Who is the maker JS of this snake and shell salt spoon?
Who is the maker JS of this snake and shell salt spoon?
This spoon was made in London in 1848. Can anyone identify the maker's mark JS please?
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Last edited by lindmcc on Tue Aug 22, 2006 7:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I now have copies of both volumes of these books, at great expense, as well as a copy of Jackson's. The John Stone who registered the mark in London lived in Exeter. A John Stone had a mark registered in Exeter. It was identical except for a dot in the middle. I am wondering if it is safe to assume they were one and the same person.
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I would say yes, John Stone of Exeter was working, according to Jackson (1989), from 1825 when he was mentioned in the Freeman's List, until 1867. Culme has the London registered mark in the 1840s with that Stone living in Exeter. If we look further in Culme, there is James Shipwright, who had the J.S mark in 1850, from Vol 1 he was around a bit earlier, so he may have registered the J.S, so Stone used JS for items assayed in London?
All good history.
Richard
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All good history.
Richard
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I've always thought this spoon was by John Stone (Exeter 1851) - no centre pellet - but in light of the above I am not now so sure. Any thoughts?Scotprov wrote:I would say yes, John Stone of Exeter was working, according to Jackson (1989), from 1825 when he was mentioned in the Freeman's List, until 1867. Culme has the London registered mark in the 1840s with that Stone living in Exeter. If we look further in Culme, there is James Shipwright, who had the J.S mark in 1850, from Vol 1 he was around a bit earlier, so he may have registered the J.S, so Stone used JS for items assayed in London?
All good history.
Richard
I should clean my spoons. LOL
Regards/carling
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Jackson's lists both a John Scardon and a John Sweet, Exeter 1823, in the list of Exeter and West Country goldsmiths. I wonder if either of these could be your Exeter JS. I have also done a search on Google and found at http://genuki.cs.ncl.ac.uk/DEV/Exeter/E ... e1830.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; a list from the 1822-23 edition of Pigot's Directory that shows John Scardon at Gandy's Street and John Sweet at Pancras Lane.
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