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Maker(s):Snow, IV, Jeremiah
Culture:American (1764-c.1821-23)
Title:teaspoon
Date Made:ca. 1799
Type:Food Service
Materials:silver
Place Made:United States; Massachusetts; Palmer, Wilbraham, Amherst, or Springfield
Measurements:overall: 5 1/4 in; 13.3 cm
Accession Number:  HD 61.263
Credit Line:Gift of Mrs. Carl Lester (Stebbins family descendent)
Museum Collection:  Historic Deerfield

Description:
Silver teaspoon with a pointed-end handle and pointed-end bowl, which is marked "I.SNOW" in a rectangle for Jeremiah Snow IV (1764-c.1821-23), and engraved with the initials "TD" in script on the front of the handle and with the date "1799" on the back of the handle. Kane notes that three generations of silversmiths named Jeremiah Snow (Jr., III, IV) have not been clearly differentiated. Jeremiah Snow, Jr., was the son of Jeremiah Snow, Sr. (d. before 1724), a mariner of Philadelphia who moved to Charleston, Massachusetts, where he married his first wife, Wealthen Watter (Walters) in 1701, and his second wife, Mary Welsh(1688-1746) of Charleston, after Wealthen's death in 1704. Kane thinks it likely that Jeremiah Snow, Jr., was the son of Mary, and thus the first cousin of Boston jeweler John Welsh (1730-1812). If he was born in 1705, he would have completed his training by the late 1720s, and a Jeremiah Snow of Charleston, probably Jeremiah, Jr., first appears in the public record of 1730. Three initial and surname marks ("I.SNOW" in a rectangle; "J. SNOW" in a cartouche; and "I:SNOW" in a rectangle) may have been used by Jeremiah Snow, Jr.; Snow's son, Jeremiah III (1735-1803) who worked in Springfield, Massachusetts; and probably by his grandson, Jeremiah Snow IV (1764-c.1821-23) who became a clockmaker and goldsmith, working in Palmer, Wibraham, Amherst and Springfield, Massachusetts.

Link to share this object record:
https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+61.263

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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