Platter of ironstone transferware with clear glaze. Rectangular with clipped corners, recessed bottom and moderately wide sides that extend outward. White body is devoid of decoration except for black transfer scene of a long bridge spanning a river, 5 people in foreground, town at right end of bridge and another in the distance on right bank. Underside has apparent impressed mark and transfer maker's mark at center: under a spread eagle with shield is a "sign" reading "COLUMBIA BRIDGE ON THE SUSQUEHANNA". Below it is "W.R.", indicating maker William Ridgway & Co. Sticker on bottom is: "$390" and "CLP". This river scene is a variation of the print done by William Henry Bartlett (see G98.12.21).
Shelton or Hanley, England
Provenance
Purchased in Adamstown Antiques Gallery for Heritage Center collection. Transferred from Heritage Center, December 2012.
Copper teakettle with round body, gooseneck spout, very low domed lid w/ scrolled knob of sheet copper riveted onto lid with a hand-cut washer added under lid, suggesting repair or replacement. Curved handle hinges onto tapered plinth tab bases with two rivets each. Vertical dove-tailed side seam opposite single-seamed spout. Dove-tailed bottom.
Touchmark on top of handle is "R..REED." within a rectangular reserve with serrated ends.
Made by Robert Reed, working in Lancaster 1771-1779, then 1785-1795.
Provenance
Purchased by Heritage Center from Philip Bradley Antiques
Transferred from Heritage Center to LancasterHistory.org December, 2012.
Tax assessment lists Robert Reed 1786-1793.
Kauffman, Henry J. American Copper and Brass. New York: Bonanza, 1979.
Coppersmith info from Shelley Horvath Posten (dau. of Don Horvath), 2009
Copper dented and scratched overall, polish residue at handle hinges. Side handle break repaired with sheet iron patch secured to outside with two iron rivets. Knob appears to be a repair or a replacement.
Object ID
P.80.131
Place of Origin
Lancaster
Credit
Heritage Center Collection. Purchased through the generosity of the James Hale Steinman Foundation,
Round copper vessel, shaped like a teakettle, but without a spout. A shaped strap handle is attached to each side of the opening at shoulder with riveted brackets. The handle widens near the middle, where the maker's mark is stamped: "P & B. SCHAUM"
Body is dovetailed to base, one dovetailed vertical seam, handle attached to flanges held in place by two rivets each. Pot insert is missing. Another insert (S.13) was purchased as a replacement.
Vessel has multiple dents, creating a general distortion overall. Surface is also tarnished and has drip stains running down the sides. The bottom is very worn and has numerous stains. Blueish-white stains on the inside. Polish residue on handle.
Object ID
P.77.61
Place of Origin
Lancaster
Related Item Notes
See broadside for Benjamin Schaum's hardware store, P.91.02
Credit
Heritage Center Collection. Purchased through the generosity of the James Hale Steinman Foundation
Copper tea kettle, classic form with gooseneck spout, high dome lid, marked strap handle hinged on "plinth w/ serifs" tab bases. Lid fitted with a crudely fashioned replaced iron or steel mushroom-shaped finial, bent to one side.
Vertical dove-tailed seam on side opposite spout, top seam running length of spout. Dove-tailed bottom.
Tarnished with numerous dents and scratches over body. Two very heavy dents at shoulder, opposite each other and one on bottom. Finial knob bent to one side. Two significant cracks on proper right side at shoulder and one on back.
Object ID
P.01.48.1
Place of Origin
Lancaster
Credit
Heritage Center Collection. Purchased through the generosity of the James Hale Steinman Foundation
Large copper teakettle with rounded body, goose-neck spout and hinged handle having a medium arc, mounted on shaped flanges with three rivets. The domed lid has a small brass mushroom knob (replaced). Dovetailed seams on bottom and vertical seam on side opposite spout. Seamed repair to spout tip.
"F. STEINMAN" is stamped on the handle within a reserve.
Provenance
Transferred from Heritage Center Collection, Dec. 2012
Jack Brubaker, The Steinmans of Lancaster, pp. 11-15.
