A SILVER AND ENAMEL PRESENTATION PUNCH BOWL AND LADLE

MAKER'S MARK OF WHITING MFG. CO., NEW YORK, CIRCA 1897

Details
A SILVER AND ENAMEL PRESENTATION PUNCH BOWL AND LADLE
maker's mark of whiting mfg. co., new york, circa 1897
Circular, the rim and foot applied with silver and matte-finished enamel grapevines, the ladle with matching decoration, one side of the bowl and the ladle engraved with a Marquess's coronet above a crest within the Order of the Garter, the other side engraved TO The Marquis & Marchioness OF Breadalbane as a token of esteem on the occasion of their silver wedding July 27th 1897 FROM Thomas J. Lipton, marked under base and on ladle
14¾in. diameter; gross weight 133oz. 10dwt. (2)
Provenance
Gavin Campbell (b. April 9, 1851), 1st Marquess of Breadalbane, K.G., m. July 27, 1872 Alma Graham (b. September 7, 1854), daughter of the 4th Duke of Montrose.

Lot Essay

Sir Thomas J. Lipton presented this punchbowl and ladle to the Marquess of Breadalbane as a 25th-anniversary present. Thomas Lipton (1850-1931) expanded his father's small grocery in Glasgow into an international retail business which made him a millionaire by the age of thirty. Lipton's success was based on his innate genius for advertising, and his publicity schemes, such as dropping leaflets from hot-air balloons, attracted great attention from the press. Lipton cut costs by ordering his groceries directly from farmers, mostly in Ireland, and in 1889 he acquired his own tea plantations in Ceylon. In 1897, the year he commissioned this punchbowl, Lipton's fortune was well established and he launched his thirty-year interest in yacht-racing as well as his philanthropic career. For these efforts, Lipton was knighted in 1898. Lord Breadalbane had held a number of public offices by 1897, including Lord Steward of the Household, and was a director of several public companies, and it is likely that this punch bowl commemorated a successful business relationship as well as a silver anniversary.