Lot Essay
John Andrew (1747-1791) was Salem's most important eighteenth-century silversmith. He most likely apprenticed to Boston silversmith, Benjamin Burt, and began advertising his own business "at the Sign of the Gold Cup" in Salem's Essex Gazette in 1768. At the age of twenty-two, he received the commission from the First Church in Salem to make this flagon, matching an English flagon of 1767 that was a gift of Samuel Browne. Andrew's flagon "enjoys the distinction of being the finest extant example of Salem silver known to date" (Patricia Kane, Colonial Massachusetts Silversmiths and Jewelers, 1998, pp. 145-146).
According to the Deacons' Records (illustrated here), the purchase of the present flagon was voted upon in February 1769, the work was executed in April, and the silversmith was paid on May 5, 1769. It is particularly fitting that John Andrew made silver for the First Church in Salem, as his great-great-great grandfather was Rev. Francis Higginson, the First Church's founder and first minister, and his great grandparents were John and Sarah Higginson, the donors of lot 61.
Rev. William Bentley, minister of the East Church in Salem from 1783 to 1819, wrote of the erratic career of silversmith John Andrew, "In his prosperity he was evidently giddy; in his adversity he experienced and almost unexampled depression, & . . . was subject to the most extreme emotions." (The Diary of William Bentley, D.D., Pastor of the East Church, Salem, Massachusetts, Essex Institute, 1905-1962, v. I, p. 298)
CAPTION: Record of the Church's purchase of the present flagon in 1769, Deacons' Record Book 1713-1847
The First Church in Salem
According to the Deacons' Records (illustrated here), the purchase of the present flagon was voted upon in February 1769, the work was executed in April, and the silversmith was paid on May 5, 1769. It is particularly fitting that John Andrew made silver for the First Church in Salem, as his great-great-great grandfather was Rev. Francis Higginson, the First Church's founder and first minister, and his great grandparents were John and Sarah Higginson, the donors of lot 61.
Rev. William Bentley, minister of the East Church in Salem from 1783 to 1819, wrote of the erratic career of silversmith John Andrew, "In his prosperity he was evidently giddy; in his adversity he experienced and almost unexampled depression, & . . . was subject to the most extreme emotions." (The Diary of William Bentley, D.D., Pastor of the East Church, Salem, Massachusetts, Essex Institute, 1905-1962, v. I, p. 298)
CAPTION: Record of the Church's purchase of the present flagon in 1769, Deacons' Record Book 1713-1847
The First Church in Salem