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Panama-Pacific and Midwinter Expositions Spoons CA - San Francisco,1894, 1915 - 2012aug - Worlds Fai

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Western Americana Start Price:175.00 USD Estimated At:350.00 - 500.00 USD
Panama-Pacific and Midwinter Expositions Spoons CA - San Francisco,1894, 1915 - 2012aug - Worlds Fai
Invoicing and lot pick up will NOT be available at the live auction.
Lot of 6 commemorative spoons. 1) A 6” sterling spoon, an “Official Souvenir PPIE” (Panama Pacific International Exposition), showing the Tower of Jewels in the handle. 2) A round-bowled spoon showing the Palace of Horticulture in the bowl and the Tower of Jewels on the handle. Marked Panama Pacific Exposition. On the reverse is Court of the Four Seasons. Marked 1877 Niagara Falls Co. 5.5” long. 3) Sterling 5.5” spoon with 1915 and I.E. in the bowl and two P’s on the handle with world globes inside, topped by a California bear. 4) A 6” spoon with the seal of the California Midwinter Fair in the shovel-shaped bowl, and floral carving on the handle. Marked AMN Sterling Co. 5) Small 3.5” Midwinter Fair spoon with 1894 and a picture of one of the buildings in the bowl, with a bear depicted on the handle. Marked with sterling maker’s mark. 6) This Trans-Mississippi Exposition spoon measures 4.25” and contains an advertisement in the bowl for the Fleischmann Co, with Omaha 1898 lettered on the handle. The PPIE was the world’s fair held in San Francisco in 1915, and was a great boon to the city that had been devastated by the earthquake of 1906. It was officially a celebration to recognize the completion of the Panama Canal, as well as to commemorate Balboa’s discovery of the pacific ocean 100 years earlier. After some deliberation it was decided to fill in the mud flats to the north of the city and build there on 635 acres in the area now known as the Marina. The Tower of Jewels was the “crown jewel” of the fair, standing 43 stories tall and covered by more than 100,000 colored glass “jewels.” The only building remaining from the exposition is the Palace of Fine Arts, which was completely reconstructed in the 1960s [Ref: www.sanfranciscomemories.com/ppie/history.html]. The Midwinter Fair was held in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park in 1894. It was the brainchild of Michael H. de Young, then owner of the San Francisco Chronicle. The Japanese Tea Garden and the M.H. de Young Memorial Museum are the remaining legacies from this fair. -59293