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Dewdrop with Star Cake Stand

Dewdrop with Star Cake Stand

Family Heirlooms provide Ancestor Clues

May 26, 2019 by Beth Wilson in Genealogy

When I taught genealogy classes I often spoke about the clues that our family heirlooms can provide us about our ancestors if we take the time to look. If we are lucky, the item is labeled with the maker’s name which helps identify, date, and place the item but if it isn’t labeled, there are other ways to identify it. This cake stand was handed down from my Great-Grandmother to my Grandmother to my Mother to me. It has what the television show Antiques Roadshow calls provenance, a chronology of ownership. But I really wanted to prove that it had belonged to my Great-Grandmother because family stories can change as they are passed down through the family. I knew the pattern of the glass might give a clue as to how old it was. My Great-Grandmother, Emma, was born in 1856 in southern Indiana and was married in 1874 in the same area. After researching a bit I found out that this glass pattern is called Dewdrop with Star. The pattern has small pointed hobnails known as dewdrops and the points of a star are formed on the base with these hobnails. I discovered that the pattern was introduced by Campbell, Jones & Company in 1877. This company was in business from 1865-1886 so the time period was correct for it to have been in the household of my Great-Grandmother Emma. To add icing on the cake, Emma’s husband, Joseph, died in 1880 and when I was looking at his 1880 probate file, I found his Estate Inventory and lo and behold, there was a cake stand mentioned!

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In the left column, the last line on this page lists a cake stand.

Joseph and Emma Pruitt about 1875.

Joseph and Emma Pruitt about 1875.

So by identifying the age of the cake stand and the property that was in Emma’s household, I have two strong pieces of circumstantial evidence that the story is correct. The cake stand probably did belong to my Great-Grandmother, Emma Pruitt.

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This is an antique silver spoon known as coin silver (needs a bit more polishing). The term is used to describe American silver flatware and hollowware made before 1870 that is not sterling. Coin silver is about 90% silver, the silver content is about 2.5% less than sterling. Coin silver is about 10% copper. This spoon was handed down in my family, I received it from my mother. I was told that it belonged to my Great-Great-Great-Grandmother, Phebe Putnam and the engraved initials are P. P. so that matches but I wanted to find additional information that might help prove that it belonged to Phebe. Phebe was born in 1789 in New York State and lived most of her life near Batavia in Genesee County, New York where she died in 1862. She was married about 1805.

Phebe Burroughs Putnam’s tombstone in the Putnam Settlement Cemetery, Genesee County, New York.

Phebe Burroughs Putnam’s tombstone in the Putnam Settlement Cemetery, Genesee County, New York.

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Fortunately, the back of the coin silver spoon is engraved with a maker’s name and mark. I searched for some time for information about this silversmith but was unsuccessful. I decided to search old newspapers online from the place and time period of Phebe’s life. (I use old newspapers frequently when doing genealogical research, they have a wealth of information.) I found the following advertisement in an 1830 Batavia, New York newspaper.

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So on May 27, 1830, S. McCain was advertising his products including “Silver spoons , made and kept constantly for sale” in the Batavia newspaper near where Phebe lived. Strong circumstantial evidence that he made Phebe’s spoon and it did belong to her.

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This is called a Ruby Stained Souvenir cup, they were popular from about 1880-1910. It belonged to my grandmother, Joanna, and for years I did research to try to determine what club or group she belonged to in San Bernardino in 1909 that used the initials A. Y. P.. I knew she married Willis Leonard in December 1909 but I assumed it was a club or group of some kind. I wasn’t having any luck so recently I decided to do a google search and lo and behold, it is not a club or group, it stands for Alaska Yukon Pacific. The Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition took place in Seattle, Washington from June 1 to September 16, 1909. It’s possible that Joanna or someone she knew bought the cup there. After their wedding, Joanna and Willis left on a 6 weeks wedding trip through the Eastern and Southern U. S.. A 1909 San Bernardino newspaper article mentioned their wedding and trip.

