Rogers, Smith & Co. Silver Napkin Rings

Title

Rogers, Smith & Co. Silver Napkin Rings

Description

These quadruple silver napkin rings are relics of the Victorian silver hollowware boom. Silver soup tureens, condiment sets, platters, and tableware in the dining room and toiletry items, perfume flasks, powder boxes, and hand mirrors in the bathroom were a hallmark of an established post-bellum American middle-class house. As silver items grew more fashionable, some of them lost practical application and became just another item of décor. Throughout the 19th century many families washed napkins only once a week and used napkin rings to distinguish one family member's napkin from another's. A wedding gift to Phyllis Witte's grandparents in 1895, these napkin rings are identical, serving no purpose other than to indicate the couple's status and taste.

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Source

Phyllis Witte, Nebraska City History Harvest, 2010

Date

1895

Rights

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Format

object

Type

image

Original Format

photograph
napkin rings

Files

nebc_witte_phyllis_0001.jpg

Collection

Citation

“Rogers, Smith & Co. Silver Napkin Rings,” History Harvest, accessed November 21, 2024, https://historyharvest.unl.edu./items/show/56.

Output Formats