I recently recieved this very nice Sterling tongs with a mark I am having trouble with. F.M. as to maker, what looks like a duty mark, lion and date code G. Am I on the right track as to it being English? Any help as to to the maker would be of great help also.
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British sugar tongs? or Coin Silver?
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Hi,
Its a bit difficult to see - do you have a better picture of the marks? It would also help to see a picture of the tongs themselves. On the face of it, this does not look like a British hallmark for the following reasons:
The Date letter G should probably be in some form of shield shaped punch. The Lion looks a bit odd! The duty mark also looks to be in the wrong shaped punch. Apart from all that, I don't know who "FM" could be.
Sorry I can't be very positive, but a better picture may help.
Regards
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Its a bit difficult to see - do you have a better picture of the marks? It would also help to see a picture of the tongs themselves. On the face of it, this does not look like a British hallmark for the following reasons:
The Date letter G should probably be in some form of shield shaped punch. The Lion looks a bit odd! The duty mark also looks to be in the wrong shaped punch. Apart from all that, I don't know who "FM" could be.
Sorry I can't be very positive, but a better picture may help.
Regards
.
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- contributor
- Posts: 266
- Joined: Tue May 31, 2005 12:42 am
English Sterling tongs
Here is a picture of the tongs and a better pic of the marks. It measures 6.5" long. Thanks for any assistance you can provide.
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I can confirm Frederick Marquand, the elongated second period after the M is distinctive. See William Voss's page: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com ... /67822.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Frederick Marquand
Thank you very much for the assistance. The piece is Sterling as tested and you are spot on in your identification - thanks again.
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