I recently acquired a small teaspoon with an unusual set of hallmarks- the assay office mark seems to be missing, and for this reason I can’t find the date letter C’s corresponding year. The maker “THGH” also seems difficult to find.
Any help with identifying the year or the maker would be greatly appreciated.
Identifying strange Georgian hallmark without assay office.
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Re: Identifying strange Georgian hallmark without assay office.
Hi and welcome to the forum.
TH/GH is Thomas & George Hayter, a father and son partnership, who registered this mark in 1816. The hallmark is a London mark with the date letter c for 1818/19 and it is quite normal for the town mark to be omitted at this period. This particularly occurs on smaller items of flatware and was probably an anti-fraud device to prevent a complete hallmark being cut from a small, low-cost piece and then being incorporated into a larger piece where the town mark should have been present.
Phil
TH/GH is Thomas & George Hayter, a father and son partnership, who registered this mark in 1816. The hallmark is a London mark with the date letter c for 1818/19 and it is quite normal for the town mark to be omitted at this period. This particularly occurs on smaller items of flatware and was probably an anti-fraud device to prevent a complete hallmark being cut from a small, low-cost piece and then being incorporated into a larger piece where the town mark should have been present.
Phil
Re: Identifying strange Georgian hallmark without assay office.
Thank you so much for that brilliant information, Phil.silvermakersmarks wrote: ↑Mon May 29, 2023 1:48 am Hi and welcome to the forum.
TH/GH is Thomas & George Hayter, a father and son partnership, who registered this mark in 1816. The hallmark is a London mark with the date letter c for 1818/19 and it is quite normal for the town mark to be omitted at this period. This particularly occurs on smaller items of flatware and was probably an anti-fraud device to prevent a complete hallmark being cut from a small, low-cost piece and then being incorporated into a larger piece where the town mark should have been present.
Phil