Rotating Toaster
Dateca.1750-1800
OriginAmerica
MediumWrought iron
DimensionsOverall: 3 3/8 x 23 1/2in. (8.6 x 59.7cm)
Toaster body: 1 7/8 x 13 5/8in. (4.8 x 34.6cm)
Credit LineGift of Louisa F. France
Object number1994-113
DescriptionThree legged rotating (or spinning) toaster with a twisted, crooked shank and a leaf shaped handle with decorative filing and a large suspension ring at the end. The handle extends from the shank to the pivot point under the bread rack, where it is splits and forms two footed legs. A third leg is tenoned and riveted into the handle. It's rotating bread rack is composed of two pairs of arches made of twisted bars, interspaced with curled sprigs (one missing). The bread rack is attached to the handle by a rivet, which acts as the pintle on which it spins.Label TextPerhaps one of the few dietary staples most modern Americans have in common with early Americans is a simple piece of toast. Cooking a piece of bread not only adds a delightful crunch and improves flavor, it is also an easy way of making less-than-fresh bread not only edible, but delicious. This is why toasters have been around for centuries, if not millennia, and are to be found in most kitchens today.
Anyone with a source of heat, some bread and something to hold it with can make toast. The existence of more complicated devices, like this wrought iron example, attest to the regularity in which early Americans toasted their bread. This piece is designed to hold two slices, and easily swings around to allow for both sides of the bread to be done. More ornate than many of those encountered, one can easily imagine the "sprig" designs this utensil could impart onto the surface of the toast it was used to make.
ca.1770-1810
ca.1770-1820
ca.1750-1840
1760-1800
1805-1809
ca.1770-1850
ca. 1800
ca.1780-1820
ca.1760-1840
ca. 1765
1747-1748
1747-1748