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Maker(s):Kelley, Cornelius M.
Culture:American
Title:fork
Date Made:ca 1900 - 1934
Type:Food Service
Materials:base metal: worught iron
Place Made:United States; Massachusetts; Deerfield
Measurements:Overall: 29 1/2 in x 2 in; 74.9 cm x 5.1 cm
Accession Number:  HD 2015.8.3
Credit Line:Museum Collections Fund
Museum Collection:  Historic Deerfield

Description:
Wrought iron, two-tined cooking fork, with twisted center shaft, and "Kelley weave" handle - composed of four strands of wrought iron woven together, loop ring finial, made by Cornelius Kelley of Deerfield, MA. Massachusetts blacksmith Cornelius Kelley participated from the first to the final years of the Deerfield Arts and Crafts movement. Born in Ireland, Kelley was one of only a handful of the movement's artisans who did not have ancestral ties to Deerfield. He immigrated to the United States in 1889, learned the trade of blacksmithing in Greenfield, Massachusetts, before moving to neighboring Deerfield in 1899. Already by the summer of 1900 Kelley's hand-crafted hinges were appearing on a desk bench by Margaret Whiting and a wooden box built by artisan Madeline Yale Wynne, the soon-to-be first president of the Deerfield Society of Arts and Crafts. Madeline also collaborated with the blacksmith on a candelabra. Wynne designed the piece, and Kelley executed it. Cornelius became one of seven directors of the new organization in 1901. Soon the village blacksmith was working with furniture makers Dr. Edwin Thorn and Caleb Allen, and, according to a Deerfield Arts and Crafts Society brochure, creating "wrought-iron...hall lanterns, artistic hinges and candelabra made from colonial designs."1 Between 1906 and the early 1920s, Kelley stopped exhibiting with Deerfield Arts and Crafts artisans. Briefly, between 1916 and 1918 he taught as an assistant instructor in the Forge Shop of the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (now Carnegie-Mellon University). Cornelius Kelley once again began advertising "Hand-Wrought Iron Work" in the 1922 Announcement of the Society of Deerfield Industries. The blacksmith served as the Society's vice president in 1931 and its president from 1933 to 1934. He advertised through its brochure as late as 1941.

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https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+2015.8.3

Research on objects in the collections, including provenance, is ongoing and may be incomplete. If you have additional information or would like to learn more about a particular object, please email fc-museums-web@fivecolleges.edu.

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