the period.  (p4A item # <A HREF="/Tile-Newcomb-College-Pottery-Irvine-Sadie-Oak-Moss-Design-9-inch-D9760318.html" target=_blank>D9760318</A>)<br />
</center><br />
</p>
<p>After 1919, Newcomb Pottery and the Arts &#038; Crafts movement declined in popularity. The college closed the pottery workshop in 1939 and replaced it with the Newcomb Guild and a line of modern, undecorated utilitarian wares. The Guild never gained sufficient public support and ceased operation in 1940.</p>
<p><center><br />
<img src="/item_images/medium/26/85/49-1.jpg"></p>
<p>A Newcomb Guild pottery vase from the later years of the pottery.  Note the decreased distinction in style and decoration.  (p4A item # <A HREF="/Newcomb-College-Pottery-Unattributed-Vase-Gulf-Stream-Glaze-5-inch-D9981450.html" target=_blank>D9981450</A>)<br />
</center><br />
</p>
<p>In the wake of Hurricane Katrina and the rebuilding of Tulane&#8217;s campus and mission, the fate of Newcomb College itself is now in doubt. (Newcomb College should not be confused with the H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College Institute, a organization that continues to run programs once run by Newcomb College.)  Tulane&#8217;s plan in 2006 for restructuring involved dissolving Newcomb College, but suits regarding donor intent filed by Mrs. Josephine Newcomb&#8217;s heirs have kept the issue from being completely resolved.</p>
<p><i>Reference note by p4A.com Contributing Editor Pete Prunkl with additional research by Hollie Davis, p4A Senior Editor, June 29, 2009.</i></p>
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		<title>Bakelite</title>
		<link>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/barbershop_coin_op/1910_bakelite/</link>
		<comments>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/barbershop_coin_op/1910_bakelite/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2015 22:56:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hcst</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[barbershop & coin-op]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bottles, flasks & jars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[clocks & watches]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[crafts & folk art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[decorative accessories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ephemera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[firearms & edged weapons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[furniture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[games]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[holiday & patriotic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[jewelry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kitchen & household]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lighting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[militaria]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[miscellaneous]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[movies, stage, radio & tv]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[photographica]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://1910-guid</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Bakelite <p>Scandal &#038; the Story of Bakelite Bakelite hit the market in 1907, heralding the arrival of the modern plastics industry. Bakelite was the first completely man made plastic, as until then, plastics such as celluloid, casein, and Gutta-Percha all had as a base a natural material. It was developed by Belgian-born chemist Dr. Leo Hendrick Baekeland who started his firm General Bakelite Company to produce the phenolic resin type plastic. Bakelite was inexpensive [...] <b>Click <a href="http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/barbershop_coin_op/1910_bakelite/">here</a> to continue reading.</b>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Bakelite</h2>
<p><b>Scandal &#038; the Story of Bakelite</b><br />
<br />Bakelite hit the market in 1907, heralding the arrival of the modern plastics industry. Bakelite was the first completely man made plastic, as until then, plastics such as celluloid, casein, and Gutta-Percha all had as a base a natural material. It was developed by Belgian-born chemist Dr. Leo Hendrick Baekeland who started his firm General Bakelite Company to produce the phenolic resin type plastic. Bakelite was inexpensive to manufacture and extremely durable, and made its inventor a wealthy man.  In subsequent generations, however, the Baekeland&#8217;s family story was one of tragedy rather than triumph. In 1972 the schizophrenic great grandson of Dr. Baekeland stabbed his mother to death. Savage Grace, by Natalie Robbins and Steven M.L. Aronson, a book about the family and the murder, was a best seller when it was published in 1985.</p>
