Pair of shoe buckles
Dateca. 1790
Artist/Maker
William Tutin
OriginEngland, Birmingham
MediumPewter and iron/steel
DimensionsOL: 3 5/16"; OW: 2 9/16"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1995-154,2
DescriptionPewter shoe buckle with iron/steel chaps; one of a pair.Label TextIf there is one product that is associated with Birmingham, it is a seemingly infinite variety of shoe buckles. William Tutin was one of Birmingham's specialist makers of base metal buckles and spoons. He was also the inventor of Tutania, apparently an antimony-rich alloy with similar properties to Britannia metal. His name appears in the Birmingham directories between 1767 and 1823. Records indicate that he was purchasing pewter from Ingram & Hunt in 1785.
Donald Fennimore has published a pewter sugar bowl from the first years of the nineteenth century that is stamped with an American eagle with spread wings, striped shield, and banner framed within an oval of stars, indicating that Tutin may have not only produced pewter sugar bowls for the American market, but also perhaps stamped furniture brasses with this same patriotic decoration.
InscribedNone
MarkingsTouch mark "W T" within a rectangle on undersides of both frames. "W TUTIN" stamped on both sets of chapes.
ProvenanceVendor: Thomas Campbell, Hawleysville, Connecticut.
Exhibition(s)
1785-1800
Ca. 1780
ca. 1760
1760-1775
1765-1775
Ca. 1790
1740-1760
1765-1775
1770-1790
1770-1790