HALLMARKS OF ENGLISH SILVER MAKER'S MARK IDENTIFICATION - ILLUSTRATED LISTING
WITH THE ADDITION OF SCOTTISH, IRISH, CHANNEL ISLANDS AND COLONIES SILVERMITHS
|
This is a page of A Small Collection of Antique Silver and Objects of vertu, a 1500 pages richly illustrated website offering all you need to know about antique silver, sterling silver, silverplate, sheffield plate, electroplate silver, silverware, flatware, tea services and tea complements, marks and hallmarks, articles, books, auction catalogs, famous silversmiths (Tiffany, Gorham, Jensen, Elkington, WMF, Reed & Barton, Mappin & Webb, Bateman Family), history, oddities ...
SITE MAP -
HOME PAGE
|
BRITISH SILVERSMITHS ILLUSTRATED LISTING OF MAKER'S AND SPONSOR'S MARKS GP |
(click on the photo to enlarge image)
|
|
|
|
|
GP&S into four conjoined octagons G. Payne & Son,
The firm was founded in Wallingford in 1790 by John Payne in 1790. Further shops were opened in
Abingdon 1825, Banbury 1842 and Tunbridge Wells 1870, all run by various members of the Payne family.
George Septimus Payne inherited the Abingdon shop in 1874 and moved to Oxford in 1888.
Payne & Son (Goldsmiths), Oxford, started trading in January 1889 and have been at 131 High
Street ever since Birmingham 1930 hallmark |
|
|
STERLING SILVER OF ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, IRELAND, CHANNEL ISLANDS AND COLONIES |
BRITISH SILVERSMITHS - ILLUSTRATED LISTING OF MAKER'S AND SPONSOR'S MARKS |
THE DIRECTORY OF SCOTLAND (PROVINCIAL) - CHANNEL ISLANDS - CANADA - AUSTRALIA - CAPE |
BRITISH TOWN MARKS AND DATE LETTERS
|
The hallmarking of British silver is based on a combination of marks that makes possible the
identification of the origin and the age of each silver piece manufactured or traded in the UK. The marks are:
Town mark, corresponding to the mark of the Assay Office that has verified the piece
Lion passant guardant or Britannia or lion's head erased, certifiying the silver quality
Maker's mark, identifying the silversmith presenting the piece to the assay office (usually the initials of Christian name and surname of the silversmith)
Date letter, in cycles of twenty letters of the alphabet of different shape identifies the year in which the piece was verified by the Assay Office
A further mark was used in the period 1784 - 1890:
Sovereign head ('duty mark'), certifying the payment of the duty
This page was useful? leave your LIKE on
facebook
work in progress on this page - your help, corrections and suggestions will be greatly appreciated -
|