<p><b>Bakelite for Appliances &#038; Jewelry</b><br />
<br />Early Bakelite was used almost exclusively in the manufacture of radios, appliances and electrical components because it was lightweight, inexpensive, durable, moisture-resistant and non-flammable.  The limited color range of black, brown, and the occasional burgundy and dark green was appropriate for use as radio cabinets, vacuum cleaner parts, and electrical elements, but eventually, formulas were developed to produce the plastic in a range of appealing colors. Its ability to be carved and molded made it ideal for inexpensive jewelry. Early jewelry attempts to mimic more expensive materials like ivory amber, onyx, and jade, but by the 1930s, consumers began to appreciate the plastic for own qualities and Bakelite jewelry made its appearance everywhere from Sears Roebuck to Sacks 5th Avenue.</p>
<p><b>Colorful Art Deco Bakelite Gems</b><br />
<br />Artists and designers discovered the beauty and workability of Bakelite (and Catalin, a competitor who also produced a phenolic resin plastic). New technology created additional colors, and the plastic became available in scarlet, green, amber, brown burgundy, red-orange, and Kelly green and black and marbled.  By 1934, yet another plastics company had produced a formula for Bakelite in pastel colors including willow green, light blue, pink and yellow. Due to the unstable nature of the chemicals used in the pastel colors formula, these pieces are hard to find, and as such, are among the most costly of Bakelite jewelry.   </p>
<p><b>Bakelite Jewelry &#038; Values</b><br />
<br />Bakelite could be molded, carved, or laminated, and designers and turned to the material for brightly colored, inexpensive flights of fancy to adorn everything from wrists to waists. Necklaces featured beads in a variety of sizes and colors, sometimes terminating in carved or laminated pendants.  A popular choker style necklace consisted of pairs of bright red cherries on celluloid stems and leaves dangling from a celluloid chain (today $150-300.) </p>
<p><b>Bakelite Bracelets</b><br />
<br />Bracelets were stretchy, cuff, charm, wrap or tank-track styles. Stretchy bracelets consisted of beads or lozenges strung on elastic.  Cuff styles could be wide and deeply carved, or narrower bands intended to be stacked together. The band could be smooth, molded (usually in a geometric pattern), carved, or pierced.  Wrap bracelets were beads strung on wire, and tank-track bracelets featured overlapping semi-circular links.  A quick check on eBay turned up bracelets on offer in prices ranging from $50-300. Deeply carved, wide red cuffs seem to fetch the highest prices, followed by amber, then green. </p>
<p><b>Bakelite Pins</b><br />
<br />A variety of pins were produced, either whimsical figurals or geometrics.  The Art Deco love affair with the Scottie Dog was evident in the jewelry on offer.  Horses also had a strong presence, but pins of elephants, penguins, marlins, and cherries are also available.  Pins range in price from $118 for a lovely carved leaf, $130 for a carrot, $102 for a red horse head, and an almost shockingly low $18 for a classic Scottie in red.  </p>
<p><b>Bakelite Jewelry Affordable (Again)!</b><br />
<br />Prices reached almost ludicrous levels in the early 1990s, and the jewelry became so popular that other Bakelite pieces such as poker chips, Tootsie Toys and Mah Jong tiles were frequently fashioned into jewelry.  The market seems to have cooled, meaning that it&#8217;s once again possible to buy a fine Bakelite cuff bracelet for less than a gold one.</p>
<p> <i>Reference note by p4A Contributing Editor Susan Cramer, August, 2011</i></p>
<h2>Bakelite</h2>
<p>Bakelite is named after its inventor, Belgian-born chemist Leo Hendrik Baekeland (1863-1944). After emigrating to the United States in 1889, Baekeland dabbled in photography.  In the late nineteenth century, photographic paper was so insensitive to light that prints had to be exposed outdoors in sunlight.  Baekeland invented a more sensitive paper that he called Velox.  He sold the rights to George Eastman in 1899 for a million dollars.</p>
<p>Now independently wealthy, Baekeland bought a farm near Yonkers, New York and set up a laboratory in the barn.  He wanted to develop an insulating coating for copper wire, the kind of wire used to wind solenoids and motors.  In those days wire was coated with shellac, which was laboriously made from the shells of the lacca beetle that inhabited southeast Asia.  Shellac was expensive and in short supply.  Could Baekeland develop a synthetic substitute? </p>
