My Family Silver

In partnership with Burkes Peerage and Gentry

coverley

Sir Roger de Coverley and the Gipsies,’ a silver group made in the workshops of Joseph Angell, London, about 1850, inspired by Joseph Addison’s tale, which first appeared in The Spectator, 21 July 1711.
The much-loved character of Sir Roger would have been familiar to many, his exploits having been reprinted several times during the 18th and 19th Centuries. He also featured in
Sir Roger de Coverley; or, The Merry Christmas, a dramatic entertainment produced at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, in 1746; and in Sir Roger de Coverley; or, The Widow and Her Wooers, a drama at the Olympic Theatre in 1851. Furthermore, the artists Thomas Stothard (who sometime provided designs for silver to Rundell, Bridge & Rundell) and Charles Robert Leslie had both chosen ‘Sir Roger de Coverley and the Gipsies’ as a subject for paintings, the latter winning praise for his at the Royal Academy of Arts in 1829.
(photo: unknown, circa 1853)

The production of so-called ‘narrative’ plate – pieces which ‘tell a story’ - was by no means confined to England, but it was in London during much of the 19th century that silversmiths produced some of the best examples. Scenes of bucolic peace or episodes from the myths of Antiquity had decorated silver cups, cream jugs and boxes and dishes for generations, but it was probably the appearance of Flaxman’s ‘Shield of Achilles‘ in 1821, with its wide border of figures inspired by Homer’s Iliad, that began a fashion for finely wrought objects that were intended to elevate mere silver and silver-gilt into precious works of art.

Rundell’s, the firm responsible for the ‘Shield of Achilles,’ was inevitably involved in the manufacture of other such pieces, such as the ‘Crecy Shield’ (William Bateman, London, 1834), but it was in the hands of Garrard’s and Storr & Mortimer/Hunt & Roskell’s designers and craftsmen that in the 1840s and 1850s the genre flourished. Both firms displayed magnificent examples at the Great Exhibition of 1851, most of which had been made as testimonials or race ‘cups,’ but a worthy, less celebrated entrant to this field was Joseph Angell. With his silver group, ‘Sir Roger de Coverley and the Gipsies,’ made from models by John Henning junior, he had hit upon an old, familiar subject that with nostalgic warmth recalled the age before factories and speeding locomotives. As the Athenaeum remarked approvingly, ‘Mr. Angell could not have chosen a scene more thoroughly English than this.’

rundell-label-1820-273

a printed paper trade label, ‘RUNDELL BRIDGE & RUNDELL Jewellers Goldsmiths Watch Makers &c TO HIS MAJESTY [George IV] His Royal Highness The Duke of York and ROYAL FAMILY [32] Ludgate Hill LONDON,’ 1820-1827

A letter appeared last week in the Metro, London’s popular free newspaper, wherein the writer expressed his doubt that Ye Olde Trip To Jerusalem is Britain’s oldest pub. That honour, he said, was more likely to be held by The George at Norton St. Philip, Somerset. It appears that many an illustrious personage, from Samuel Pepys to the Duke of Monmouth, has quaffed a pint or two there. In a flight of fancy I wondered how many more had been enjoyed at The George by a local boy who grew up to be one of the wealthiest self-made men in England.

I refer to Philip Rundell, born at Norton St. Philip in 1746, who, via an apprenticeship with a jeweller in Bath, went on to become head of the celebrated royal goldsmiths, Rundell, Bridge & Rundell of Ludgate Hill, London. Between 1804 and his retirement in 1823 Rundell’s chief partners were his nephew Edmond Waller Rundell (1768?-1857), whose mother wrote that 19th Century publishing sensation, A New System of Domestic Cookery, and the urbane John Bridge (1755-1834).

At its height Rundell, Bridge & Rundell employed dozens, if not hundreds, of personnel: from the celebrated artist/designer John Flaxman (1755-1826) to humble plate polishers and pearl stringers. In manufactured silver alone the firm produced for a period at one workshop (Paul Storr superintending) some 10,000 ounces every month.

When Philip Rundell died in 1827 he astonished the world at large by leaving an estate valued at approximately £1 million.