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This strainer was made by Franklin Porter whose silver was always well designed and heavy gauge. It has a square platform with a round pierced bowl. An applied, shaped handle has a circular loop terminal. The lovely surface exhibits wonderful hammering.
Franklin Porter (1869-1935) was an important art & crafts silversmith. Porter trained at the Rhode Island School of Design. 'From 1910-1914, he worked out of his home in Bristol Ferry, Rhode Island... He and his family eventually moved to Middleton, Massachusetts, where his wife, Ethel, operated a tearoom in the front of the house that also served as a salesroom... Porter and his family became caretakers of the historic Judge Samuel Holten House in Danvers' in 1924 and returned to being a silversmith full-time having been working during the war 'as a machinist and master mechanic at two local factories'.(1) However, he was fiercely independent and never joined Boston's Society of Arts & Crafts, eschewing the commercial pressures of that organization. (2)
This beautiful tea strainer is marked 'F. PORTER/ STERLING'. It measures 6 inches long, weighs 1.10 troy ounces and is in excellent antique condition.
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