<p>In 1907, he prepared a mixture of phenol, formaldehyde and lye which had the color and the consistency of honey.  Unexpectedly, the mixture hardened in its container, producing a solid whose surface faithfully duplicated the shape and the texture of its container.</p>
<p>It occurred to Baekeland that his mixture could be heated in molds to create objects of any desired shape.  Thus was born Bakelite, the world&#8217;s first synthetic plastic.  Baekeland founded The Bakelite Corporation to manufacture his material. </p>
<p>Bakelite is known by several generic names.  It is referred to as phenolic because phenol (C6H5OH) is the main ingredient.  Phenol is the preservative that is responsible for the &#8220;mediciney&#8221; smell of preschoolers&#8217; paste and is the &#8220;mediciney&#8221; ingredient in antiseptic mouthwash. </p>
<p>It is also known as thermosetting because the chemical reaction that creates the solid actually occurs while the molding compound is being heated in the mold.  Once the solid object has been formed, it cannot be softened again, unlike thermoplastics such as polystyrene that can be melted and re-used.  This property makes thermosets useful for objects that might become warm, such as housings for electrical devices or even handles for kitchen pots and pans. </p>
<p><center><br />
<img src="/item_images/medium/43/91/67-01.jpg"></p>
<p>A Manning-Bowman coffee pot with bakelite handle, base and spigot handle.  (p4A item # <A HREF="/Coffee-Pot-Art-Deco-Manning-Bowman-Chrome-Ball-Bakelite-Accents-D9810832.html" target=_blank>D9810832</A>)<br />
</center><br />
</p>
<p>Baekeland&#8217;s competitors also made thermosets, and the word &#8220;bakelite&#8221; (small b) became a generic term denoting phenolic from any manufacturer.  To further complicate things, The Bakelite Corporation later became a distributor of polystyrene, which was sold under the trade name Bakelite. </p>
<p>The original lump of Bakelite was a transparent amber-colored solid whose appearance Baekeland described as &#8220;frozen beer&#8221;.  A few products were actually molded that color, notably ladies&#8217; combs that were meant to simulate hand-carved tortoise shell. </p>
<p>Most Bakelite was made with additives that altered its appearance or mechanical properties. </p>
<p>Flock (short cotton threads) was often mixed with molding compound so that the threads would become embedded in the finished product.  The fibers improved Bakelite&#8217;s mechanical strength, much as steel reinforcing rods strengthen concrete. </p>
<p>The most common appearance for a Bakelite object was opaque black, which was produced by incorporating carbon black into the molding compound.  The ubiquitous black rotary-dial telephone was manufactured of black Bakelite. </p>
<p><center><br />
<img src="/item_images/medium/12/64/28-01.jpg"></p>
<p>A Henry Dreyfuss bakelite telephone.  (p4A item # <A HREF="/Telephone-Desk-Henry-Dreyfuss-Model-302-Plastic-Metal-Bakelite-B126428.html" target=_blank>B126428</A>)<br />
</center><br />
<br />
In the 1930s it became possible to make Bakelite in colors other than black by adding suitable pigments before molding.  This led to the use of phenolic for costume jewelry and other decorative items. </p>
<p><center><br />
<img src="/item_images/medium/48/09/07-01.jpg"></p>
<p>A bakelite &#8220;bow tie&#8221; pattern bangle bracelet.  (p4A item # <A HREF="/Bangle-Bracelet-Bakelite-Bow-Tie-Cream-Shades-of-Brown-Orange-Green-D9769092.html" target=_blank>D9769092</A>)<br />
</center><br />
<br />
Bakelite objects are manufactured by a process known as compression molding.  A pre-measured amount of molding compound is placed between two halves of a mold, which are then closed together.  Initial heating softens the compound to the consistency of putty.  High pressure forces the compound into every nook and cranny of the mold.  Continued heating promotes the chemical reaction that produces the solid object.  Automated molding presses could operate unattended, producing a finished object every 1-2 minutes. </p>
<p>Bakelite&#8217;s popularity began to decline in the 1940s as thermoplastics became more readily available.  The first major thermoplastic was cellulose acetate, which was made from a byproduct of the cotton gin.  Intricately-shaped objects can be fabricated by injection molding.  Molten plastic is forced into a mold under high pressure, where it cools and solidifies.  Since cellulose acetate was derived from an agricultural product, supply could not keep pace with the growth of demand.  After World War II, polystyrene (made from petroleum) quickly became the most popular thermoplastic. </p>
<p>The days of manufacturing collectible jewelry from Bakelite are over, but phenolics continue to be used for applications where heat resistance is required, such as electrical equipment or cookware. </p>
<p><I>Reference note by p4A Contributing Editor Joseph H. Lechner, Ph.D.</I></p>
