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Franklin Porter Sterling Silver Arts & Crafts Dish, Danvers, MA, c. 1930

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This lovely plate is a wonderful example of arts & crafts silver from Franklin Porter. It is entirely hand-raised, and the entire surface on both sides displays beautiful, irregular hammering. The raised rim is formed with 11 depressions within the outer scalloped edge. 

Franklin Porter (1869-1935) was an important art & crafts silversmith working in Danvers, Massachusetts when this dish was made. Porter trained at the Rhode Island School of Design. (1) However, he was fiercely independent and never joined Boston's Society of Arts & Crafts, eschewing the commercial pressures of that organization. (2)

He worked out of his home, the 1670 Judge Samuel Holten House, and each piece was accompanied by a note which read in part:

Like the House in which it was made, this piece is constructed of the best material obtainable, by methods older than the House itself and is intended for a century or more of service. (3)

Examples of his silver holloware are uncommon, always hand-raised and of good quality. A four-piece demitasse set by him is in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (4) and his masterpiece, The Resurrection Communion Service, is in the treasury of the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. (5)

This beautiful example from this shop is marked underneath 'F. PORTER/ STERLING' and with his trademark first used in 1925. The plate measures 6 inches in diameter, weighs 5.95 troy ounces and is in very good antique condition with light wear to the surface.

Endnotes:

    1. Jeannine Falino and Gerald W. R. Ward, eds., Silver of the Americas, 1600-2000: American Silver in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, (Boston: MFA Publications, 2008), p. 273.
    2. "Franklin Porter, Silversmith" by Helen Porter Philbrick in the Essex Institute Historical Collections (Vol. CV, No. 3, July, 1969), p. 211.
    3. Philbrick, p. 147.
    4. Falino, p. 273.
    5. Philbrick, pp. 195-99.