AN AMERICAN GOLD AND ENAMEL MOURNING RING
AN AMERICAN GOLD AND ENAMEL MOURNING RING
1 More
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF GLORIA MANNEY
AN AMERICAN GOLD AND ENAMEL MOURNING RING

MARK OF MYER MYERS, NEW YORK, CIRCA 1768

Details
AN AMERICAN GOLD AND ENAMEL MOURNING RING
MARK OF MYER MYERS, NEW YORK, CIRCA 1768
the exterior with three bands of black enamel, the interior engraved Phil Philipses ob. 9 May 1768 AE 43 Y 8 M, marked on interior (Rosenbaum mark 3, Barquist mark 6)
7⁄8 in. (2.2 cm.) diameter
2 dwt. (3 gr.) gross weight
Provenance
In honor of Philip Philipse (1724-1768).
With Vincent D. Andrus (1915-1962).
With Ginsburg and Levy, New York, by the 1960's.
With Jonathan Trace, New York, by the 1980's.
Acquired by the present owners from the above.
Literature
Jeanette W. Rosenbaum, Myer Myers, Goldsmith: 1723-1795, Philadelphia, 1954, p. 116, plate 6.
Peter J. Bohan, American Gold 1700-1860, exhib. cat., New Haven, 1963, pp. 20-21, 43, no. 105.
Peter J. Bohan, "Early American Gold," Antiques, December 1965, pp. 817-818, fig. 17.
David Barquist, Myer Myers: Jewish Silversmith in Colonial New York, New Haven, 2001, p. 56, p. 73 nn. 287-288.
Exhibited
New Haven, Connecticut, Yale University Art Gallery, American Gold 1700-1860, 2 April-28 June 1963, no. 105 (lent by Ginsburg and Levy).
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art, long term loan, 2009-2022.

Brought to you by

Julia Jones
Julia Jones Associate Specialist

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

The present lot comprises a small group of gold marked for Myer Myers, including a pair of shoe buckles, a snuffbox, and five rings including the one offered here. The further four rings include a mourning ring in memory of Anna Maria Panet, now in the collection of the Museum of the City of New York, another for Robert Hunter Morris, now in a private collection, a third for John Stroud, sold from the Darling Foundation Collection at Christie's, New York, 18 January 2007, lot 15, and then again from the Collection of Irvin & Anita Schorsch at Sotheby's, New York, 20 January 2016, lot 1046, and a plain ring sold at Christie's, New York 20 January 2023, lot 592.
Philip Philipse (1724-1768) was the second son of Frederick Philipse II, the second Lord of Philipsburg Manor in Westchester County, New York. Loyalists during the Revolution, the Philipse family, including Philip, his older brother Frederick, and his sisters Susanna and Mary, had their lands seized in 1779 by the Revolutionary Government of New York, including what was known as The Philipse Patent, a 250 square mile tract of land purchased by Adolphus Philipse which received a land patent from the British Crown in 1702.

More from Important Americana

View All
View All