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		<title>Chrome by Chase- The Art Deco Years</title>
		<link>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/kitchen_household/2933_chrome_by_chase_the_art_deco_years/</link>
		<comments>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/kitchen_household/2933_chrome_by_chase_the_art_deco_years/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2015 22:56:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hcst</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[kitchen & household]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[miscellaneous]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[silver & gold]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://2933-guid</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Chrome by Chase- The Art Deco Years <p>The Art Deco style may have originated in Europe, but Americans embraced it for everything from skyscrapers to soap dishes, and nobody did it better than Chase.</p> <p> First Waterbury, then Chase Art Deco buildings like the Chrysler Building and Radio City Music Hall in New York, the Union Terminal in Cincinnati, and much of Miami Beach needed lighting and accessories to go with this exciting new [...] <b>Click <a href="http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/kitchen_household/2933_chrome_by_chase_the_art_deco_years/">here</a> to continue reading.</b>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Chrome by Chase- The Art Deco Years</h2>
<p>The Art Deco style may have originated in Europe, but Americans embraced it for everything from skyscrapers to soap dishes, and nobody did it better than Chase.</p>
<p><b><br />
First Waterbury, then Chase</b><br />
Art Deco buildings like the Chrysler Building and Radio City Music Hall in New York, the Union Terminal in Cincinnati, and much of Miami Beach needed lighting and accessories to go with this exciting new style, and nobody did it better than the Chase Company.  Augustus Chase and other Waterbury (Connecticut) civic leaders established the Waterbury manufacturing Company in 1876.  The company originally specialized in brass, turning out buttons, pins, upholstery trim, saddle and harness parts, and novelties.  Augustus was succeeded by his son Henry who ran the company so successfully that by 1900 a needed rolling mill was built.  The business continued to grow as the Chase Metal Works became a major supplier to the US government during World War I.  Like many companies at the end of a booming wartime economy, Chase desperately needed to retool to peacetime production, and Frederick Chase was the man to do it.</p>
<p><b><br />
Chase for the Home Featuring High Design &#038; Low Price</b><br />
Frederick Chase mounted an aggressive marketing campaign introducing Chase products for the home, and by 1936 business was booming.  The Chase Brass and Copper Company became one of the largest producers of high quality machine made Art Deco accessories and lighting, offering products such as candlesticks, smoking accessories, barware, serving pieces, and lamps.  The products were sold in special gift departments called Chase Shops in jewelry and department stores including Marshall Field&#8217;s and the Mays Company.  Over the years, the company commissioned the best industrial designers  to develop new offerings. Design giants Walter von Nessen, Rockwell Kent, Charles Arcularius and Russell Wright created a variety of products for the Chase Company.</p>
<p><center><A href="http://www.prices4antiques.com/Tea-Service-Modernist-Chase-Chrome-Ribbed-Plastic-Handles-4-Pieces-B175333.html" target=_blank><img src="/item_images/full/17/53/33-01.jpg" width=400></a><br />
Chase four-piece tea service of polished chrome<br />p4A item <A HREF="/Tea-Service-Chrome-Modernist-Chase-Ribbed-Plastic-Handles-4-Pieces-B175333.html" target=_blank>B175333</A></center></p>
<p><b><br />
Emily Post, the Movies, &#038; High Quality Chromium</b><br />
Although Chase products were inexpensive, they were extremely well made, particularly those in their signature chromium finish.  Chromium is a chemical element that takes a high polish and has an extremely high melting point.  Home makers loved its low cost elegance- the gleam of silver for that cost little to buy and required no polishing.  Unlike its competitors, Chase chromium had a brass or copper base under the chromium plated surface.  Using a non-ferrous metal as a base guaranteed that the chrome wouldn&#8217;t pit, flake, bubble or rust.  Home Economist Emily Post endorsed Chase Company products in a 24 page book called How to Give Buffet Suppers that featured a host of Chase Chromium serving and heating products.  Chase products also appeared frequently as props on Broadway stages and Hollywood films.</p>
