Eagle spout, detail of teapot made by Thomas Fletcher and Sidney Gardiner, Philadelphia, 1812–1820, silver. Private collection.
In 1811, Fletcher and Gardiner moved to Philadelphia, a city twice Boston's size with three times its commercial activity. It was the best business calculation they ever made. Two years later, the firm was known, as the authors write, "as the creator of the heaviest, tallest, most ornate, elegant and patriotic work in silver produced in the country to that date."
Through wide advertising, arrangements with other retailers and word of mouth, Fletcher & Gardiner's practice became an international one, producing presentation, household, church and personal objects in gold and silver for customers from New Hampshire to New Orleans to Mexico. Always looking to open new markets and receptive to the latest innovations in design, manufacture and marketing, Fletcher traveled to Europe twice, in 1815 and 1825, where he was dazzled by current styles inspired by classical antiquity.
The show includes many specific examples of these stylistic influences: a circa 1835 sauceboat in the collection of Ruth J. Nutt is in shape and ornament inspired by contemporary French silver. Also in the Nutt collection, a hot water urn of roughly the same date relates to one from the London silver manufactory Rundell, Bridge & Rundell, where Fletcher is known to have admired a silver vase copied from a large Roman marble owned by the Earl of Warwick.
Fletcher and Gardiner were in the right place, Philadelphia, and at the right time. On June 18, 1812, Congress declared war on Great Britain. Two months later, Captain Isaac Hull (1773–1843) led the US frigate
Constitution
in a decisive battle against Britain's
Guerriere
off the coast of Newfoundland. The grateful public raised funds for "a splendid piece of Plate" to be presented to Hull. Fletcher & Gardiner won the commission.
Mark for use on De Witt Clinton vases, Thomas Fletcher and Sidney Gardiner, Philadelphia, 1825.
Fennimore and Wagner write that the resulting 29½-inch-tall Hull urn "has no known contemporary model," but drew heavily on engravings of antiquities and European goldsmiths' work. It employed nearly every technique, including the liberal application of die-cast and die-rolled ornament, a Fletcher & Gardiner signature. Surmounted by an American eagle finial and terminating in hairy-paw feet, the urn weighed 502 ounces, cost $2,200 and took nearly a year to make.
"Fletcher & Gardiner came out of the gate gangbusters," reflects Fennimore. "Virtually nothing like the Hull urn had ever been made in American silver in its scale, weight, scope and elaboration. It spoke to their grand vision in so many ways."
The Hull urn resulted in a slew of other commissions for urns, vases, cake baskets, pitchers and swords honoring heroes of the War of 1812 and other conflicts. Some of these trophies are notable for their scale; others, including several Society of Cincinnati badges, for their intricacy and diminutive proportions. A gold, enamel and ruby Society of Cincinnati badge made for Winifred Scott (1786–1866) is in the collection of the US Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. Another rarity, now at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, is a meticulously worked gold frame enclosing a portrait miniature on ivory of Francis Kinlock Huger (1773–1855). Fletcher & Gardiner made it as gift for the Marquis de Lafayette when he visited Charleston, S.C.
Candelabrum, Philadelphia, made by Thomas Fletcher, 1834–40, silver. Ruth J. Nutt collection of American silver. —Thomas Nutt photo
Fennimore and Wagner drew upon a substantial collection of Thomas Fletcher letters and drawings scattered among five institutions. The drawings are analyzed in depth by Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Beth Carver Wees, who contributed a catalog chapter.
"These archives opened up a wonderful venue of exploration and allowed us rich access to the mind of an artisan, how an idea expresses itself on paper and how it moves into the three-dimensional realm," says Fennimore.
The book is not closed on Fletcher & Gardiner metalwares.
"The firm was a very important manufacturer of jewelry but, try as we might, we could not find much of it," says Fennimore. "There is also a significant body of Fletcher & Gardiner ecclesiastical silver that deserves further study."
Fletcher & Gardiner adapted new production methods to satisfy a large and expanding audience of affluent consumers. Despite its founders' ambitions, the firm suffered a series of reversals and began its steady decline after Gardiner's death from yellow fever in Vera Cruz, Mexico, in 1827. Fletcher & Gardiner closed in 1842. Thomas Fletcher spent his last years cobbling together an income. He died in 1866, age 79, at his son's house in New Jersey.
Hot water urn made by Thomas Fletcher and Sidney Gardiner, Philadelphia, 1820–30, silver. Private collection.
In conjunction with the exhibition, a symposium, "American Silver of the Early Nineteenth Century," is planned for Friday and Saturday, September 5 and 6, at Winterthur. Speakers will include Janet Zapata, Ann Wagner, Donald L. Fennimore, Margaret Little, Deborah Dependahl Waters, D. Albert Soeffling, Bert Denker, Emily Guthrie and E. Richard McKinstry,
Published by Winterthur and distributed by the Antique Collectors' Club,
Silversmiths to The Nation: Thomas Fletcher and Sidney Gardiner, 1808–1842
is by Donald L. Fennimore and Ann K. Wagner, with contributions from Cathy Matson of the University of Delaware, Deborah Dependahl Waters of the Museum of the City of New York and Beth Carver Weiss of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The hardcover edition costs $95.
Men of and for their time, Thomas Fletcher and Sidney Gardiner created objects that in their majesty, stature and originality spoke to the brightest ambitions of their age.
For information, 800-448-3883 or
www.Winterthur.org
.