AN AMERICAN SILVER WATER PITCHER
AN AMERICAN SILVER WATER PITCHER
AN AMERICAN SILVER WATER PITCHER
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PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF ROSA STRYGLER
AN AMERICAN SILVER WATER PITCHER

MARK OF THIBAULT & BROTHERS, PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA, CIRCA 1830

Details
AN AMERICAN SILVER WATER PITCHER
MARK OF THIBAULT & BROTHERS, PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA, CIRCA 1830
The ovoid body and stepped circular foot applied with die-roll bands of running grapevine, with acanthus leaf scrolled handle, engraved below spout with presentation inscription, marked twice to underside
13 3/8 in. (34 cm.) high
58 oz. 12 dwt. (18,225 gr.)

Brought to you by

Sallie Glover
Sallie Glover

Lot Essay


The presentation inscription reads: To / Dr. John K. Mitchell. / THE CITY OF / Philadelphia / GREATFUL / for his disinterested and / intrepid exertions / in a / PERIOD OF PUBLIC / CALAMITY / "Transeat in exemplum"

John Kearsley Mitchell (1798 - 1858) was a physician in Philadelphia who played an important role during a number major epidemics that struck the city in the mid-19th Century. This pitcher was given as a gift to Mitchell from the city of Philadelphia in gratitude for his service during the cholera epidemic that struck the city in 1832 (See The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography Volume IX, page 346).

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