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Lot 122

A Coalport bone china “Revelry” extensive sixty-one piece part dinner, tea & coffee service; & a ditto six-piece cutlery set, boxed; & coffee service.

Lot 35

A Losol ware “Athole” toilet jug & basin; a ditto pair of candlesticks & a hair-pin receptable; various other items of china & pottery; & a part set of cutlery.

Lot 7327

A collection of vintage Viners cutlery and a Polish blue enamel Bain marie pan set, 20cm high

Lot 140

Mixed Lot: Silver plated tea set, various cutlery, fish server etc

Lot 46

A quantity of various plated cutlery to include a three piece horn handled carving set; an ornate continental white metal fork; a candelabra; tea tray etc.

Lot 216

A 'BESTECKE SOLINGEN' CUTLERY SET AND OTHER CUTLERLY ITEMS, a black brief case encasing a twelve place set of white and yellow metal cutlery, together with a cased fish eater set and cased set of coffee spoons

Lot 223

A BOX OF ASSORTED WHITE METAL WARE, to include a large oval tray with pierced rim, an 'Arthur Price' silver plate waiter, a three piece EPBM tea set comprising of teapot, sugar bowl and milk jug, plate coasters, two circular trays, various silver plate and white metal photo frames, small dishes, napkin ring, candle holders, together with an incomplete canteen of cutlery etc

Lot 250

A BOX OF ASSORTED SILVER AND WHITE METAL ITEMS, to include two silver shallow dishes, hallmarked 'Mappin & Webb Ltd London 1973, a silver spoon, hallmarked 'W E V' Sheffield 1964, approximate gross weight 152.9 grams, 4.91 ozt, together with a white metal tea set including a tea pot, sugar bowl and milk jug, two white metal milk jugs a sugar bowl, a teapot two bowls and assorted cutlery

Lot 584

FOUR BOXES OF MISCELLANEOUS SUNDRIES, to include vintage Christmas ornaments, a set of snooker balls, several sets of Unicorn darts, a Sacker's hygienic comb in original tin, St. Bruno Flake tin, an early 20th century Parsley Brand Salmon money tin, sewing basket, vintage buttons, a painted cast metal brown bear money box, small oak book stand, a Polaroid 'Swinger' model 20 land camera, a Stadium Bakelite ashtray, silverplate serving tray, a case of stainless steel cutlery, a framed print from Boots 'Shady Nook', boxed Christmas tree, tinplate cash box, etc. (s.d) (4 boxes + loose)

Lot 646

AN UNBRANDED EDWARDIAN OAK TANTULUS, with three decanters, original stoppers (one chipped at base), locking mechanism works but missing key, silverplate handle and fittings are worn, together with an oak cutlery case with brass fittings and handle containing a Rogers & Bros. silverplate thirty six piece set of cutlery for six settings (2) (Condition report: missing key to tantalus, silver plate worn)

Lot 697

THREE BOXES OF METAL KITCHENWARE, to include a set of Stellar saucepans, Old Hall stainless steel dinnerware, a quantity of stainless steel cutlery, etc. (3 boxes)

Lot 707

ONE BOX OF ORNAMENTS, PICTURES AND TABLE LAMP, to include a 1967 Singer sewing machine, ceramic figural table lamp and shade, a boxed Hermle anniversary clock, brass ornaments, a set of Viners cutlery, a cast metal Frederick Hill & Co. set of kitchen scales, three gilt framed pictures, etc. (1 box + loose)

Lot 217

A boxed Viners Tabletop Collection 18/10 Stainless Steel 44 piece cutlery set

Lot 220

A Sophie Conran for Arthur Price Rivelin 24 piece cutlery set with box

Lot 268

A cased set of Cooper Ludlam of Sheffield stainless steel cutlery in the King's Pattern

Lot 619

A Walker & Hall oak cutlery canteen containing an associated set of gold plated cutlery.

Lot 2250

A small quantity of boxed cutlery including coffee beans spoons, four teaspoons, set of butter knives, etc.

Lot 219

A part set of EPNS Kings pattern cutlery in canteen and other flatware and cutlery in another canteen (2)

Lot 261

Good Collection of High Grade Silver Plated Cutlery Including a set by Selfridges

Lot 123

A set of eleven German porcelain cutlery handles with hunting trophies, circa 1770Each finely painted with a hunting trophy surrounded by branches of oak leaves, gilt edges, comprising: nine fork handles and two knife handles, the knife handles: 10.5cm long; the fork handles: 9cm long (very minor rubbing) (11)For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 217

Community plate cutlery and cased set of fish cutlery

Lot 238

Box of plated ware - candlesticks, dressing table set, teapot, jugs, cutlery set etc

Lot 79

Boxed Housley stainless steel cutlery set

Lot 83

Boxed set of Sheffield stainless steel cutlery

Lot 1096

Boxed Cutlery Set by George Butler of Sheffield, in fitted wooden case.

