Fruit or cake basket
Probably Birmingham, England
1800-1820
Measurements
4-7/8 in x 11-1/2 in x 6-3/4 in
Materials
Fused silver on copper
Credit Line
On loan from Winterthur
Accession Number
1983.72
Condition Notes
Some of the thin layer of fused silver has been polished off from the copper base.
Provenance
The basket was purchased from antiques dealer Philip H. Bradley of Downingtown, Pennsylvania, for use in the Wilson-Warner House.
Comments
The small, “boat-shaped” basket is made of copper with a thin layer of fused silver outside. The silver is subject to eroding away from wear and polishing, visible inside the rim at the high end. The basket is made of two solid metal sections (the bottom and the top rim) joined by wire loops soldered in place. One end is one-half-inch higher than the other. Beading along the rim edge and leaves cast into the surface at each coiled end further ornament the basket.A “plated fruit basket” is listed among items sold in the March 24, 1829, David Wilson Jr. bankruptcy sale. It was sold to Daniel Corbit for $3.87½. That basket has not been identified among objects that descended from him.