HJ Kauffman, Early American Copper, Tin & Brass, 1995, pp. 42-43.
HJ Kauffman, American Copper & Brass, 1979, p. 65.
Height (in)
13
Width (in)
16
Condition
Good
Condition Date
2013-11-13
Condition Notes
Many dents and overall wear. HJK says handle slightly shortened (likely done by him). Tip of spout replaced. Plugged hole in bottom. Replaced knob. Stamped name very worn. Tarnished with polish residue where the spout, handle, and lid meet the main body.
Object ID
G.77.14
Notes
When his father died in 1758, John Frederick Steinman, Sr. (1752-1823) moved with his mother to Lititz from his birthplace, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. His mother remarried a few years later to John Christophe Heyne, a tinsmith and pewterer from Lancaster. The shop of Heyne and Steinman would become known as Steinman's Hardware Store, the oldest hardware store in America.
Place of Origin
Lancaster
Credit
Heritage Center Collection. Gift of Henry J. Kauffman
Strainer of glazed redware, but with a lighter brown color than most redware. Resting on three tapered 1-1/8 " long feet. The flat-bottomed dish has straight sides that flare out to a molded, high lip. Applied handles at sides. Large holes in bottom and three rows of smaller holes at sides.
Lead glaze overall with some streaks/runs of a darker brown.
Numerous chips on body overall; some large ones on underside and a large chip on the side; handle edges have suffered the most significant chipping loss. Glaze is crackled overall and has some staining, particularly on the interior. Feet are moderately worn.
Object ID
G.98.12.17
Place of Origin
Pennsylvania
Credit
Gift of Mrs. S.R. Slaymaker II, Heritage Center Collection
Pearlware Staffordshire china plate has purple transfer-printed decoration on white ground. Scallop-edged rim has flowers and C-scrolls while sunken bottom has bucolic scene of 2-story house, outbuildings, trees, wooden fence and recumbent cow. A man in late 18th - early 19th c. garb and Quaker broad-rimmed hat walks with a cane in foreground. Underside has printed pattern name and maker under an umbrella canopy: "The Residence/ of the late/ RICHARD JORDAN/ NEW JERSEY/ J H & Co" Impressed at center of underside is mark of maker resembling an airplane propeller within a circle.
One of a set of 6, all have removed paper labels with "SD #48" on back; one has label "Staffordshire" and three have "H220", "H221", and "H222" indicating a Heritage Center loan. See file for info on abolitionist Quaker preacher Richard Jordan (1756-1826).
This set of plates was found in collection and believed to be part of the Sauder estate.
Although produced in England, the Staffordshired china shown depicts the New Jersey residence of the late Richard Jordan, a Quaker preacher in Newton, Burlington Country (near Camden).
Born in 1756, Jordan was one of the first Quakers to publicly campaign against the holding of slaves. After traveling extensively on the east coast and in Europe, he published a travel journal that gave him a degree of fame in the eastern United States.
In 1809 Jordan joined the Newton, New Jersey Quaker Meeting and settled on a small farm in what is now Camden, where he died in 1826. During the last year of his life, Jordan was sketched standing in front of his farm by this friend, William Mason, a Philadelphia drawing teacher. The china service was ordered by friends of the preacher after his death.
Pearlware Staffordshire china plate has purple transfer-printed decoration on white ground. Scallop-edged rim has flowers and C-scrolls while sunken bottom has bucolic scene of 2-story house, outbuildings, trees, wooden fence and recumbent cow. A man in late 18th - early 19th c. garb and Quaker broad-rimmed hat walks with a cane in foreground. Underside has printed pattern name and maker under an umbrella canopy: "The Residence/ of the late/ RICHARD JORDAN/ NEW JERSEY/ J H & Co" Impressed at center of underside is mark of maker resembling an airplane propeller within a circle.
One of a set of 6, all have removed paper labels with "SD #48" on back; one has label "Staffordshire" and three have "H220", "H221", and "H222" indicating a Heritage Center loan. See file for info on abolitionist Quaker preacher Richard Jordan (1756-1826).
This set of plates was found in collection and believed to be part of the Sauder estate.
