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Kettle on stand

(active 1865–1961)
about 1915
Object PlaceProvidence, Rhode Island, United States
Medium/TechniqueSilver
Dimensions28 x 29 x 22.5 cm (11 x 11 7/16 x 8 7/8 in.)
Credit LineMuseum purchase with funds donated by The Seminarians, other friends, and the Curator's Fund in memory of Harry H. Schnabel, Jr.
Accession number1998.189.1-3
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsSilver hollowware
Collections
Description

This large coffee and tea service is composed of six pieces made by Rogers & Wendt in the mid-nineteenth century and a matching kettle on stand made by Gorham in the early twentieth. The addition succeeds beautifully and provides evidence of the high quality of workmanship available after the turn of the century.

Formed and decorated in the late classical style, the original six pieces are the work of Rogers & Wendt, a little-known Boston firm. Johan Rudolph Wendt apprenticed with master goldsmith Dietrich Heinrich Stadt II in his native Germany and immigrated to the United States during the 1848 revolution. Listed as a chaser in the Boston directory of 1850, he prospered quickly. By 1853 he appeared in partnership with Augustus Rogers, who had begun his career in New York but established himself in Boston in the 1840s. Reported to have a large shop of forty workers, the firm prospered. Rogers & Wendt retailed this service and other wares through Jones, Shreve, Brown & Co., one of Boston’s largest and most prestigious retailers of luxury goods.

This fully marked service is a major example of comparatively rare Boston silver by this firm. In 1860 Rogers & Wendt formed a partnership with George Wilkinson, Gorham’s head designer, to supply the well-known New York firm of Ball, Black & Co. For unknown reasons, the partnership lasted only a few months, but Wendt retained his New York connection and, for more than a decade, occupied two floors of the firm’s new building as an independent supplier. Although Wendt is recognized as a major New York City silversmith, his Boston work remains relatively unknown.

This text has been adapted from "Silver of the Americas, 1600-2000," edited by Jeannine Falino and Gerald W.R. Ward, published in 2008 by the MFA. Complete references can be found in that publication.

Inscriptions“EGB” entwined letters within a medallion engraved on concave shoulder of side of kettle, to right of handle. “from / W. B. and K. D’C. B. / June 28, 1915” in alternating script and Gothic letters engraved underneath base.
ProvenanceThe Gorham company costing slip for the kettle and stand shows that it was a special order to match the Jones, Shreve, Brown & Co. tea set. The set was made for Tilden Thurber Company of Providence, Rhode Island, who sold it to the Binney family. Elizabeth Goddard Binney (b1893) married Barnes Newberry of Rhode Island about 1915, which is when the kettle was added to the service. The service descended to their son William Binney Newberry (b. 1928), who placed the service at auction. In 1998 it was purchased by dealer Spencer Marks and therafter purchased by the Museum. Thomas Newberry was Secretary of the Navy under President Roosevelt. William Binney was the founder of the R.I. Hospital Trust Bank, which is now Bank of Boston.
Gorham Manufacturing Company
1898
Gorham Manufacturing Company
1885
Pitcher
Gorham Manufacturing Company
about 1863–68
Teakettle on stand
Gorham Manufacturing Company
1874–1878
Gorham Manufacturing Company
1881
Group shot:  1991.784, 1991.785
Gorham Manufacturing Company
about 1873
Gorham Manufacturing Company
about 1873
Group shot: 69.1291-7
Gorham Manufacturing Company
1906
Teapot (part of a tea and coffee service)
Gorham Manufacturing Company
1906
Group shot: 69.1291-7
Gorham Manufacturing Company
1906
Group shot: 69.1291-7
Gorham Manufacturing Company
1906