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PAUL REVERE, JR. Made Silver Tablespoon Hallmarked REVERE with Punch Style D

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:6,000.00 USD Estimated At:10,000.00 - 15,000.00 USD
PAUL REVERE, JR. Made Silver Tablespoon Hallmarked REVERE with Punch Style D
Autographs
Paul Revere Jr. Made Silver Spoon Hallmarked “REVERE” Large Tablespoon Kathryn Buhler’s Hallmark Style D & 10
(PAUL REVERE, JR.) (1734 - 1818). Famous American Silversmith of Boston, Patriot of the Revolutionary War Era Massachusetts, Son of Liberty who made the historic “Paul Revere’s Ride” warning “The British are Coming!”
This is an original, authentic and quite beautiful 8.5 inch long heavy Coin Silver Tablespoon, Handmade by Paul Revere, Jr., Hallmarked by him “REVERE,” Choice Extremely Fine. This ornate yet simple styled, circa 1800 Tablespoon, is perfectly solid and heavy having no major marks or detractions with a very smooth even silver appearance. It has a simple swag design on the back of its large elongated oval bowl, which itself measures nearly 3” long. This lovely spoon has a rounded upturned handle with flowing artistic Hand-engraved family initials at top of the handle. It is hallmark stamped with perhaps the full and best design Paul Revere hallmark, "REVERE" in a rectangular enclosure located on the back side of the handle, as usual. A truly wonderful, perfectly preserved and decorative designed silver spoon made by America’s most famous Revolutionary War Patriot-Silversmith, Paul Revere. This example having his premium, perhaps most identifiable full "REVERE” hallmark punch, that shows very clear.

Recently, a larger size table spoon with the same hallmark sold at auction for $22,000 hammer plus a 17.5% buyer’s fee totaling $25,850. It was not nearly as “pleasing” in its detail of design as this current Paul Revere made Tablespoon. The last example we offered was in our EAHA Auction of April 24, 2015, Lot 64 being a smaller 4.5” teaspoon, graded Choice Extremely Fine and selling for $16,800.

This example having his most identifiable, "REVERE" hallmark, that shows very clear but for the extreme right of the final E due to strike. For identification showing the similar maker's mark, see: “Colonial Silversmiths and Jewelers,” by Patricia E. Kane, Yale University Art Gallery, 1998, mark D (as illustrated). Second confirmation reference is “American Silver 1655-1825 in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, by Kathryn C. Buhler, pages 384-385, mark d (as illustrated). A third confirmation is located in “Paul Revere Goldsmith” Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, by Kathryn C. Buhler, page 64, mark 10 (as illustrated and noted as used only by Paul Revere, Jr.). Provinance: The Zigler Art Museum, Jennings, LA, said to have been purchased by Mrs. Zigler in 1971, to our current consignor.
Paul Revere, Jr. (1734-1818), the son of French Hugenot immigrant Apollos de Revoire (Anglicized to Paul Revere, Sr.). Though a prominent silversmith in his day, Revere is, of course, best remembered for his partriotic endeavors and his famed midnight ride.

Paul Revere was a prosperous and prominent Boston Silversmith who helped organize an intelligence and alarm system to keep watch on the British military during the Revolutionary War period.

Following that War, Revere returned to his Silversmith trade and used the profits from his expanding business to finance his work in Iron casting, Bronze Bell and Cannon casting, and the forging of copper bolts and spikes. In 1800 he became the first American to successfully roll copper into sheets for use as sheathing on naval vessels, including “Old Ironsides” aka the USS Constitution.