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Culture:Chinese
Title:teaset
Date Made:1800-1815
Type:Food Service
Materials:ceramic: hard paste porcelain, overglaze polychrome enamels, gilding
Place Made:China
Accession Number:  HD 64.230
Museum Collection:  Historic Deerfield

Description:
Chinese export porcelain 61-piece teaset (now with 1 teapot stand, 17 teacups, 9 coffee cups, 31 saucers, 1 waste bowl, and 2 dishes) with lightly fluted bodies and scalloped rims, decorated in brown, blue, iron-red, black, and gilding. The set belonged in the family of Gouverneur Morris (1752-1816), and descended through his family to the Gouverneur M. Phelps, MD, (1878-1954) family of Ashfield, Massachusetts. Revolutionary War–era statesman, Gouverneur Morris made a lasting impact on the nation, the state, and the city as a drafter of the U.S. Constitution, a builder of the Erie Canal, and a creator of Manhattan's street grid. Morris graduated from King's College in 1768, delivering the commencement address "Wit and Beauty." The scion of a prominent New York family whose manor gave the Morrisania section of the present-day Bronx its name, Morris and his older brother Lewis, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, sided with the revolutionaries even as their mother and sisters remained loyal to the crown. After the Revolutionary War, Morris served in the Continental Congress and as assistant to the minister of finance, proposing the decimal system for the national currency and inventing the word cent in the process. As a Constitutional Convention delegate, he is acknowledged to have given final form to the U.S. Constitution, paring the original draft of 23 articles to seven and writing the document's preamble. He also inserted the famous phrase "We the people" at the beginning. As James Madison said, "The finish given to the style and arrangement of the Constitution fairly belongs to the pen of Mr. Morris." Morris later served as a diplomatic agent in England, as U.S. minister to France during the French Revolution's Reign of Terror, and as a U.S. senator. In 1811, he chaired a three-man commission that transformed Manhattan Island by designing its 12-avenue, 155-street grid above Houston Street. He also chaired the Erie Canal Commission for three years, but did not live to see the canal's completion. According to Ian Lowe of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, England, this set's shape and design was probably copied by the Chinese from an English pattern made in the New Hall Factory in the latter half of the 18th century. The pieces are decorated with a variety of Chinese landscapes with mountains, figures, riverscapes, houses, and trees in gilt-outlined oval reserves, which were probably done by more than one painter. The scalloped rims have a gilt band outlined in black around the rim edge with alternating blue flower heads and red crosses over a row of small red pyramid shapes, over a scalloped blue band outlined in gilt.

Link to share this object record:
https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+64.230

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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