Pearlware Staffordshire china plate has purple transfer-printed decoration on white ground. Scallop-edged rim has flowers and C-scrolls while sunken bottom has bucolic scene of 2-story house, outbuildings, trees, wooden fence and recumbent cow. A man in late 18th - early 19th c. garb and Quaker broad-rimmed hat walks with a cane in foreground. Underside has printed pattern name and maker under an umbrella canopy: "The Residence/ of the late/ RICHARD JORDAN/ NEW JERSEY/ J H & Co" Impressed at center of underside is mark of maker resembling an airplane propeller within a circle.
One of a set of 6, all have removed paper labels with "SD #48" on back; one has label "Staffordshire" and three have "H220", "H221", and "H222" indicating a Heritage Center loan. See file for info on abolitionist Quaker preacher Richard Jordan (1756-1826).
This set of plates was found in collection and believed to be part of the Sauder estate.
Pearlware Staffordshire china plate has purple transfer-printed decoration on white ground. Scallop-edged rim has flowers and C-scrolls while sunken bottom has bucolic scene of 2-story house, outbuildings, trees, wooden fence and recumbent cow. A man in late 18th - early 19th c. garb and Quaker broad-rimmed hat walks with a cane in foreground. Underside has printed pattern name and maker under an umbrella canopy: "The Residence/ of the late/ RICHARD JORDAN/ NEW JERSEY/ J H & Co" Impressed at center of underside is mark of maker resembling an airplane propeller within a circle.
One of a set of 6, all have now-removed paper labels with "SD #48" on back; one has label "Staffordshire" and three have "H220", "H221", and "H222" indicating a Heritage Center loan. See file for info on abolitionist Quaker preacher Richard Jordan (1756-1826).
This set of 6 plates was found in collection and believed to be part of the Sauder estate.
Pearlware Staffordshire china plate has purple transfer-printed decoration on white ground. Scallop-edged rim has flowers and C-scrolls while sunken bottom has bucolic scene of 2-story house, outbuildings, trees, wooden fence and recumbent cow. A man in late 18th - early 19th c. garb and Quaker broad-rimmed hat walks with a cane in foreground. Underside has printed pattern name and maker under an umbrella canopy: "The Residence/ of the late/ RICHARD JORDAN/ NEW JERSEY/ J H & Co" Impressed at center of underside is mark of maker resembling an airplane propeller within a circle.
One of a set of 6, all have removed paper labels with "SD #48" on back; one has label "Staffordshire" and three have "H220", "H221", and "H222" indicating a Heritage Center loan. See file for info on abolitionist Quaker preacher Richard Jordan (1756-1826).
This set of plates was found in collection and believed to be part of the Sauder estate.
Pearlware Staffordshire china plate has purple transfer-printed decoration on white ground. Scallop-edged rim has flowers and C-scrolls while sunken bottom has bucolic scene of 2-story house, outbuildings, trees, wooden fence and recumbent cow. A man in late 18th - early 19th c. garb and Quaker broad-rimmed hat walks with a cane in foreground. Underside has printed pattern name and maker under an umbrella canopy: "The Residence/ of the late/ RICHARD JORDAN/ NEW JERSEY/ J H & Co" Impressed at center of underside is mark of maker resembling an airplane propeller within a circle.
One of a set of 6, all have removed paper labels with "SD #48" on back; one has label "Staffordshire" and three have "H220", "H221", and "H222" indicating a Heritage Center loan. See file for info on abolitionist Quaker preacher Richard Jordan (1756-1826).
This set of plates was found in collection and believed to be part of the Sauder estate.
Stoneware storage jar with applied lug handles, salt-glazed, gray ovoid body with prominent lip and brushed cobalt blue decoration on sides and at applied handles. One side has a bifurcated flower with oval cartouche centered between flowers. Within cartouche is maker's mark "H GAST/ West Orange/ LANCASTER". Opposing side has a flower with 3 branches.
Gast established himself on W. Orange St. in 1834, but moved to 416 Manor St. in 1838. Thus, this jar was made sometime 1834 to 1838. Gast was the principal supplier of stoneware in the city for over 40 years, His son joined him in the mid 1850s.
