A brass candle holder has a central socket known as the capital which holds the candle; the capital has decorative pairs of incised lines set at one quarter distance from the top, six in the center and two one quarter distance from the bottom. The capital also features an oblong-shaped opening with a short handle protruding for the thumb to raise the candle up through the capital as it burns. The capital surmounts a brass drip pan with a loop-shaped finger grip riveted to the underside lip of the drip pan.
Year Range From
1830
Year Range To
1870
Storage Location
Wheatland, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
Butler's Pantry
Storage Wall
South Wall
Storage Cabinet
Work Table
Storage Shelf
Table Top
Object Name
Chamberstick
Material
Brass
Height (cm)
12.065
Height (ft)
0.3958333333
Height (in)
4.75
Depth (cm)
1.905
Depth (ft)
0.0625
Depth (in)
0.75
Diameter (cm)
17.145
Diameter (ft)
0.5625
Diameter (in)
6.75
Dimension Details
Depth dimension is only the tray
Condition
Fair
Condition Date
2022-02-01
Condition Notes
Several dents on the drip pan from use, the thumb lever and hogscraper is missing as is the extinguisher that would have been attached to the finger handle.
A pewter teapot with a metal handle painted black. The painted metal handle and the form is typical of mid- to late-19th century New England pewtersmiths. Form is a reverse mold construction; the casting is reversed upon itself and soldered at the middle. The ornate finial also suggests a late 19th century manufacture date.
A pewter water pitcher made in a form similar to the Boardmans pewtersmiths of Hartford, Connecticut. Boardmans' pewter shop was in business from 1804-1873.
Copper ladle attached to a long wrought iron handle riveted to the ladle at the center of the bowl and at its edge. Iron handle is flattened at the copper bowl, transitions to round stock in the middle and flattens again at the end.
Reverse painting on glass mounted in an American Reverse Cove Gold Leaf Picture Frame, is a scene of Fort Washington from the Maryland side of the Potomac River. The moon is shaped from a piece of Mother of Pearl. The Fort served as one of the points of defense for Washington D.C. during the Civil War.
Reverse painting on glass mounted in an American 1850 Sully Gambose Picture Frame, is a scene of two houses in a rural setting near a meandering river with two people in a small boat and a sail boat down stream. The white facades of the houses are Mother of Pearl.
One of two matching silverplate bases (1b-2b) that are paired with two round Sandwich cut glass salt cellars (1a-2a). The short silver plate bases terminate on four ball feet situated at each corner. The square bases are hollow and each have an opening upon which the glass salt cellars rest. Silver bases have a ribbed shoulder decor rounded up to neck of base. Neck has two bands with slanting lines, repeated around outside of flare.
Rococo Revival gas chandeliers attributed to Christian Cornelius, a Dutch silversmith who founded the Cornelius lighting business in 1827. It became Cornelius, Baker, and Company in 1835. By the 1850s, it operated a factory on Columbia Avenue. They began by making brass lighting fixtures and later zinc fixtures and sculptures.
Rococo Revival gas chandeliers attributed to Christian Cornelius, a Dutch silversmith who founded the Cornelius lighting business in 1827. It became Cornelius, Baker, and Company in 1835. By the 1850s, it operated a factory on Columbia Avenue. They began by making brass lighting fixtures and later zinc fixtures and sculptures.
Hand-painted daisies adorn these porcelain cornucopia-shaped vases mounted on Gilt Spelter cast bases featuring four cherub faces amidst vines and leaves. The top of each vase is pierced with gilt paint highlighting the piercings and hand painted gilt vines.
Round stamped and hollow metal tieback head with round raised central rosette and five heart-shaped petals surrounded by five larger heart-shaped scroll-edged petals. Tieback attaches to a wall via a long metal post.
Crest of top rail, finger-molded in scalloped shaped. Horizontal splat curved upward, terminating in scroll on each end, thicker at middle. Seat is shield shape, serpentine front. Legs plain cabriole, back legs square and canted. 36.14.3 differs from 36.
This porcelain toothbrush case was made by Robert Persch's Porcelain Factory in Mildeneichen, which was located in the Liberec Region of the Czech Republic. Case has a white background with a floral/leaf design in blue, orange and gold.