Find's Treasure Forums

Welcome to Find's Treasure Forums, Guests!

You are viewing this forums as a guest which limits you to read only status.

Only registered members may post stories, questions, classifieds, reply to other posts, contact other members using built in messaging and use many other features found on these forums.

Why not register and join us today? It's free! (We don't share your email addresses with anyone.) We keep email addresses of our users to protect them and others from bad people posting things they shouldn't.

Click here to register!



Need Support Help?

Cannot log in?, click here to have new password emailed to you

Was going through a cabinet on the back porch and came up with some of the old silverware I have found..

Uncle Willy

New member
Got a bunch more somewhere. Most of this is 1843 Rogers Brothers. The date on one is 1919. Got to scrounge up the others hiding around here.

Bill
 
You'd think they could have, at least, ran them through the dishwasher before losing them to the dirt.:lol:
 
love the finds Bill :please: is it Stirling or plate.
i collect a bit of old silver from garage sales & opp shops & have found two spoons from the early 1800s wile detecting there's only one thing i like finding more than old silver when out hunting & that's old gold :laugh:.
i"v got a few books on silver so if ya ever need an ID on silver hall marks give me a bell :).
i really cant wait ta see the rest of the pile :yikes:.
lazyaussie
 
There are no treasures like rediscovered treasure!!:thumbup:
 
Wm. Rogers (William Rogers), 1801 - 1973, was a master American silversmith and a pioneer in the silverplate industry. It can be confusing to identify silver marked Wm. Rogers because his prestigious name was appropriated by many companies both in his lifetime and for generations after.
At least six interrelated lines of silverplate have been marked Wm. Rogers.

1. The mark 1865 Wm. Rogers was used by Rogers himself in 1865.

2. The mark Wm. Rogers surrounded by a star and eagle was used by William Rogers between 1825 to 1841 on his coin silver spoons. From 1878 to 1893, after the death of William Sr., it was used by Simpson, Hall, Miller and Company after they signed an agreement with Wm. Rogers Jr. This mark was used again off and on from the late 1800s until at least 1939 by the International Silver Co.

3. The mark Wm. Rogers Mfg Co was used after 1865 by William and his son William Jr. and later by the International Silver Company.

4. The mark Wm. Rogers and Son followed by a star was used from around 1856-1861.

5. The mark Wm. Rogers and Son was used by William Sr. and Jr. from 1861 to 1871 and later by the International Silver Company.

6. The mark Wm. A. Rogers was used as early as 1897. It became part of Oneida silver around 1929, and Oneida employed the Wm. A. Rogers mark as late as 1978.

Popular Victorian patterns from Wm. Rogers and Son include Alhambra (1907), Beauty (1909), Orange Blossom (1910), and Rose (1909).

Popular patterns from Wm. Rogers Mfg include Isabella (1913), Revelation (193:geek:, and Jubilee (1953).

Popular patterns from Wm. A. Rogers include Glenrose (190:geek:, Grenoble (1906), Carnation (190:geek: and La Concorde (1910).

Good references to consult regarding Wm. Rogers include the Encyclopedia of American Silver Manufacturers by Dorothy T. Rainwater and Judy Redfield, Silverplated Flatware by Tere Hagan, American Silverplate by Dorothy Rainwater with Donna Felger, and the Standard Encyclopedia of American Silverplate by Frances M. Bones and Lee Roy Fisher.
 
Yeah most of this is Wm Rogers or Wm Rogers & Son, one dated Dec. 28, 1915, but one I have never heard of - Lady Betty silverplate.

Bill
 
Top