A SILVER ICE BOWL
A SILVER ICE BOWL

MARK OF GORHAM MFG. CO., PROVIDENCE, 1870

Details
A SILVER ICE BOWL
MARK OF GORHAM MFG. CO., PROVIDENCE, 1870
Formed as ice blocks hung with icicles and chased with frost, set on a conforming shaped oval foot, applied at each end with a polar bear, the base engraved T. Kirkpatrick NY, marked under base
11 in. long; 30 oz. 10 dwt.

Lot Essay

Gorham lists this model for an ice bowl as no. 125 and it was first introduced on April 15, 1870 at a manufacturing cost of $81.96. Gorham made several different ice bowls; however, this model was the most popular and best-selling.

The iconography of this bowl relates to the 1867 purchase of Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million. Also at this time, the Bostonian, Frederic Tudor (1783-1864) developed the technology to harvest, market, and sell ice to an affluent audience. Ice was a luxury, and these bowls provided the perfect accessory. (See: Samuel J. Hough, The Class of 1870: Gorham Sterling Ice Bowls, Silver Magazine, September-October 1989, p.p. 30-33)

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