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Coaster

ca. 1780 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

By the 1760s coasters, or bottle stands, were popular drinking accessories. Gentlemen could not drink freely until the end of the meal when the ladies had withdrawn to take tea or coffee in the drawing room. The butler laid out the appropriate glasses in front of each guest. He placed glass decanters on coasters, before the master of the house to be passed around informally. Coasters allowed guests to slide decanters or wine bottles across the table without scratching the surface. They also caught wine drips that might stain the table. Coasters had baize covered or polished wooden bases. Later versions sometimes had wheels.

This coaster is made of Sheffield plate. In 1742 Thomas Boulsover discovered that fused bars of silver and copper could be rolled into sheets of laminated metal and worked like silver. The Sheffield plate industry flourished for approximately one hundred years until electroplating superseded it in the 1840s.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Sheffield plate, a laminate of sterling silver fused on to a copper core, on a turned wooden base
Brief description
Sheffield plate, on a turned wooden base, Sheffield, ca. 1780
Physical description
Sheffield plate on a turned wooden base lined with baize, (one of set of six), the side pierced and chased with rosettes and garlands; reeded edge.
Dimensions
  • Height: 2.7cm
  • Diameter: 12.7cm
Style
Production typeMass produced
Marks and inscriptions
No marks
Credit line
Miss M. B. Hudson Bequest
Object history
Given to the Museum by Miss M. B. Hudson.
Production
Reason For Production: Retail
Subjects depicted
Summary
By the 1760s coasters, or bottle stands, were popular drinking accessories. Gentlemen could not drink freely until the end of the meal when the ladies had withdrawn to take tea or coffee in the drawing room. The butler laid out the appropriate glasses in front of each guest. He placed glass decanters on coasters, before the master of the house to be passed around informally. Coasters allowed guests to slide decanters or wine bottles across the table without scratching the surface. They also caught wine drips that might stain the table. Coasters had baize covered or polished wooden bases. Later versions sometimes had wheels.

This coaster is made of Sheffield plate. In 1742 Thomas Boulsover discovered that fused bars of silver and copper could be rolled into sheets of laminated metal and worked like silver. The Sheffield plate industry flourished for approximately one hundred years until electroplating superseded it in the 1840s.
Bibliographic reference
Banister, Judith. Wine Coasters in Silver and Old Sheffield Plate. Antique Collector. May 1976, vol.5, pp.37-41.
Collection
Accession number
M.333A-1922

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Record createdJune 19, 2009
Record URL
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