<p><b><br />
The Chase Trademark</b><br />
The company acquired trademarks as it acquired divisions, but by 1928 management wanted a mark that was unique, a mark that summarized the company and would instantly call it to the mind of the consumer.  Because they made such a diverse range of products, from consumer goods to copper rivets, the mark had to be universal.  The Centaur mark was unveiled in the fall of 1928, and advertising Manager Rodney Chase felt it to be a complete success.  The centaur holds a bow and appears to be in the middle of a hunt, or chase.  The Chase mark appears on almost every piece made after 1928 however, on some pieces the impressed mark is under the rivet that attaches the plastic handles. </p>
<p>-<i>Reference note by p4A contributing editor Susan Cramer.</i></p>
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		<title>Buffalo Bill Cody</title>
		<link>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/autographs/2302_buffalo_bill_cody/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2015 22:56:23 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[William F. &#8220;Buffalo Bill&#8221; Cody <p>The year 1883 neatly divides William Cody&#8217;s former life as a hunter, scout and guide from his later career as a showman. He was 37 in this year of transition. </p> <p>The early life of William Frederick Cody (1846 to 1917) was colorful, adventurous and, thanks to Dime novels, exaggerated. He fought for the Union Army in the Civil War at 18. By 21, he earned his lifelong nickname [...] <b>Click <a href="http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/autographs/2302_buffalo_bill_cody/">here</a> to continue reading.</b>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>William F. &#8220;Buffalo Bill&#8221; Cody</h2>
<p>The year 1883 neatly divides William Cody&#8217;s former life as a hunter, scout and guide from his later career as a showman. He was 37 in this year of transition. </p>
<p>The early life of William Frederick Cody (1846  to 1917) was colorful, adventurous and, thanks to Dime novels, exaggerated. He fought for the Union Army in the Civil War at 18. By 21, he earned his lifelong nickname by hunting buffalo and supplying the meat to the Kansas Pacific Railroad. At 22, he helped locate Tall Bull&#8217;s camp at Summit Creek, Colorado, and killed a number of Cheyenne in the battle. Eight years later he killed and scalped Yellow Hair (mistranslated as Yellow Hand even in a document in this data base), a Cheyenne chief at the battle of War Bonnet Creek, Colorado. He later regretted the murder and campaigned for Indian rights. He probably also rode for the Pony Express for a few months. He was an accomplished Indian scout, buffalo hunter, guide and marksman. </p>
<p><center><br />
<img src="/item_images/medium/37/24/27-01.jpg"></p>
<p>Cabinet card photograph of Buffalo Bill Cody.  (p4A item # <A HREF="/Cabinet-Card-Photograph-Buffalo-Bill-Cody-D9877572.html" target=_blank>D9877572</A>)<br />
</center><br />
</p>
<p>In 1883, he formed Buffalo Bill&#8217;s Wild West, a show featuring living legends of the Wild West. The show toured the country and England reenacting battles and events. At various times, the show included Will Bill Hickok, Bronco Billy, Texas Jack, Sitting Bull, Tim McCoy and Annie Oakley. Wild West was a success for 30 years. Nebraska Governor John Thayer commissioned Cody an honorary colonel in 1886. Cody revered the title and used it in his show&#8217;s publicity and throughout the rest of his life. </p>
<p><center><br />
<img src="/item_images/medium/07/97/40-01.jpg"></p>
<p>Program from an 1891 performance of Buffalo Bill Cody&#8217;s Wild West Show.  (p4A item # <A HREF="/Buffalo-Bill-Program-1891-Chromolithographed-64-inch-A079740.html" target=_blank>A079740</A>)<br />
</center><br />
</p>
<p>Beginning in 1910, Cody began a series of Wild West farewell tours that ended in Denver, Colorado, in 1913 where the show went bankrupt. All of the tents, seats, animals, wagons and his prized phaeton coach were sold at auction. Cody followed that loss with a role in a film that recreated his exploits.</p>
<p>Throughout his life, Cody invested in mining, live stock, ranching, coal and oil developments, film making, tourism and publishing. In 1895, he and others developed land around Yellowstone National Park into the town of Cody, Wyoming. Although his boyhood home near LeClaire, Iowa, was moved to Cody in 1933, Buffalo Bill and his family lived primarily in North Platte, Nebraska and Rochester, New York. He is buried on Lookout Mountain, Colorado. </p>
<p><I>Reference note by p4A.com Contributing Editor Pete Prunkl.</I></p>