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I am wondering if they also went to Seattle and bought the cup there. I inherited a collection of several sterling silver souvenir spoons that Joanna bought on their wedding trip. While writing this I checked that collection and found the following spoon.

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This is a souvenir spoon also from the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition.

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So I don’t know for sure but I suspect Willis and Joanna may have also visited Seattle during their travels and bought the cup and spoon there after the Exposition had ended.

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This is an autograph album that belonged to my grandmother Joanna Pruitt Leonard before her marriage. Autograph albums were popular during the Civil War and their popularity lasted until the early 20th century. These albums can provide many clues for genealogists depending on who signed the album and what they wrote.

Joanna Pruitt Leonard

Joanna Pruitt Leonard

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This is the first page of the album. Joanna’s name is in it with the date and where she was at the time. So we know she was in Kelly, New Mexico on that date although we don’t know for sure that she was living there. This may have been a birthday present because it was her 6th birthday.

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This page provides a clue as to members of Joanna’s extended family, her cousin Matie Clark signed the album.

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Another cousin signed this page with the same surname, Vivian V. Clark, still in Kelly, New Mexico but a year later. So Joanna may have been living there during those years.

To do genealogical research all you need is a name, a date, and a place. Autograph albums and family heirlooms can provide that information in many different ways to help with your search.

May 26, 2019 /Beth Wilson
Genealogy
35 Comments
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Anyone for a Game of Cards? Have a seat at my Card Tablescape!

May 22, 2019 by Beth Wilson in Tablescapes

I did this playing cards tablescape several years ago and then posted it again two years ago. It has always been one of my favorites so I decided to post it again for new readers.

This is a tablescape that I did several years ago but I wasn’t blogging then and didn’t take very many photos so I decided to recreate it. I changed out the centerpiece but the rest is the same as the original version. It is one of my favorites. It started with a vintage tablecloth that I am using here as an overlay over a black tablecloth I bought on Amazon. I will show a bit of the smaller card design tablecloth later. I bought it on Ebay several years ago. It has a diamond shaped card design but it’s buried under things!

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I have four different place settings with the four different card suits and then I repeated two. For each place setting the salad plate design matches the small bowl, the base of the clear glass, and the place card. For fun, I added the names of some of my female ancestors on the place cards although I suspect a few of them would think card playing was inappropriate!

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I had found a different set of card salad plates at a garage sale years ago and that with the tablecloth started the design of the table. Then I found this set somewhere, maybe HomeGoods and I decided to use them instead. They were made by I. Godinger & Co..

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I really like the card suit design around the edge of the plates.

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For design purposes there are two extra plates in the plate pile on this table. The next plate down is my every day red Fiesta salad plate. When we remodeled the kitchen a couple years ago it became a white kitchen with red accents and I bought new red every day dishes.

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The next plate down is a black dinner plate, Fun Factory made by Waechtersbach in Germany. I use this plate often, black plates are very versatile. I think I found it at HomeGoods.

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This large dinner/charger plate is from Pottery Barn, pattern is Cambria in red. A charger plate needs to be about 11”-12” in diameter and this plate is about 11 3/4”. I keep looking at the other colors because it is a great plate and can be used as both a dinner plate and a charger. It is microwave and dishwasher safe too. It would be a great plate to start a charger collection. (This pattern is currently on clearance at Pottery Barn, 3/12/21.)

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The final plate down is my Antique Beaded charger from William Sonoma that I bought several years ago. This is a photo from a different tablescape. I realized I hadn’t posted a photo of the charger in this post.

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The flatware is made by D & D Inox in Italy. I bought it at Neiman Marcus or Bloomingdales during a major sale a few years ago. There are similar patterns available online now. This set pops up quite a bit in my table settings.

