Pair of Hunt & Roskell Silver Meat Plates, 1852

dscn1920
dscn1920 dscn1918 dscn1921 dscn1926 dscn1924 dscn1927 dscn1922

Sold

Meat Plates (pair) - Shaped oval with shell and gadroon border - London 1852 by Hunt & Roskell - 410mm x 315mm; 2470g - Ref. No.: LC/2485

Sorry, this item is out of stock.

These magnificent silver meat serving platters have a wonderful shape with a very bold shell and gadroon mount.This pair of plates are of the highest quality with a hefty feel and in excellent condition with just the usual knife scratches to the top surfaces. Both bear superb engraved crests and coat-of-arms to the border (see below) and were made by the most important retailers of the second half of the Victorian period.

 

Hunt & Roskell were the continuation of the firm set up by Paul Storr and their "by Appointment" status to Queen Victoria is proudly shown with the crown surmount to the "ISH" makers mark.

We currently have in stock a single larger meat platter to match. Details can be seen by clicking the photo at the foot of this page.

  

The armorial bearings on these two plates are those of the family of Crawley impaling Wells and the crest depicts a crane proper holding in the talon a fleur-de-lys (for Crawley). The arms denote the marshalling of a marital coat showing the arms of the husband on the dexter and the arms of the wife on the sinister.

  

These armorial bearings commemorate the marriage of John Sambrooke Crawley (1823 - 1895) and Sarah Bridget Wells (1834 - 1924) on the 4th November 1852. The meat plates would either have been given as wedding gifts or commissioned by the couple soon after their marriage.

  

John was the eldest son of Samuel Crawley, MP, of Stockwood Park, near Luton in the County of Bedfordshire and his second wife, Maria Musgrave, daughter of Christopher Musgrave, of Kempton Park in the County of Middlesex; whilst Sarah was the third daughter of Frederick Octavius Wells, of the Bengal Civil Service, sometime Chief Justice of Agra and his wife, Maria Alicia, daughter of Lieutenant Colonel Richard Scott, sometime commanding officer of the 26th Battalion of the Bengal Sepoys.

  

Samuel Crawley was in the vanguard of agricultural improvement and freely endowed churches in and around Luton. Several Crawleys had served as High Sheriffs of Bedfordshire, including John’s father who was High Sheriff for the year 1817 - 18. His father also served as a Member of Parliament for Honiton (1818 – 1826) and for Bedford (1832 – 1837 and 1838 – 1841); whilst the Wells family descend from a family that was resident at Deptford in the County of Kent and had been shipbuilders for many generations having their yards at Deptford.

 

A full professionally written report describing the coat-of arms and the family backgrounds will be made available to the purchaser of these meat plates.