Lot 535

A quantity of electroplated items to include a cased set of cutlery, a sugar bowl, a cocktail shakers, a teapot, a toast rack, etc.

Lot 39

Lot silver cutlery, 835/000, with parts point fillet with 9 different types of spoons, set with 12 teaspoons, 3 separate teaspoons, a cake fork, a meat fork, a spoon, napkin band and a finger cloth ring. Total approx. 800 grams.

Lot 486

A collection of EPNS including a cased canteen of cutlery, a three piece tea set, a tureen, a salver, coffee pot etc Condition Report:Available upon request

Lot 716

A mixed quantity of vintage and antique silver plate to include a large oval silver plated tray with wavy edge, pierced border and cut-out handles, approx. 63 x 42cm, a three-piece tea set comprising tea, coffee and milk, sugar scuttle, pressed glass claret jug with plated mask spout, handle and collar, cigarette box, pepperette, cutlery and a cased set of Art Nouveau style dessert spoons (lacking one small spoon).

Lot 646

Pelham Puppet, kutani jug, tea bowl, netsukes, camping cutlery set and other interesting items, including a box of buttons

Lot 908

A silver plated table centre bowl, swing-handled sweetmeat basket on stand, fruit bowl, various cutlery, plated sugar caster, and a cased set of 6 silver-handled tea knives

Lot 331

Three boxes of assorted items to include: cased bronze cutlery set, various vases; Crown Ford, blush ivory, The Foley Faience, a pair of Shelley 'Surrey Scenery' vases, two handled 'Yorkshireman Coat of Arms' tankard, Carlton Ware lustre jug, James Kent Old Foley rose design ginger jar, bee and honeycomb design milk jug and preserve pot set, silver plated candelabra, various silver plate; gravy boat, milk jug, vase, cased cutlery, trumpet vases, loose cutlery, Smith's kitchen timer in the shape of a copper pot, pewter tankard, letter rack, Turkish coffee pot, miniature bed warmer, candlesticks, cruet items etc. (3)(B.P. 21% + VAT)

Lot 618

BOXED KING'S PATTERN CUTLERY SET

Lot 34

A set of three items of sterling silver cutlery. Plain bowls with cast leaf and vine stems. CJ Vander Ltd London1990. 276g.

Lot 149

ANTIQUE CASED FULL CUTLERY SET HARRISON BROS SHEFFIELD

Lot 271

Small quantity of sundry silver and other cutlery, including a set of six silver teaspoons; two sets of Continental silver tongs; silver-handled bread knife and cake slice, cased; silver-plated fish servers, in blue presentation case; teaspoons etc.

Lot 126

Silver pedestal bon bon dish, Walker & Hall; small collection of plated cutlery, including a set of Edwardian dessert knives and forks, with mother-of-pearl handles; and a set of fish knives and forks, ivorine handles.Condition report:The bonbon dish is silver and weighs 3.3oz. It's base is uneven a d there are two dings to the centre of the dish and a dent to one side of the rim. The cutlery is silver-plated, with several of the ivorine handles having cracks. The mother-of-pearl-handled cutlery appears to be missing items from the inside part of the lid. Please see additional uploaded images.

Lot 500

A Collection of Sundries to include Indian Wooden Cased Carving Set, Treen Bowl, Meat Skewer, Cutlery Etc

Lot 9026

Box various silver plated Wed. candlesticks, WMF cutlery, trays, tea set and ice bucket

Lot 9100

Box with silver-plated and plate cutlery including Gero and Christofle, earthenware tray set in metal frame, earthenware coasters, Ravelli ceramic vase, tin crackle Copier glass vase, glass vase and Charm Craft game

Lot 1372

Three plated trays, a cased three piece mother of pearl handled cutlery set, etc.

Lot 78

A vintage partial canteen of cutlery, including bone handled knives, some still with original packaging, a pair of engraved serving spoons in box and a boxed horn handled serving set.

