Ad blocker detected: Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker on our website.
This makers' mark appears at first blush to be that of Mary and Elizabeth Sumner of London (accompanied on this piece by an "R" date letter for 1812-13, plus Lion Passant and King Geo. duty mark, no town mark), but the so-specified makers' mark in Jackson's has a rather rounded cartouche, whereas this one is fairly squared cornered:
Might anyone be able to confidently confirm or deny this particular mark as that by Mary and Elizabeth Sumner? TIA!
I agree that the bottom set looks more like "KS" than "ES", but with rubbing and knocks, it's tough to say one way or the other with any degree of certainty. Consider that "K" is very rarely used as the first initial of a silversmith given name for this period of Brit silverware. A quick search yields only Kean, Kenneth and Kathleen. So what is the likelyhood that this mark is by an obscure pair of silversmiths MS and KS, as opposed to it being an obscure mark of Mary and Elizabeth Sumner? If you were forced to bet your life one way or the other, which would it be? Not trying to be confrontational, just weighing probabilities. It is what it is, and we will either figure it out, or we won't. Such is life.
Mary and Eliza Sumner, the widow and daughter of William Sumner entered two marks, the first in a circular punch on the 31-8-1809 and the second in a square punch on 21-8-1810. If your tongs are dated after this and the fact that they were spoonmakers, would lead me to think you are correct.
Yes, the tongs are marked for date code 1812-13, apparently at the end of the Mary and Elizabeth partnership. Sorry for the verboten hot link to the specific mark, wasn't aware this was a no-no. Would it be acceptable to provide the text link to the full page for anyone who wanted to search, given that it is a public board? Also, Patrick, can you indicate the text from which you posted the MS/ES marks? TIA.
That scan of Mary and Elizabeth Sumner's marks came from John P. Fallon's "The Marks of the London Goldsmiths and Silversmiths, Georgian Period (c 1697-1837)".
Small book, but packed with information. Very user freindly.
Hello - I'm stumbling into this conversation five years late! I was researching Mary Sumner today, as her makers mark appears on my set of kiddush cups.
I hope that someone can clarify this for me:
Using this site, I was able to determine that the cups are sterling, made in London in 1901. The makers mark looks exactly like the Mary Sumner mark. However, according to the research I'm doing, it appears that Mary Sumner only produced silver between 1807 and 1808. I guess that I'm misinterpreting those dates. Did sterling items continue to be produced under that mark after 1808?