Coffee pot
George Washington's accounts from 1758 onwards record numerous purchases of coffee as well as the equipage needed to prepare the imported beverage and the vessels required to serve and drink it in style. He paid £37.17.6 for this "Silvr Coffee Pot" engraved with his coat of arms just days before resigning his commission as Commander in Chief in December 1783. An expensive form to produce, the coffeepot's raised and hammered double-bellied body, cast leaf- and scroll-decorated S-curved spout, and carved S-scroll wooden handle make it an excellent example of Rococo silver.
Body is engraved on one side with George Washington's crest (a griffin rising [facing the viewer's left] from a coronet with three strawberry leaves) and coat of arms (argent two bars gules; in chief three mullets gules) in an asymmetrical cartouche bordered by C scrolls, ruffled shells and foliate designs.
Published ReferencesCarol Borchert Cadou, The George Washington Collection: Fine and Decorative Arts at Mount Vernon (New York: Hudson Hills Press, 2006), 116-7, cat. 32.
James C. Rees, Treasures from Mount Vernon: George Washington Revealed (Mount Vernon, VA: Mount Vernon Ladies' Association, 1999), 88.
Martha Gandy Fales, "The Silver," Antiques 135, no. 2 (February 1989): 522-3, pl. IX.
Kathryn C. Buhler, Mount Vernon Silver (Mount Vernon, VA: The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association, 1957), 45, 48, fig. 21.
Benson J. Lossing, "Arlington House: The Seat of G.W.P. Custis, Esq.," Harper's New Monthly Magazine VII (September 1853): 442.