Lot 26

A PART SERVICE OF CHRISTOFLE SILVER PLATED CUTLERY In the Printania pattern, early 20th Century, comprising: 16 table forks; 18 table spoons; 9 dessert forks; 8 dessert spoons; 8 dessert knives; 12 teaspoons; a pair of salad servers; and a ladle; Together with a pair of French silver sugar tongs, in a similar pattern, maker's mark indistinct; and a set of French Art Deco ebony and silver handled knives, comprising 12 table knives (one handle detached) and 12 dessert knives, the larger examples with French control marks, the dessert knives apparently unmarked Condition: For a condition report or further images please email hello@hotlotz.com at least 48 hours prior to the closing date of the auction. This is an auction of preowned and antique items. Many items are of an age or nature which precludes their being in perfect condition and you should expect general wear and tear commensurate with age and use. We strongly advise you to examine items before you bid. Condition reports are provided as a goodwill gesture and are our general assessment of damage and restoration. Whilst care is taken in their drafting, they are for guidance only. We will not be held responsible for oversights concerning damage or restoration.

Lot 745

Part canteen of cutlery, case set of fish knives and forks and other plated wares.

Lot 5015

Cased canteen of silver plate cutlery, for place six settings, together with a collection of silver plate and other metal ware including set of silver plate fish eaters, with hallmarked silver ferules, in fitted case, pewter tyg, tankards, sauce boats, hot water pot etc, in two boxes

Lot 5028

Collection of silver-plated cutlery including cased set of six EPNS cake forks, Royal Crown Derby pie server, sugar tongs, ladles, etc

Lot 5057

Three piece silver plate bachelors tea set, comprising teapot, milk jug and sugar bowl, each upon three claw and ball feet, together with a collection of other silver plated items and metal ware, including cutlery, teapots, jugs, etc, in three boxes

Lot 5118

Viners Ltd silver plate Silver Rose pattern cutlery service for six place settings, to include butter knives, table knives and forks, soup spoons, dessert forks and spoons, tea knives, forks and spoons, two serving spoons and a seven piece fruit set, some boxed, missing table spoons

Lot 5119

Mappin & Webb Princes Plate cutlery, to include six butter knives, six dessert forks, seven dessert spoons, four table spoons, ten table forks and two ladles, etc, together with other plated cruet set, napkin rings, flatware and a collection of pewter and silver plate tankards, etc

Lot 123

A large canteen of cutlery, part gold plated together with a cased carving set

Lot 140

A set of cased cutlery, various (5)

Lot 364

A selection of boxed cutlery & tables wares, some silver mounted & a set of silver teaspoons

Lot 380

A WWII Second World War Third Reich Nazi German Waffen SS six person cutlery set. The 24 piece set made by Emil Mans of Solingen with SS runes to the handle of each utensil and housed within the original case.Note; from a large private collection of militaria. Due to the nature of the items, buyers are reminded for the need to satisfy themselves as to condition / originality / authenticity prior to bidding. All lots remains sold strictly 'as is' irrespective of any description. 

