Anyone know the pattern and use for this early Gorham Serving Spoon?

Discussion in 'Silver' started by jollyrancher, Oct 19, 2015.

  1. jollyrancher

    jollyrancher Active Member

    I've worked out that this is a very early Gorham mark (circa 1865), marketed by Benjamin & Ford out of New Haven, CT. What I can't figure out is the purpose for the spoon and what the pattern is. Anyone know? It's about 9 1/2" long.
     

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  2. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

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  3. jollyrancher

    jollyrancher Active Member

    Thanks! The bowl is about like you'd see for a tablespoon. Not flat. I'm confused. The patent date for the Benjamin Ford mark is earlier than an 1878 date. Plus I read that that Gorham mark was also earlier than 1878.
     
  4. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    See the PAT 78 on your spoon? That's the date for the design.
     
  5. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

  6. jollyrancher

    jollyrancher Active Member

    Cool...thank you :)
     
  7. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    Another thing to be aware of is that the "circa" dates you've probably seen for Benjamin & Ford are not "patent dates" and are approximations. Ford survived Benjamin, as did Benjamin's son, who was also in the business.

    I'd call it a tablespoon, what we call today a "serving spoon."
     
  8. silverthwait

    silverthwait Well-Known Member

    As Susan said, it is a serving spoon, for something that does not drip. And perhaps needs to have a top crust severed with the pointed tip -- such as Strata, or Bread Pudding, or Macaroni and Cheese. :)
     
  9. jollyrancher

    jollyrancher Active Member

    Thanks for the clarification and explanations everyone.
     
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