Lot Essay
John Coney was the greatest silversmith of his generation, celebrated for the quality of his workmanship as well as the variety of forms he produced. This beaker displays Coney’s virtuosity in its proportions, large scale, and heavy gauge. After his death, Rev. Thomas Foxcroft wrote that Coney was “excellently talented for the Employment assign’d Him, and took a peculiar Delight therein” (Patricia E. Kane, Colonial Massachusetts Silversmiths and Jewelers, 1998, p. 321).
William Manley (c. 1648-1732) married Phebe Brooks (1652-1720) in Boston in 1686. She was one of nine daughters of Gilbert Brooks (c. 1621-1695) and Elizabeth Symons of Rehoboth. William Manley was a slater and was admitted as a freeman of Boston in 1690. He bequeathed money to the poor of the new South Brick Church in his will of 1732.
William Manley (c. 1648-1732) married Phebe Brooks (1652-1720) in Boston in 1686. She was one of nine daughters of Gilbert Brooks (c. 1621-1695) and Elizabeth Symons of Rehoboth. William Manley was a slater and was admitted as a freeman of Boston in 1690. He bequeathed money to the poor of the new South Brick Church in his will of 1732.