Lot 629

A CASED SET OF CARVING KNIVES, JOSEPH RODGERS & SONS, CUTLERS TO HIS MAJESTY, SHEFFIELD, EARLY 20TH CENTURY AND ANOTHER comprising knife struck with maker’s details, crown dividing the royal initials ‘GR’, and ‘Shear steel', natural staghorn grip, and nickel silver pommel, fork and steel en suite in its leatherette case lined in blue with the maker’s detail inside the lid in gilt letters; the second, T. Glossop, Sheffield, similar, in its mahogany case, the first case 41.5 cm (2) LiteratureDavid Hayden-Wright, The Heritage of English Knives, Atglen, Pennsylvania, 2008, p. 192. In the nineteenth century, Rodgers had an unsurpassed reputation and history that was synonymous with the cutlery trade. The family's first cutler, John Rodgers (1701-85), is recorded around 1724, with a workshop near the present cathedral. In the same year the Company of Cutlers 'let' him a mark, a Star and Maltese Cross, which became world famous in later years. John Rodgers had three sons, John (1731-1811), Joseph (1743-1821), and Maurice (c.1747-1824) who joined the business and succeeded him. They are recorded with more workshops by 1780 and the business soon extended to occupy a nearby block of buildings at 6 Norfolk Street, an address that became as famous as Rodgers’ trade mark. By the early 19th century their trade had expanded from pen and pocket knives to include table cutlery and scissors. By 1817 the General Sheffield Directory lists the firm as ‘merchants, factors, table and pocket knife, and razor manufacturers’. In 1821 John’s son Joseph died and his sons continued the business under the leadership of the younger John (grandson of the founder). John was described as ‘unobtrusive in his manner’ but was ambitious and one of the founding partners of the Sheffield Banking Co. He had a flair for marketing and travelled the country taking orders. Not only was his firm’s output and range greater than any other Sheffield firm, but its quality was superior. The company’s manifesto states: ‘The principle on which the manufacture of cutlery is carried on by this firm is – quality first … [and] … price comes second’. He began making exhibitions knives and presented George IV with a minute specimen of cutlery with 57 blades, which occupied only an inch [25mm] when closed. In 1822, Rodgers’ was awarded its first Royal Warrant. Another fourteen royal appointments, from British and overseas royal dignitaries, followed over the next eighty years, and its company history was duly titled: Under Five Sovereigns. John Rodgers next commissioned the Year Knife, with a blade for every year (1821) and opened his sensational cutlery showroom in Norfolk Street where visitors came to marvel at Rodgers’ creations. Perhaps the greatest highlight shown there was the Norfolk Knife, an over 30 inch long sportsman’s knife with 75 blades and tools, that Rodgers’ produced for the Great Exhibition in 1851. The showroom proved particularly popular with Americans whose trade played a significant role in the firm’s expansion. Additionally, they looked East, with agents in Calcutta, Bombay, and Hong Kong by the mid-19th century. These markets enabled Rodgers to become the largest cutlery factory in Sheffield. The number of workmen appears to have grown from about 300 in the late 1820s, to over 500 in the 1840s. In 1871 the business became a limited company with Joseph Rodgers (1828-1883), grandson of the Joseph Rodgers who had died in 1821 and Robert Newbold as managing directors. Joseph died on 12 May 1883 and Newbold became the chairman and managing director. The firm continued to expand with offices in London, New York, New Orleans, Montreal, Toronto, Calcutta, Bombay and Havana. Their work force in 1871 was around 1,200 and accounted for one-seventh of all Sheffield’s American cutlery trade. In 1876 the American market was stagnating and Rodgers’ began looking elsewhere with a focus on trade in the Middle East, India and Australia. Notably the name ‘Rujjus’ or ‘Rojers’ was said to have entered the language as an adjective expressing superb quality in Persia, India and Ceylon. By 1888, the value of Rodgers’ shares had more than doubled and, in 1889, a silver and electro-plate showroom was opened in London. At this time, Rodgers acquired the scissors business of Joseph Hobson & Son. Rodgers’ produced catalogues that were packed with every type of knife imaginable. Pocket knives were made in scores of different styles. Ornate daggers and Bowie knives and complicated horseman’s knives were made routinely. Some patterns, such as the Congress knife and Wharncliffe knife, were Rodgers’ own design. The Wharncliffe – with its serpentine handle and beaked master blade – was apparently designed after a dinner attended by Rodgers’ patron Lord Wharncliffe. The firm’s workmanship was usually backed by the best materials. Rodgers’ ivory cellar in Norfolk Street was crammed with giant tusks and was regarded as one of the hidden sights of the town. Four or five men were constantly employed in sawing the tusks, and around twenty four tons of ivory were used a year around 1882. Rodgers’ appetite for stag was no less insatiable: deer horns and antlers filled another cellar and pearl from the Philippines and was also cut there. Around 1890, Rodgers’ began forging its own shear steel and in 1894 they began melting crucible steel. Newbold retired in 1890 and the grandsons of Maurice Rodgers, Maurice George Rodgers (1855-1898) and John Rodgers (1856-1919), became joint-managing directors. The McKinley Tariff Act of 1890 halved their American business and consequently they toured South Africa. Despite increasing foreign competition and the decline of the American market, Rodgers’ prospered before the First World War. However, workers’ wages were cut while the partners continued to take significant dividend which culminated in a prolonged and bitter strike. The First World War saw a decline in the business which continued steadily until the 1975 when it was absorbed by Richards and ceased trading in 1983. Joseph Rodgers & Sons left an enduring legacy in its knives. Its dazzling exhibition pieces and other fine cutlery show that the company’s reputation as Sheffield’s foremost knife maker was well founded. Abbreviated from Geoffrey Tweedale 2019. Part proceeds to benefit the Acquisition Fund of the Arms and Armor department, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Lot 631

