View full screen - View 1 of Lot 91. A Scottish gilt-metal and agate letter opener, by Hamilton, Crichton & Co. of Edinburgh, circa 1880.

A Scottish gilt-metal and agate letter opener, by Hamilton, Crichton & Co. of Edinburgh, circa 1880

Lot Closed

January 19, 03:31 PM GMT

Estimate

2,000 - 3,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

A Scottish gilt-metal and agate letter opener, by Hamilton, Crichton & Co. of Edinburgh,

circa 1880


with original purple velvet case with gilt-metal crowned R [possibly for the Rosebery family], the inside with maker's inscription HAMILTON, CRICHTON & COY GOLDSMITHS, SILVERSMITHS AND DIAMOND MERCHANTS, 41 GEORGE STREET, EDINBURGH

24.7cm. wide, 9⅝in.

Most probably, Archibald, 5th Earl of Rosebery (1847-1929);
Thence by descent, until sold Sotheby's London, Mentmore, Vol. 5., 21-27 May 1977, lot 3244.

Alexander Crichton was born in Edinburgh in 1839, and we first hear of him entering a silver cup into the 1870 Society of Arts exhibition and then registering his mark at Goldsmiths Hall in November 1872, with a workshop located at 47 Great Russell Street.


It was in the early 1880s that Crichton designed his fantastical animal claret jugs for which he is so well known. He created more than thirty-four silver and glass claret jugs between 1881 and 1882, many of these designs being registered at the Patent Office. The animals include walrus, crocodile, cockatoo, dodo, fish, squirrels, seals, ducks, budgerigars, owls, penguin and an otter.


Although Alexander Crichton was a London silversmith, he almost certainly had strong Scottish connections as many of his works were sold by Hamilton, Crichton & Co., Scottish goldsmiths of 41 George Street, Edinburgh. There is a matching set of a silver knife, fork and spoon, dated 1874-5 and with the maker’s marks in the collections of National Museums Scotland (inv. no. 000-100-001-123-C). The identity of Crichton’s partner, Hamilton, remains unclear.