Provenance
Unknown.
See Phil Schaltenbrand, "Big Ware Turners," 2002, pp. 18-20.
Redware canning jar, ovoid shape with no handle. Pronounced foot ring and rounded flaring lip with recessed interior to receive a fitted lid (missing). Dark brown manganese decoration with some mottling, streaks and dark spatters. Lead glaze overall except for underside.
Very strong wear with losses. Lip has very large chip and one very small chip at outside edge. Strong losses of glaze at lip. Very strong abrasions at salient point of side, with considerable scattered scratches. Foot ring has three large chips and one very large chip. Soil on inside and underside.
Object ID
G.99.22.1
Place of Origin
Pennsylvania
Credit
Gift of Drs. Irwin and M. Susan Richman, Heritage Center Collection
Mochaware pitcher, white potbelly body on footring, pulled spout and applied handle with foliate-molded terminals. Hand-painted slip decoration has broad orange center band with dendritic forms. Two bands of ligt blue are flanked by pairs of thin brown bands
Two attached stickers read "Mocha 1 P" and "2352 J.B. Morris Jr.".
Large chips at spout, on rim near handle. Small chips on footring and crack. Soil overall. Occasional marring and abrasions. Slip decoration on sides in remarkably good shape.
Glazed soft paste porcelain Gaudy Dutch teapot (A) with lid (B). Handpainted "Butterfly" pattern decoration on pale blue body of pearlware. Squat ovoid body sits on a low footring; body swells most in lower half. Collar extends outward below an oblong mouth fitted with conforming domed lid with oblong knob finial . Spout has minimal molding as does arching applied handle.
Provenance
Collected by Harpo and Susan Marx during visits back East from CA. Donated to Heritage Center.
Overall strong staining, especially at lower spout and base section and interior. Strong hairline cracks throughout base and bottom, with resulting staining. Scratchon butterfly wing. Chip on underside of spout tip. Long split/crack on handle back, perhaps from firing. Coloring is very uneven at multiple places, sometimes creating a mottled effect. Wear and soil under foot ring.
Object ID
G.98.51.03a-b
Place of Origin
England
Credit
Given in memory of Harpo by Susan Marx, Heritage Center Collection
Glazed soft paste porcelain Gaudy Welsh sugar bowl (A) with lid (B). Handpainted inverted tulips of red and yellow are interspersed with 3 large, dominating deep blue scalloped motifs decorated with copper lustre painted floral decoration. Squat pot-bellied body sits on a low squarish pedestal with scalloped edging. Two molded angular applied handles. Top has round mouth with flared collar extends outward. Domed lid has squarish molded knob finial. Darkened remnant of paper sticker with blurred writing, perhaps "-caster/ --ea set/ --1825."
Provenance
Collected by Harpo and Susan Marx during visits back East from CA. Donated to Heritage Center.
Chinese export bowl of high fired porcelain, polychrome decoration under glaze. Thin walled in nearly hemispherical form sitting on a 3/4" raised foot. Gold-painted rim with red edging. Two goldfish inside bottom. Continuous landscape on exterior is the same repeating Roman or Greek scene of a seated half-robed seated man with dog facing three nude women and seated baby. All set against distant mountains and one tree in foreground.
Glazed soft paste porcelain bowl, hand-painted "Kings Rose" pattern decoration. Sitting on a footring , the bowl has steeply curving high sides. Decorated on opposing sides with the same design of a large red flower surrounded by smaller yellow flowers with rust petals and leaves.Interior design along rim are four pink flowers spaced around rim and linked by thin line banding, S-curves, and various round shapes. Center of bottom has one red flower with leaves.
Papers stickers underneath are: "Gaudy Dutch/ Kings Rose," then "18B" and finally a loan number "6.23.82" referring to the 1982 loan to the Heritage Center.
Small scratches and areas of paint loss, particularly the round, green "fruits" on inner rim. Inside discoloration, stains, soil. Some wear to foot ring. Rim has multiple tiny chips, abrasions and wear.