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		<title>Vermeil &#8211; definition</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2015 22:56:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>hcst</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Vermeil <p>&#8220;Vermeil&#8221; is a French word co-opted by the English in the 19th century for a silver gilt process. Vermeil is a combination of silver and gold, although other precious metals are also occasionally added, that is then gilded onto a sterling silver object. The reddish (vermilion) hue of the addition of the gold gives the product its name. Vermeil is commonly found in jewelry, and a standard of quality (10 karat gold) and [...] <b>Click <a href="http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/ancient_artifacts/2600_vermeil_definition/">here</a> to continue reading.</b>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Vermeil</h2>
<p>&#8220;Vermeil&#8221; is a French word co-opted by the English in the 19th century for a silver gilt process.  Vermeil is a combination of silver and gold, although other precious metals are also occasionally added, that is then gilded onto a sterling silver object.  The reddish (vermilion) hue of the addition of the gold gives the product its name.  Vermeil is commonly found in jewelry, and a standard of quality (10 karat gold) and thickness (1.5 micrometers) has been set.</p>
<p>Vermeil was initially created through fire or mercury gilding, a technique developed in the 18th century, which requires the application of a solution of mercury nitrate to the object and then the application of a silver and gold/mercury amalgam.  In order for the gilding to adhere to the surface, the coated object is placed in a kiln and exposed to extreme temperatures, which burns away the mercury.  (This is similar to the technique used to produce <a href="../1376_ormolu_non_furniture/">ormolu</a>, a form of gold-gilt.)  As a result of the intense and prolonged exposure to mercury, it has been estimated that most mercury gilders died before the age of 40.  Mechanical or chemical gilding techniques were largely replaced by electroplating by the mid-19th century, and the process was banned in many countries in the mid-1800s.</p>
<p>The White House has a room known as the Vermeil Room, so named for a collection of vermeil tableware.</p>
<p><center><br />
<img src="/item_images/medium/42/28/54-01.jpg"></p>
<p>A Gorham sterling silver compote with vermeil interior &#8211; note the reddish hue.  (p4A item # <A HREF="/Compote-Sterling-Silver-Gorham-Flat-Urn-Form-Square-C-Handles-Medallions-8-inch-D9827145.html" target=_blank>D9827145</A>)<br />
</center><br /></p>
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		<title>R. Wittingham N. York &#8211; Richard Whittingham &#8211; Brass Andirons</title>
		<link>http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/kitchen_household/2944_r_wittingham_n_york_richard_whittingham_brass_andirons/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2015 22:56:23 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[R. Wittingham N. York Detail of the &#8216;R Wittingham N York&#8217; stamp, p4A item D9848534 <p>&#8220;R. Wittingham N. York&#8221; is a misspelled mark used by the brass founders Richard Whittingham, Sr. (1747 to 1821) and his son Richard Whittingham, Jr. (born 1776). It is found impressed on high-quality brass andirons of the period 1800 to 1821. Richard Sr. was active as an American brass founder from 1795 to 1818; his son Richard Jr. is [...] <b>Click <a href="http://www.internetantiquegazette.com/kitchen_household/2944_r_wittingham_n_york_richard_whittingham_brass_andirons/">here</a> to continue reading.</b>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>R. Wittingham N. York</h2>
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<img alt="Detail of the 'R Wittingham N York' stamp" src="http://www.prices4antiques.com/item_images/full/40/14/65-02.jpg" width="274"></td>
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<td><font size="1"><center>Detail of the &#8216;R Wittingham N York&#8217; stamp, p4A item <A HREF="/Andirons-Federal-Whittingham-R-Brass-Urn-Top-Column-Shaft-21-inch-D9848534.html" target=_blank>D9848534</A></center></font> </td>
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<p>&#8220;R. Wittingham N. York&#8221; is a misspelled mark used by the brass founders Richard Whittingham, Sr. (1747 to 1821) and his son Richard Whittingham, Jr. (born 1776). It is found impressed on high-quality brass andirons of the period 1800 to 1821.  Richard Sr. was active as an American brass founder from 1795 to 1818; his son Richard Jr. is thought to have been active in the business circa 1810.</p>
