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This piece is made of Old Sheffield Plate (fused plate).
Made by Harvey & Gore in the 1830's.
I estimate the length at 7 inches (17.78 cm.)
What was it used for ?
Well... it is quite obviously a pass the salt train. In the 1830's if a person was at one end of the table, and the salt shaker at the other, they would say "pass the salt please" and another at the other end would place the shaker in the basket located at the back of the train shown, and roll it down the table. (how am I doing so far?) All right then... I have no clue!
Except that the basket in the back is there for one reason or another, any other clues?
good evening and pass the coffee please . . .'tis a coffee dripper. Usually the cylinder is a bit taller for those of us who need extra blasts of caffeine.
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So far it has had 50 plus viewings, it has nothing to do with food (salt) caffine (coffee dripper) how about nicotene? if not maybe it should be melted down and made into something useful. {;-) Or, you could give us another hint? (Because I still have no idea).
Pat
i like the little engineer on top of the enormous boiler. trains used to be very attractive for tabletop decoration - i wish i had a photo of my grandfather's long-gone salt train. he had rigged it up on a narrow-gauge train track, there was a little silver locomotive with silver salts on wheels. used to make my grandmother absolutely livid so he played with it all the time. i don't recall whether they all went together - the locomotive and cars, i mean.
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byron mac donald wrote:So what goes in the basket? and why didn't Salmoned identify it as a bong? :-) it could have been.
I should have realized that musing would come back to bite me... ;) The basket was probably empty, but I imagine it could have contained a blotter of some sort.
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