A CASED SET OF TWENTY-ONE CLEAVERS, PERHAPS FOR PLANTATION USE, JOSEPH RODGERS & SONS, CUTLERS TO HIS MAJESTY, 6 NORFOLK STREET, SHEFFIELD, 20TH CENTURY each with hooked cleaver blade, stamped with the maker’s details, star and cross mark and the royal initials ‘GR’ divided by a crown, and shaped wooden grip, in a wooden case with embossed and gilt trade label, the case: 65.0 cm x 43.0 cm LiteratureDavid Hayden-Wright, The Heritage of English Knives, Atglen, Pennsylvania, 2008, p. 203. In the nineteenth century, Rodgers had an unsurpassed reputation and history that was synonymous with the cutlery trade. The family's first cutler, John Rodgers (1701-85), is recorded around 1724, with a workshop near the present cathedral. In the same year the Company of Cutlers 'let' him a mark, a Star and Maltese Cross, which became world famous in later years. John Rodgers had three sons, John (1731-1811), Joseph (1743-1821), and Maurice (c.1747-1824) who joined the business and succeeded him. They are recorded with more workshops by 1780 and the business soon extended to occupy a nearby block of buildings at 6 Norfolk Street, an address that became as famous as Rodgers’ trade mark. By the early 19th century their trade had expanded from pen and pocket knives to include table cutlery and scissors. By 1817 the General Sheffield Directory lists the firm as ‘merchants, factors, table and pocket knife, and razor manufacturers’. In 1821 John’s son Joseph died and his sons continued the business under the leadership of the younger John (grandson of the founder). John was described as ‘unobtrusive in his manner’ but was ambitious and one of the founding partners of the Sheffield Banking Co. He had a flair for marketing and travelled the country taking orders. Not only was his firm’s output and range greater than any other Sheffield firm, but its quality was superior. The company’s manifesto states: ‘The principle on which the manufacture of cutlery is carried on by this firm is – quality first … [and] … price comes second’. He began making exhibitions knives and presented George IV with a minute specimen of cutlery with 57 blades, which occupied only an inch [25mm] when closed. In 1822, Rodgers’ was awarded its first Royal Warrant. Another fourteen royal appointments, from British and overseas royal dignitaries, followed over the next eighty years, and its company history was duly titled: Under Five Sovereigns. John Rodgers next commissioned the Year Knife, with a blade for every year (1821) and opened his sensational cutlery showroom in Norfolk Street where visitors came to marvel at Rodgers’ creations. Perhaps the greatest highlight shown there was the Norfolk Knife, an over 30 inch long sportsman’s knife with 75 blades and tools, that Rodgers’ produced for the Great Exhibition in 1851. The showroom proved particularly popular with Americans whose trade played a significant role in the firm’s expansion. Additionally, they looked East, with agents in Calcutta, Bombay, and Hong Kong by the mid-19th century. These markets enabled Rodgers to become the largest cutlery factory in Sheffield. The number of workmen appears to have grown from about 300 in the late 1820s, to over 500 in the 1840s. In 1871 the business became a limited company with Joseph Rodgers (1828-1883), grandson of the Joseph Rodgers who had died in 1821 and Robert Newbold as managing directors. Joseph died on 12 May 1883 and Newbold became the chairman and managing director. The firm continued to expand with offices in London, New York, New Orleans, Montreal, Toronto, Calcutta, Bombay and Havana. Their work force in 1871 was around 1,200 and accounted for one-seventh of all Sheffield’s American cutlery trade. In 1876 the American market was stagnating and Rodgers’ began looking elsewhere with a focus on trade in the Middle East, India and Australia. Notably the name ‘Rujjus’ or ‘Rojers’ was said to have entered the language as an adjective expressing superb quality in Persia, India and Ceylon. By 1888, the value of Rodgers’ shares had more than doubled and, in 1889, a silver and electro-plate showroom was opened in London. At this time, Rodgers acquired the scissors business of Joseph Hobson & Son. Rodgers’ produced catalogues that were packed with every type of knife imaginable. Pocket knives were made in scores of different styles. Ornate daggers and Bowie knives and complicated horseman’s knives were made routinely. Some patterns, such as the Congress knife and Wharncliffe knife, were Rodgers’ own design. The Wharncliffe – with its serpentine handle and beaked master blade – was apparently designed after a dinner attended by Rodgers’ patron Lord Wharncliffe. The firm’s workmanship was usually backed by the best materials. Rodgers’ ivory cellar in Norfolk Street was crammed with giant tusks and was regarded as one of the hidden sights of the town. Four or five men were constantly employed in sawing the tusks, and around twenty four tons of ivory were used a year around 1882. Rodgers’ appetite for stag was no less insatiable: deer horns and antlers filled another cellar and pearl from the Philippines and was also cut there. Around 1890, Rodgers’ began forging its own shear steel and in 1894 they began melting crucible steel. Newbold retired in 1890 and the grandsons of Maurice Rodgers, Maurice George Rodgers (1855-1898) and John Rodgers (1856-1919), became joint-managing directors. The McKinley Tariff Act of 1890 halved their American business and consequently they toured South Africa. Despite increasing foreign competition and the decline of the American market, Rodgers’ prospered before the First World War. However, workers’ wages were cut while the partners continued to take significant dividend which culminated in a prolonged and bitter strike. The First World War saw a decline in the business which continued steadily until the 1975 when it was absorbed by Richards and ceased trading in 1983. Joseph Rodgers & Sons left an enduring legacy in its knives. Its dazzling exhibition pieces and other fine cutlery show that the company’s reputation as Sheffield’s foremost knife maker was well founded. Abbreviated from Geoffrey Tweedale 2019. Part proceeds to benefit the Acquisition Fund of the Arms and Armor department, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Lot 634