<p>Richard Whittingham, Sr. was born on February 5, 1747 at Newport in Shropshire, England, and was trained as a brass founder in Birmingham. In the 1787 edition of Charles Pye&#8217;s <b><i>Birmingham Directory</b></i> he is as listed as &#8220;Caster for Hire&#8221;; in the 1791 edition he is listed as a &#8220;Solder-maker&#8221;.  In 1792 he is listed in the <b><i>Universal British Directory of Trade, Commerce &#038; Manufacture</b></i> (Vol. II) as &#8220;Solder Maker, Metal Worker&#8221; of Upper Priory.</p>
<p>However, the Whittingham family sailed to America in 1791.  In 1847 Richard Jr. wrote that in 1791, at the age of 14, he was the family&#8217;s oldest living child (the first two having died) on the voyage to the New World.  He reported that the family stayed in Wolverhampton with his uncle Charles Whittingham for a few days in June of that year before heading to Liverpool to set sail. They left Liverpool on July 14, 1791 on the ship <b><i>Baltimore Union</b></i> bound for Philadelphia under the command of a Captain Blythe. Richard Jr. also recorded that a certain number of American sailors were up to no good in Liverpool on the Fourth of July. Local carpenters retaliated by cutting the rigging &#8220;to pieces&#8221; on several American ships, including the <b><i>Baltimore Union</b></i>, which had to delay its sailing until the 14th in order to make repairs.</p>
<p>The Whittinghams&#8217; ship landed in Philadelphia (then the U.S. Capital) on September 22, 1791, young Richard&#8217;s 15th birthday. In 1847 he wrote that his father was &#8220;soon called upon by some gentlemen&#8221; to move to Patterson, New Jersey to establish a &#8220;Society for the Encouragement of Useful Manufacturers.&#8221;  The Whittinghams remained in New Jersey for four years until they removed to New York City in 1795.</p>
<p>Father and son worked as brass founders in New York from 1795 until 1818.  Richard Sr., fiercely proud of his English heritage &#8211; he remained a British citizen throughout his life until his death on September 13, 1821. Richard Jr. carried on his father&#8217;s allegiance until 1844 when he became a U.S. citizen late in life.  However, as British citizens during the War of 1812, the Whittinghams had to report to American authorities.  These records show that both Richard Sr. and Richard Jr. were British aliens living in New York, along with the younger brothers Joseph and Charles.</p>
<p>The 1812 record lists Richard Jr. as being of 36 years of age and having resided in the U.S. for 21 years.  Furthermore, he is described as being 5 ft. 6.5 inches tall, of fair complexion with dark hair and eyes. The alien registration lists Richard Jr. as living at 124 Harman Street (now called East Broadway), where he was a brass founder for the Navy. It lists a wife and three children at that time.</p>
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<img alt="Pair of Federal brass andirons stamped R Wittingham N York" src="http://www.prices4antiques.com/item_images/full/40/14/65-01.jpg" width="274"></td>
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<td><font size="1"><center>Pair of Federal brass andirons stamped R Wittingham N York, p4A item <A HREF="/Andirons-Federal-Whittingham-R-Brass-Urn-Top-Column-Shaft-21-inch-D9848534.html" target=_blank>D9848534</A></center></font> </td>
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<p>The subsequent career of Richard Jr. is well documented in New York records.  In the 1816 <b><i>New York City Directory</b></i> he is listed as a brass founder working at 95 Henry Street, but still living at 124 Harman Street. A drawing survives showing the Whittingham house as a tiny cottage where the family remained until at least 1828.  The 1836 New York directory has Richard still working as a brass founder in Henry Street.  His brothers Charles and Joseph are also listed as brass founders in this directory.  In 1837 Richard and his wife Mary Anne became communicants at All Saints&#8217; Episcopal Church and still living at 143 East Broadway (formerly Harman Street).  Mary Anne died in 1849.</p>
<p>This same craft and residential information is repeated in the 1839/40 Directory and Doggett&#8217;s 1850-1851 directory has Richard listed as a founder working at 98 Henry Street and living at 147 East Broadway.  He would have been 74 years old at that time.</p>
<p>Based on this record it is unlikely that Richard Jr. worked very long for his father&#8217;s foundry, or continued that business after 1818 as he appears to have worked mostly for the navy.  Thus the beautiful and well-crafted brassware, known to antiques collectors by its misspelled &#8220;R. Wittingham&#8221; stamp, can be reliably dated from 1795 to 1818 in New York City.</p>
<p><i>Reference note by p4A editorial staff, October 2011. Genalogical details in part from genalogy.com.</i></p>
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