Postby dognose » Fri Nov 18, 2011 7:57 am
Hi,
Welcome to the Forum.
The dating of silver plater's marks is always a minefield. They were, in the most part, unregistered, and the periods of there use were perhaps overlapping, and different marks used for different pieces.
Fish eaters appeared in the second half of the 19th century, and the maker of your pieces, William Hutton, added the '&' and 'S' to their marks in c.1864, when they became styled William Hutton & Son. The 'B' and 'P' marks inicate 'British Plate', an alloy used by Huttons as the base metal in their plating process. The marks that you show were certainly still in use when James Dixon & Sons acquired Huttons in 1931.
I feel your pieces are likely to be from the 1900-1930 period and as they are plated, rather than solid silver, then it is perhaps likely that the handles were made from xylonite, a celluloid product that was a popular choice by the Sheffield manufacturers as a material for the manufacture of flatware and cutlery handles since its introduction in the later years of the 19th century.
Trev.