This one has me stumped, it’s not hard given the small library of books I have but still nothing found online either. It’s a toddy ladle with a shell top. Can anybody shed any light on this?
Wild guess. Mark 4 is supposed to imply worn three-tower castle mark for Edinburg. But the cartouche does not look worn as is therefore not right. So, pseudo? But why? A Scottish emigre? A tax dodging retailer in Aberdeen? You got me!
If the readable marks were in fact true Edinburgh assay, then 1799 would seem to be the date. So who trained George Fenwick (the father) before he began working in 1800?
The maker "JE" of Aberdeen Scotland is James Erskine. :::
I think it's James Erskine, although I have not found this specific set of hallmarks, I have found other hallmarks which point towards this direction. ::
The fantastic Erskine article says that Erskine paid "lip service" to the official assay masters, so a small percentage of his pieces would bear official hallmarks, but the vast majority were not assayed and were stamped with pseudo-hallmarks, at least this is how I understand the situation ::::::
Has this particular set of James Erskine hallmarks ever been recorded?
Thanks guys, I have studied this more closely with a 40x magnifying glass snd yes there is a shadow of the bottom part of the E so it does read ‘JE’ not ‘JF’.
James Erskine it seems to be but not seen this set of marks before. A rather naughty set of marks designed to deceive it seems!