This silver item was made by Frederick Marquand of New York City. He worked 1826 - 1839.
It is 21.75 inches ( 55.25 cm.) long and 5.5 inches ( 14 cm.) wide.
What was it used for ?
Pat.
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What-is-it question CXXIII.
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What-is-it question CXXIII.
Last edited by 2209patrick on Fri Sep 26, 2008 8:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Well done Wev.
Yes, it's a wine siphon.
This one does come from the Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum located in Winterthur, Delaware.
For those not familiar with these pieces.
Wine siphons were used to tansfer the wine to stylish decanters for table use.
They also minimized spillage and the transfering of sediment.
Pat.
.
Yes, it's a wine siphon.
This one does come from the Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum located in Winterthur, Delaware.
For those not familiar with these pieces.
Wine siphons were used to tansfer the wine to stylish decanters for table use.
They also minimized spillage and the transfering of sediment.
Pat.
.
I have no doubt that the item is a wine siphon. My problem with it is that I decant wine for 3 reasons aeration, removal of sediment and presentation. Clearly the siphon achieves presentation, the removal of sediment is highly questionable and, since a siphon is fundamentally an air free system, it cannot achieve aeration. A wine funnel on the other hand achieves all three. Is it a 19th century example of a solution looking for a problem?
Regards,
Tony
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Regards,
Tony
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