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The red goblets are Waterford Marquis, I use them frequently in tablescapes. I found the same goblet in clear at HomeGoods and snapped them up! These goblets are a bit taller than most and I like that. I bought these black goblets on Ebay and they were one of the first sets that I bought several years ago. They are Lenox Midnight Mood black glass water goblets and they were made between 1974 and 1982. They are 7 1/4 inches tall. When I started buying goblets I didn’t pay attention to the height but now I like to buy goblets that are at least about 8 inches tall because my table is large and I think they show better. I found the drinking glass at a garage sale.

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Can’t remember where I found the clear card glasses but it was in the middle of planning the first card setting I did and they were perfect! Each one has a different card suit on the bottom. They are really fun!

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I bought the small card suit bowls on Ebay several years ago.

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Can’t remember where I bought the napkin rings but it was probably Crate and Barrel or Pottery Barn on sale. They were some of the first ones I bought. I had someone on Etsy make the napkins for me. I love the way they look on this tablescape.

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I love this vintage tablecloth. It is small but I can use it as an overlay.

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I think I bought the place card holders at Oriental Trading online. They are a good source for small inexpensive table theme items.

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Found this salt and pepper set and the following one at garage sales.

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I found the large red dice at a garage sale, it has a top that opens and it actually swivels on the base. It is sitting on the box that some of the salad plates came in. I had to rescue that box from my husband trying to throw it away several times over the past couple of years. I knew it would come in handy someday! Can’t remember where I bought the card theme glass garlands but it was online somewhere.

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Ready for dinner and a game of cards!

To see 120+ other tablescapes that I have created please click here. If you are on Facebook, join my Tablescape Ideas group! Just click on the Facebook Search box at the top of the page and type in Tablescape Ideas. Don’t miss my Tablescaping How-To section at the top of this blog post for more tablescaping tips and tricks.

Please check out the March 2022 issue of Country Sampler magazine for a photo of one of my Spring tablescapes.

I put a new tablescape on my blog every week so please check back!

This blog post was featured on the blogs, The Answer is Chocolate, http://www.answerischoco.com/, Pieced Pastimes, https://piecedpastimes.blogspot.com/ , and Lou Lou Girls, https://www.loulougirls.com/ Please visit these blogs! You will enjoy them!

May 22, 2019 /Beth Wilson
Tablescapes
40 Comments
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Hanging Vintage Hankies

May 19, 2019 by Beth Wilson in Home

Many years ago I started collecting vintage hankies. It started when I found a poinsettia Christmas hankie in my mother’s things after she died. I remembered her carrying it. Soon after I was wandering around an antique mall and found another one, and why have one when you can have two…or three or… They were easy to store, inexpensive, and fun to look for when out and about because you didn’t find them that often. Then Ebay came along and they were too easy to find and there were too many collectors driving up the prices so I stopped collecting. But meanwhile I have a very large collection of hankies. Some are so pretty that I decided to frame them, some permanently, and some that are changed out from time to time. I bought a few large and small frames that I use over and over and the background is heavy white paper. This one is a larger Valentine hankie and it is on the wall in the guest room year round but I have some that I swap out for different holidays and seasons. I really love the graphics on this one and the red and blue color combination. I also use hankies as table top decorations sometimes.

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I used to hang this one during the Fall season sometimes. I also have a large collection of hankies that are shaped like different leaves in different colors and sometimes I put one of those up as well. Some of these hankies are a bit crooked but I didn’t take the time to straighten them. Some are an odd shape anyway and can’t be straightened!

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For a while years ago I hung my hankies as a valance over my kitchen window changing them depending on the season or holiday. I put these up every fall for a few years until we remodeled the kitchen.

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Not a great photo but the only one I could find of these hankies. I have about 100 different poinsettia hankies. My mother loved poinsettias and these remind me of her whenever I see them.

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This is a large frame with just a heavy white paper background and I swap out hankies depending on the season or holiday. I put this one up at Christmas time. It is one of my favorites.

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This is a smaller hankie that was sold by McCalls magazine apparently. It hangs in my guest room at Christmas time because the tree in there always has a gingerbread and candy theme. I used a red frame for this one.

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This one is another Christmas favorite that hangs in the hall during the holidays.

