Waste Bowl
Dateca. 1810
Marked by
Charles Alexander Burnett
(1769 - 1849)
MediumSilver
DimensionsOH: 5 1/8"; OW: 6 5/8"; OD: 4 7/8"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase, The Friends of Colonial Williamsburg Collections Fund
Object number2013-144,4
DescriptionRaised oval urn-shaped body chased into 8 vertical panels on a stepped oval spreading foot; upper body chased onto wide horizontal band, with applied horizontal bands at edge.Label TextCharles Alexander Burnett was the most prolific and important silversmith in the vicinity of the new nation’s seat of government, first working in Fredericksburg, Virginia (1788-1793), then Alexandria, Virginia (1793-ca. 1796), and finally Georgetown, DC (1796-ca. 1840). His clientele included members of Washington society, politicians and presidents. This teaset made in Alexandria is in Burnett’s earlier, more restrained neoclassical style; it has a family history of ownership by Mary Randolph of Virginia whose initials are engraved on three of the four pieces.
InscribedEngraved "MR" in sprigged script within a floral festooned cartouche for Mary Randolph of the Tabb family of Gloucester County, Virginia
MarkingsC•A•BURNETT in rectangle, 2 times on inside base
ProvenanceAccording to the vendor, the teaset has a family history of ownership by Mary Randolph of Amelia Courthouse and the Tabb family of Gloucester County, Virginia.
ca. 1810
ca. 1810
ca. 1810
1763-1764
1824-1827
ca. 1810
1702-1703
1795-1805
ca. 1810
1816-1817
1736-1737