Decanter

Object number99.71.5 a,b
Date1825
MediumGlass
Credit LineHeinz History Center Collection
DescriptionColorless glass decanter with stopper. Engraved design depicts flowers, dots, and stars.Dimensions10 x 4.75 in. (25.4 x 12.1 cm)
Label TextProbably Pittsburgh, Bakewell, Page & Bakewell, colorless lead glass, blown, cut and engraved. “I went through the flint glass works of Mr. Bakewell and was surprised to see the beauty of this manufacture … in which the expensive decorations of cutting and engraving … were carried to such perfection.” Thomas Nuttal, 1819 It took little more than 10 years from their 1808 founding for the Bakewell factory to establish a reputation as a producer of fine decorated glassware. The first American glasshouse to provide ware for the President’s table, Bakewell also made cut and engraved glassware for those consumers able to afford it. Highly prized examples from this factory, such as our greyhound tumbler, are featured in the exhibit, Glass: Shattering Notions. The museum, which has sought these types of objects for over 50 years, added to our Bakewell holdings in 1999 with the purchase of some of the pieces exhibited here.
On View
On view
Decanter
Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
1825
Decanter
Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
1825
Decanter
Bakewell, Pears & Company
1825-1840
Decanter
Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
1825
Decanter
Bakewell, Pears & Company
1825-1840
Stand
Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
1828-1832
Knob, Furniture
Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
1828-1832
Flask
Bakewell, Page & Bakewells
1830-1836
Decanter
Bakewell
1830-1840
Flask
Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
1830-1850
Chest of Drawers
Bakewell, Page & Bakewells
1830
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