A SALESMAN’S KNIFE DISPLAY AND A TOOL SET CASE, JOSEPH RODGERS, SHEFFIELD, LATE 19TH/EARLY 20TH CENTURY the first of stiffened leather, lined in blue baize, with provision for eighteen knives, with embossed gilt label ‘Joseph Rodgers & Sons Ltd', with star and cross trademark and ‘grant date 1682'; the second with provision for fourteen tools, embossed in gilt letters ‘Rodgers Tool Set’ and with star and cross mark on the inside (2) In the nineteenth century, Rodgers had an unsurpassed reputation and history that was synonymous with the cutlery trade. The family's first cutler, John Rodgers (1701-85), is recorded around 1724, with a workshop near the present cathedral. In the same year the Company of Cutlers 'let' him a mark, a Star and Maltese Cross, which became world famous in later years. John Rodgers had three sons, John (1731-1811), Joseph (1743-1821), and Maurice (c.1747-1824) who joined the business and succeeded him. They are recorded with more workshops by 1780 and the business soon extended to occupy a nearby block of buildings at 6 Norfolk Street, an address that became as famous as Rodgers’ trade mark. By the early 19th century their trade had expanded from pen and pocket knives to include table cutlery and scissors. By 1817 the General Sheffield Directory lists the firm as ‘merchants, factors, table and pocket knife, and razor manufacturers’. In 1821 John’s son Joseph died and his sons continued the business under the leadership of the younger John (grandson of the founder). John was described as ‘unobtrusive in his manner’ but was ambitious and one of the founding partners of the Sheffield Banking Co. He had a flair for marketing and travelled the country taking orders. Not only was his firm’s output and range greater than any other Sheffield firm, but its quality was superior. The company’s manifesto states: ‘The principle on which the manufacture of cutlery is carried on by this firm is – quality first … [and] … price comes second’. He began making exhibitions knives and presented George IV with a minute specimen of cutlery with 57 blades, which occupied only an inch [25mm] when closed. In 1822, Rodgers’ was awarded its first Royal Warrant. Another fourteen royal appointments, from British and overseas royal dignitaries, followed over the next eighty years, and its company history was duly titled: Under Five Sovereigns. John Rodgers next commissioned the Year Knife, with a blade for every year (1821) and opened his sensational cutlery showroom in Norfolk Street where visitors came to marvel at Rodgers’ creations. Perhaps the greatest highlight shown there was the Norfolk Knife, an over 30 inch long sportsman’s knife with 75 blades and tools, that Rodgers’ produced for the Great Exhibition in 1851. The showroom proved particularly popular with Americans whose trade played a significant role in the firm’s expansion. Additionally, they looked East, with agents in Calcutta, Bombay, and Hong Kong by the mid-19th century. These markets enabled Rodgers to become the largest cutlery factory in Sheffield. The number of workmen appears to have grown from about 300 in the late 1820s, to over 500 in the 1840s. In 1871 the business became a limited company with Joseph Rodgers (1828-1883), grandson of the Joseph Rodgers who had died in 1821 and Robert Newbold as managing directors. Joseph died on 12 May 1883 and Newbold became the chairman and managing director. The firm continued to expand with offices in London, New York, New Orleans, Montreal, Toronto, Calcutta, Bombay and Havana. Their work force in 1871 was around 1,200 and accounted for one-seventh of all Sheffield’s American cutlery trade. In 1876 the American market was stagnating and Rodgers’ began looking elsewhere with a focus on trade in the Middle East, India and Australia. Notably the name ‘Rujjus’ or ‘Rojers’ was said to have entered the language as an adjective expressing superb quality in Persia, India and Ceylon. By 1888, the value of Rodgers’ shares had more than doubled and, in 1889, a silver and electro-plate showroom was opened in London. At this time, Rodgers acquired the scissors business of Joseph Hobson & Son. Rodgers’ produced catalogues that were packed with every type of knife imaginable. Pocket knives were made in scores of different styles. Ornate daggers and Bowie knives and complicated horseman’s knives were made routinely. Some patterns, such as the Congress knife and Wharncliffe knife, were Rodgers’ own design. The Wharncliffe – with its serpentine handle and beaked master blade – was apparently designed after a dinner attended by Rodgers’ patron Lord Wharncliffe. The firm’s workmanship was usually backed by the best materials. Rodgers’ ivory cellar in Norfolk Street was crammed with giant tusks and was regarded as one of the hidden sights of the town. Four or five men were constantly employed in sawing the tusks, and around twenty four tons of ivory were used a year around 1882. Rodgers’ appetite for stag was no less insatiable: deer horns and antlers filled another cellar and pearl from the Philippines and was also cut there. Around 1890, Rodgers’ began forging its own shear steel and in 1894 they began melting crucible steel. Newbold retired in 1890 and the grandsons of Maurice Rodgers, Maurice George Rodgers (1855-1898) and John Rodgers (1856-1919), became joint-managing directors. The McKinley Tariff Act of 1890 halved their American business and consequently they toured South Africa. Despite increasing foreign competition and the decline of the American market, Rodgers’ prospered before the First World War. However, workers’ wages were cut while the partners continued to take significant dividend which culminated in a prolonged and bitter strike. The First World War saw a decline in the business which continued steadily until the 1975 when it was absorbed by Richards and ceased trading in 1983. Joseph Rodgers & Sons left an enduring legacy in its knives. Its dazzling exhibition pieces and other fine cutlery show that the company’s reputation as Sheffield’s foremost knife maker was well founded. Abbreviated from Geoffrey Tweedale 2019. Part proceeds to benefit the Acquisition Fund of the Arms and Armor department, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Lot 637

