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Public Domain

Anthony W. Robinson

Coffeepot

1794-1804

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Anthony W. Robinson

Coffeepot

1794-1804

Physical Qualities Silver, ivory, 13 3/8 × 5 1/2 × 10 3/4 in. (34 × 14 × 27.3 cm.)
Credit Line Bequest of Ellen Howard Bayard
Object Number 1939.206
In 1774, on the eve of the American Revolution, a guest at Colonel Robert Carter’s Virginia plantation noted in his journal, “After dinner, we had a Grand and agreeable Walk in & through the Gardens… Drank Coffee at four, they are now too patriotic to use tea.” A year earlier, angry colonists had thrown chests of tea into Boston Harbor to protest British taxes, perhaps stimulating a fresh demand for coffee among those who supported the cause of independence. Nevertheless, American silversmiths produced far fewer coffee pots than teapots, due in part to their size, weight, and cost. A bold cast eagle serves as the finial atop this coffee pot, made in Philadelphia soon after the American Revolution. It bears the engraved initials CGD but the first owner’s name has been lost.
Baltimore Museum of Art by bequest, 1939; Ellen Howard Bayard (1863-1939), MD

Inscribed: Engraved monogram 'GMP'

Maker

Anthony W. Robinson

1779–1839

American, 1780-1840
Meet Anthony W. Robinson

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