Salver
Dateca. 1770-1775
Maker
Joseph Richardson, Sr. (1711-1784)
MediumSilver
DimensionsDiameter: 6 5/8"; Height: 1 3/16"
Credit LineBequest of Joseph H. and June S. Hennage
Object number2020-268
DescriptionSilver salver of undulating circular form with an applied rim composed of six gadrooned sections separated by projecting sprigs, set above shaped sides which slope into a flat center. The components of the rim are cast, as are its three claw and ball feet.Label TextAlso known as a "waiter," small-size silver trays were used to serve, with some flair, anything from a folded letter to a glass of wine. This salver stands firm on three claw and ball feet and was produced late in the career of one of Philadelphia's most noted silversmiths, Joseph Richardson, Sr. An heirloom of one of the city's oldest families, the engraved presentation on its bottom records the salver's entry into the Coates family. It was a wedding gift from Sarah Morris (1704-1775), a Quaker minister, to Samuel Coates (1748-1830) and Lydia Saunders (d.1789), a Quaker couple married on January 12, 1775.
Samuel Coates was a merchant and philanthropist who served as a Director of the original Bank of the United States, Treasurer of the Library Company of Philadelphia, and an Overseer of the Public Schools of Philadelphia. He also helped lead the Pennsylvania Hospital from the mid-1780s through the mid-1820s. This silver salver left the Coates family in 1992.
InscribedBottom engraved "SARAH MORRIS to SAMUEL & LYDIA COATES" in two lines above "1775," followed by a scrolled flourish.
MarkingsCenter of the bottom struck twice with "IR" in relief within a rectangle.
ProvenanceBy decent in the Coates family to Dr. George Morrison Coatesm who consigned the salver to Sotheby's (New York), where it was sold on June 19, 1992 as lot 91.
ca. 1780
1776
1777
1737
1700-1730
1761-1762
1765-1766
1735-1745
1765-1780
ca. 1795
1766-1777
ca. 1765