A FINE LARGE MULTI-BLADE PENKNIFE FOR EXHIBITION, GEORGE WOSTENHOLM I.XL, SHEFFIELD, 20TH CENTURY with over one hundred folding blades and accessories, including saws, picks, scissors and corkscrew, some stamped ‘George Wostenholm I.XL.’, fitted at each side with highly figured select quality mother-of-pearl scales each retained by four minute screws, with sliding tweezers and picks top and bottom, and in fine condition throughout, 12.0 cm (closed) LiteratureDavid Hayden-Wright, The Heritage of English Knives, Atglen, Pennsylvania, 2008, p. 73. It is likely that the founder of George Wostenholm & Son Ltd was George Wolstenholme (1775-1833), a fork maker at Thomas Lane. Apprenticed to John Micklethwaite, a cutler, in 1790 and granted his Freedom in 1799, George later moved to Broad Lane where he made spring knives. He was first listed in a Sheffield directory in 1816 as a pen and pocket knife manufacturer at Rockingham Street, where he had registered a silver mark in 1809. His workshops expanded to become Rockingham Works and he apparently shortened his name to ‘Wostenholm’ to facilitate its stamping on blades. His son, George Wostenholm (1802-1876) was apprenticed to his father and they are described in 1825 as ‘George Wolstenholme & Son, manufacturers of table knives, and forks, pen, pocket, and sportsman’s knives, and general dealers in cutlery, 78 Rockingham Street’. George Wostenholm became a Freeman in 1826, a practical cutler and a dynamic salesman he found scope for his prodigious energy in America where, in 1830, the father and son launched a partnership with William Stenton, an experienced cutlery merchant. However, this did not last and the partnership was dissolved the following year when they were also granted their trademark ‘I*XL. ‘, bought by George Senior in 1826 and originally granted to William Aldam Smith in 1787. In 1833 George Senior died and the business continued under his son who opened a New York office in 1844, and by the middle of the century had agents in Philadelphia and Boston. America was the ideal market with its expanding frontier and enormous demand for folding knives, razors, and weapons. The firm’s trade became almost exclusively American and Wostenholm made little attempt to nurture other markets. In 1848 the Washington Works was acquired and American orders continued to roll in. The workforce increased significantly to 850 in 1861, having been around a hundred or so in the 1830s. The high quality of the firm’s Bowie and spring knives was achieved by ‘drilling’, in which every knife was critically examined. It had the desired effect and soon ‘I*XL’ vied with Rodgers’ star and Maltese cross as a badge of quality. Like Rodgers, Wostenholm made its share of exhibition pieces. At the Great Exhibition in 1851 Wostenholm displayed a set of ornate sheath knives, including one commissioned from the well-known artist Alfred Stevens. The company also displayed a collection of exhibition multi-blades. The display won a Prize Medal for Wostenholm. The firm also carried off prize medals at exhibitions in Paris (1855) and London (1862). George Wostenholm had remarkable stamina. In early 1869, in his late sixties, he set off for a tour of Europe and in October the same year he made another trip to New York. In 1872, he again visited New York. He was active until the end, though he sold out to his business associates in 1875, when Wostenholm’s became a limited liability company. George Wostenholm died in 1876, aged 74 and left a remarkable fortune of nearly £250,000. The new company chairman and directors had little or no experience of the cutlery trade. Initially, Wostenholm’s continued to make good profit but the McKinley Tariff of 1890 raised the duties on their American exports to unprecedented heights and caused a crisis. Wostenholm’s refused to abandon the American trade and maintained an unprofitable New York office open until the early 1930s while they had little success breaking into the Australian and other markets. In the early 20th century they opposed machine technology and consequently were in decline a decade before the First World War. Not long after, Washington Works was becoming a relic. In 1971, Wostenholm was bought by Joseph Rodgers & Sons and the new company (Rodgers-Wostenholm) moved into premises at Guernsey Road, Heeley. Part proceeds to benefit the Acquisition Fund of the Arms and Armor department, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Lot 638