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I have several California Souvenir hankies and I have framed a couple for our bedroom. I love the colorful graphics.

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You can still find vintage hankies on Ebay and in antique malls although some of the best designs have been snatched up by collectors over the years. When I was buying them they were each a dollar or two but now some of the most prized and unusual ones can cost $20 to $30 and up because there are so few of them left.

I started a Facebook Group, Vintage Hankies, Handkerchiefs, https://www.facebook.com/groups/897980928627111 to share photos of my hankies. I am hoping that others will join and share their hankies too!

May 19, 2019 /Beth Wilson
Home
27 Comments
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A California See Shells Tablescape

May 15, 2019 by Beth Wilson in Tablescapes

I live about a mile and a half from the Pacific Ocean so I often create tablescapes with an ocean theme. I love to walk along the sand collecting shells and sea glass although there is no sea glass here really. If you compare my recent tablescapes, you can see that this one recycles elements from my Bird tablescape and my Crab tablescape. It shows how you can create a variety of tablescapes using some of the same elements. If you want to be more creative when setting a table you could determine what colors you might use over and over depending on your decor and dishes and start gathering a few elements that you can mix and match. When I started tablescaping, I bought basic colors for chargers and dinner plates and the salad plates became the element that dictated the theme of the tables.

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We are lucky to live so close to the sand and waves.

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I have slowly purchased these shell plates on Ebay over the past few years. I still don’t have a complete set of dinner plates but I continue to watch for them. The tablecloth came from Amazon.

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The salad and dinner plate are both Bordallo Pinheiro, and made in Portugal. There are many different shell plates available from many different makers.

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It is easier to find a shell plate that is salad size, it is more difficult to find one that is dinner plate size. I actually have four of these plates that are charger size but I needed six for this table so I didn’t use them.

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The chargers are the same ones that I used for the Crab tablescape. The blue one is Mikasa’s Color Spectrum in Royal Blue that I bought on Ebay, a few at a time. The second charger is my Antique Beaded charger that I bought from Williams-Sonoma a few years ago.

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This stainless flatware is another one of my favorites. It is made by Reed & Barton and is called Colonial Williamsburg Gloucester Shell. Each piece has a different shell on the bottom.

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I bought the napkin rings on Ebay, They have different shell designs. They are labeled Knobler Taiwan. The napkins and table runner came from Etsy. A seller on there has made napkins for me several times. I tell her what I am looking for and she finds the material and makes them for me. This wasn’t exactly what I was looking for but it is really better than my original idea.

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These are the same glasses that I used for my Crab table and my Bird table. I seem to be stuck on blue at the moment! I bought the blue goblets on Ebay, you can still find them for sale there. They were made by Libbey in the 1970’s and the pattern is Tulip in Dusky Blue. This clear goblet is actually the pattern my mother chose for her wedding crystal in 1938. She couldn’t remember the name of the pattern or who made it and I searched for decades trying to identify it with no luck. Finally one day I was reading through old San Bernardino newspapers online doing some genealogical research looking for information about my grandparents and I stumbled on an article about a wedding shower for my mother that mentioned her gifts and the name of her crystal! This Rock Sharpe crystal goblet was made by Libbey and the pattern was Ridgeway. I was able to complete the set buying them a few at a time on Ebay.

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The shell place card holders are Andrea by Sadek, can’t remember where I bought them.

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I bought this large shell several years ago and it usually sits on a shelf in the family room. It needed something after I put it on the table so I bought flat blue marbles and filled it and then put a few shells in it.

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This table makes me want to walk along the beach and look for shells today!

To see 190+ tablescapes that I have created please click here. If you are on Facebook, join my Tablescape Ideas group! Just click on the Facebook Search box at the top of the page and type in Tablescape Ideas. Don’t miss my Tablescaping How-To section at the top of this blog post for more tablescaping tips and tricks.

I put a new tablescape on my blog every week so please check back!

May 15, 2019 /Beth Wilson
Ocean
Tablescapes
15 Comments
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