identifying siver sauce boat

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tootal
Posts: 4
Joined: Fri Jul 28, 2006 10:30 pm

identifying siver sauce boat

Post by tootal »

could someone please help me identify the following
a silver sauce boat, decoration like rope on the rim otherwise fairly plain.
base marks are as follows


H.S

An imbossed crown

ALPHA

H B & H ( i think) in patterns the last being a shield

6 4 1 0

and a rego number

thanks in anticipation
2209patrick
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Location: Land of Lincoln, USA

Post by 2209patrick »

The HB&H shield mark might be a silverplate mark used by Harrison Brothers & Howson, Sheffield, England.

Image

Pat.
tootal
Posts: 4
Joined: Fri Jul 28, 2006 10:30 pm

Post by tootal »

thank you for your accurate reply, the silver sauce boat is indeed harrison broths, and howson, but it is too heavy to be silver plate, could the H.S. imbossing and the rego no. suggest this is one of their silver products. it does have some scratching, does silver scatch easily? and can it be dated?
thankyou in anticipation
2209patrick
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Posts: 3549
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2006 9:53 pm
Location: Land of Lincoln, USA

Post by 2209patrick »

You're welcome.
The marks I posted previously are their silverplate marks.
If your sauce boat were silver it would have a set of marks including a lion passant, the Sheffield crown, a date letter and a GH makers mark.

Image

Pat.
Matulda
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Location: Sweden

Post by Matulda »

tootal wrote:thank you for your accurate reply, the silver sauce boat is indeed harrison broths, and howson, but it is too heavy to be silver plate, could the H.S. imbossing and the rego no. suggest this is one of their silver products. it does have some scratching, does silver scatch easily? and can it be dated?
thankyou in anticipation
I can't give you much new information on Harrison Brothers & Howson except that the firm was established in the middle of the 19th century (different sources say 1849, 1853 and 1871), but I would like to comment on your other questions. Nothing is "too heavy" to be silver plate, because the weight depends on the metal underneath the silver, which can be nickel, brass, tin, zinc or an alloy. Silver plate simply means that a metal or alloy is covered by a thin layer of silver, since about 1840 usually by electroplating. And yes, silver is a soft metall that scratches easily, more easily the higher the silver content is.
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