709

Good S. Kirk & Son Baltimore Standard Silver Bowl

fourth quarter 19th century, Baltimore, Maryland, of bulbous circular form, decorated with repousse vignettes of village scenes separated by ornate flowers and scrolls, with a gadrooned rim and raised on four acanthus-mounted scroll feet.
h. 4-3/4", dia. 9"; 29.07 t. oz.

Provenance: Estate of Julia Hamilton, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Notes: Baltimore remains the only U.S. city to have enforced silver assay and hallmarking as was common in Europe. For a brief period between 1814 and 1830, all silver sold in Baltimore had to be 11 oz. pure: i.e., every troy pound (12 oz.) of alloyed silver had to contains 11 oz. of silver and 1 oz. of base metal (91.7%). This was higher than the 10 oz. 14 dwt. standard (89.2%) of U.S. coins, and Baltimore silversmiths balked at these regulations which effectively imposed upon them the additional cost of alloying silver to this standard while silversmiths in the rest of the country simply used coin stock (hence "coin silver".) The law was soon repealed, but some Baltimore silversmiths, notably Samuel Kirk and Andrew Warner, continued to use the higher Baltimore standard as a prestige measure, even paradoxically long after the yet higher sterling silver (92.5%) standard became the industry standard after the Civil War.

fourth quarter 19th century, Baltimore, Maryland, of bulbous circular form, decorated with repousse vignettes of village scenes separated by ornate flowers and scrolls, with a gadrooned rim and raised on four acanthus-mounted scroll feet.
h. 4-3/4", dia. 9"; 29.07 t. oz.

  • Provenance: Estate of Julia Hamilton, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
  • Notes: Baltimore remains the only U.S. city to have enforced silver assay and hallmarking as was common in Europe. For a brief period between 1814 and 1830, all silver sold in Baltimore had to be 11 oz. pure: i.e., every troy pound (12 oz.) of alloyed silver had to contains 11 oz. of silver and 1 oz. of base metal (91.7%). This was higher than the 10 oz. 14 dwt. standard (89.2%) of U.S. coins, and Baltimore silversmiths balked at these regulations which effectively imposed upon them the additional cost of alloying silver to this standard while silversmiths in the rest of the country simply used coin stock (hence "coin silver".) The law was soon repealed, but some Baltimore silversmiths, notably Samuel Kirk and Andrew Warner, continued to use the higher Baltimore standard as a prestige measure, even paradoxically long after the yet higher sterling silver (92.5%) standard became the industry standard after the Civil War.
  • Condition: In generally good condition. Some minor pinpoint dings on the underside, and some very slight compression rings around the perimeter where the feet meet the body, but they are in good shape and not at all dented into the body. Nice repousse with some wear to the relief consistent with age. Marked (on the underside) "S. Kirk & Son / 11 OZ"

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October 24, 2021 10:00 AM CDT
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$2,000 $4,999 $200
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