135

Silverplate and Wood "Town Crier" Cocktail Shaker

designed in 1937 by Bruce de Montmorency (1903-1965), New York, New York, probably the National Silver Deposit Ware Co. Inc., in the form of a large handbell, in three parts, the bell (body), turned wooden handle (strainer/spout) and finial (cap), the interior with functioning clapper.
h. 10-3/4", dia. 6"

Literature: Simon Khachadourian, The Cocktail Shaker (London: Philip Wilson, 2000), p. 111 (illustrated).


Notes: Bruce de Montmorency, creator of the Town Crier, which appears to be his only patent, was born on March 7, 1903 in New York (or England - accounts differ). He styled himself "Count de Montmorency" (although not listed in the Almanach de Gotha) by the time of his 1927 marriage to Katherine Seymour. That union ended in divorce three years later when Katherine found de Montmorency in flagrante dilecto with his mistress at a room in the then-new Lincoln Hotel (the largest in Manhattan at the time and now the Row NYC). Mr. de Montmorency was a member of the sporting set (he was served divorce papers at a 5th Avenue shop while purchasing a fowling piece for a grouse hunt) and was a contributor to Country Life magazine in 1935. He filed the patent for the Town Crier cocktail shaker in July 1937, which was granted in December. (In between, a report in the New York Herald Statesmen notes that an unknown person shot at de Montmorency in his bedroom at the Pel-Hutchinson Apartments, the .22 caliber bullet lodging in a box mattress.) He was, at the time and for many years afterwards, a purchasing agent for elite outfitter of sporting and excursion goods Abercrombie & Fitch. He was released from this position in 1943 when an insurance investigation into the loss of 473 watches revealed that de Montmorency had been stealing merchandise from the company and selling it back to them, quadrupling his income. An article in the Daily News about the larceny described him as "a character with an A as broad as the English Channel" (whatever that means) and quoted him that "slow horses and women require considerable investment". He was later a director of the Cataract Oil Co. in Texas with bandleader Guy Lombardo (!), and ship and airline manifests show no fewer than eleven transatlantic crossings for him and his second wife, Freda Eileen Leary (1905-1987), in the 1950s and 60s, including transit on both the Mauretania and the Queen Mary. He died in Washington, D.C. on December 27, 1965.

designed in 1937 by Bruce de Montmorency (1903-1965), New York, New York, probably the National Silver Deposit Ware Co. Inc., in the form of a large handbell, in three parts, the bell (body), turned wooden handle (strainer/spout) and finial (cap), the interior with functioning clapper.
h. 10-3/4", dia. 6"

  • Literature: Simon Khachadourian, The Cocktail Shaker (London: Philip Wilson, 2000), p. 111 (illustrated).
  • Notes: Bruce de Montmorency, creator of the Town Crier, which appears to be his only patent, was born on March 7, 1903 in New York (or England - accounts differ). He styled himself "Count de Montmorency" (although not listed in the Almanach de Gotha) by the time of his 1927 marriage to Katherine Seymour. That union ended in divorce three years later when Katherine found de Montmorency in flagrante dilecto with his mistress at a room in the then-new Lincoln Hotel (the largest in Manhattan at the time and now the Row NYC). Mr. de Montmorency was a member of the sporting set (he was served divorce papers at a 5th Avenue shop while purchasing a fowling piece for a grouse hunt) and was a contributor to Country Life magazine in 1935. He filed the patent for the Town Crier cocktail shaker in July 1937, which was granted in December. (In between, a report in the New York Herald Statesmen notes that an unknown person shot at de Montmorency in his bedroom at the Pel-Hutchinson Apartments, the .22 caliber bullet lodging in a box mattress.) He was, at the time and for many years afterwards, a purchasing agent for elite outfitter of sporting and excursion goods Abercrombie & Fitch. He was released from this position in 1943 when an insurance investigation into the loss of 473 watches revealed that de Montmorency had been stealing merchandise from the company and selling it back to them, quadrupling his income. An article in the Daily News about the larceny described him as "a character with an A as broad as the English Channel" (whatever that means) and quoted him that "slow horses and women require considerable investment". He was later a director of the Cataract Oil Co. in Texas with bandleader Guy Lombardo (!), and ship and airline manifests show no fewer than eleven transatlantic crossings for him and his second wife, Freda Eileen Leary (1905-1987), in the 1950s and 60s, including transit on both the Mauretania and the Queen Mary. He died in Washington, D.C. on December 27, 1965.
  • Condition: **In overall good condition with some scuffs and scratches and one tiny dimple, but no dents, breaks or repairs noted. Some minor loss to the silvering around the textured band on the cap. Marked (on the underside) "Pat. No. 2,102,520".

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