The silver, gold and other metalwork in the Institute’s collections include personal items used by participants in the American Revolution as well as decorative objects made to commemorate the people and events of the war. Camp cups, utensils and pocket watches document the daily lives of soldiers and civilian participants in the Revolution. Figural clocks, tableware and other household goods reveal ways in which later generations celebrated the Revolution’s leaders and achievements. A highlight of this collection is a rare gilt brass mantel clock depicting George Washington as commander in chief of the American forces, made by Jean-Baptiste DuBuc in Paris at the turn of the nineteenth century.
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Tankard owned by Ennis Graham
Myer Myers, New York
ca. 1747-1763
Gift of Edmund Strudwick, Jr. and Etta Brown Larson in memory of John Collins Daves, North Carolina Society of the Cincinnati, 1975
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Pocket watch owned by Richard Clough Anderson
Richard Powis, London
1776
Gift of Isabel Anderson, 1938
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Sugar tongs owned by John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg
Possibly David Smith, Philadelphia
ca. 1778
Bequest of Mary Safford Hoogerwerff, 1965
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Ring owned by Tadeusz Kosciuszko
Eastern European
18th century
Gift of Dr. William Curtis Carroll Davis, North Carolina Society of the Cincinnati, 1960
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Mourning ring memorializing Nathaniel Heard
American
1792
Gift of E. LeRoy Heard, Jr., and Thomas M. Heard, Society of the Cincinnati in the State of New Jersey, 1985
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Beaker owned by John Hutchinson Buell
Attributed to Alexander Vuille, Baltimore, Md.
ca. 1795
The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
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Printing plate of a portrait of Commodore Esek Hopkins
French
Late 18th-Early 19th century
The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
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George Washington mantel clock
Jean-Baptiste DuBuc, Paris
ca. 1800-1810
Gift of David Gordon Sutton, Frank Taylor Sutton III, and Frank Taylor Sutton IV, 2001