A FINE MULTI-BLADE PENKNIFE FOR EXHIBITION, GEORGE WOSTENHOLM I.XL, SHEFFIELD, EARLY 20TH CENTURY with over forty-eight folding blades and accessories, including saws, picks, scissors and corkscrew, some stamped ‘George Wostenholm I.XL.’, fitted at each side with highly figured composition scales each retained by four minute screws, with sliding tweezers and picks top and bottom, and in fine condition throughout, 12.0 cm (closed) LiteratureDavid Hayden-Wright, The Heritage of English Knives, Atglen, Pennsylvania, 2008, p. 73. It is likely that the founder of George Wostenholm & Son Ltd was George Wolstenholme (1775-1833), a fork maker at Thomas Lane. Apprenticed to John Micklethwaite, a cutler, in 1790 and granted his Freedom in 1799, George later moved to Broad Lane where he made spring knives. He was first listed in a Sheffield directory in 1816 as a pen and pocket knife manufacturer at Rockingham Street, where he had registered a silver mark in 1809. His workshops expanded to become Rockingham Works and he apparently shortened his name to ‘Wostenholm’ to facilitate its stamping on blades. His son, George Wostenholm (1802-1876) was apprenticed to his father and they are described in 1825 as ‘George Wolstenholme & Son, manufacturers of table knives, and forks, pen, pocket, and sportsman’s knives, and general dealers in cutlery, 78 Rockingham Street’. George Wostenholm became a Freeman in 1826, a practical cutler and a dynamic salesman he found scope for his prodigious energy in America where, in 1830, the father and son launched a partnership with William Stenton, an experienced cutlery merchant. However, this did not last and the partnership was dissolved the following year when they were also granted their trademark ‘I*XL. ‘, bought by George Senior in 1826 and originally granted to William Aldam Smith in 1787. In 1833 George Senior died and the business continued under his son who opened a New York office in 1844, and by the middle of the century had agents in Philadelphia and Boston. America was the ideal market with its expanding frontier and enormous demand for folding knives, razors, and weapons. The firm’s trade became almost exclusively American and Wostenholm made little attempt to nurture other markets. In 1848 the Washington Works was acquired and American orders continued to roll in. The workforce increased significantly to 850 in 1861, having been around a hundred or so in the 1830s. The high quality of the firm’s Bowie and spring knives was achieved by ‘drilling’, in which every knife was critically examined. It had the desired effect and soon ‘I*XL’ vied with Rodgers’ star and Maltese cross as a badge of quality. Like Rodgers, Wostenholm made its share of exhibition pieces. At the Great Exhibition in 1851 Wostenholm displayed a set of ornate sheath knives, including one commissioned from the well-known artist Alfred Stevens. The company also displayed a collection of exhibition multi-blades. The display won a Prize Medal for Wostenholm. The firm also carried off prize medals at exhibitions in Paris (1855) and London (1862). George Wostenholm had remarkable stamina. In early 1869, in his late sixties, he set off for a tour of Europe and in October the same year he made another trip to New York. In 1872, he again visited New York. He was active until the end, though he sold out to his business associates in 1875, when Wostenholm’s became a limited liability company. George Wostenholm died in 1876, aged 74 and left a remarkable fortune of nearly £250,000. The new company chairman and directors had little or no experience of the cutlery trade. Initially, Wostenholm’s continued to make good profit but the McKinley Tariff of 1890 raised the duties on their American exports to unprecedented heights and caused a crisis. Wostenholm’s refused to abandon the American trade and maintained an unprofitable New York office open until the early 1930s while they had little success breaking into the Australian and other markets. In the early 20th century they opposed machine technology and consequently were in decline a decade before the First World War. Not long after, Washington Works was becoming a relic. In 1971, Wostenholm was bought by Joseph Rodgers & Sons and the new company (Rodgers-Wostenholm) moved into premises at Guernsey Road, Heeley. Part proceeds to benefit the Acquisition Fund of the Arms and Armor department, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

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