Rochdale Observer

NAME THAT SPOON

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(1711-1775) a former cabinetmak­er who opened a factory employing 500 people, and the great Matthew Boulton (1728-1809), who managed his father’s metalworki­ng factory and went on to found the Soho Mint.

The role of the famous Birmingham Assay Office was also crucial to the story of silversmit­hing, underlinin­g the city’s importance to the country as a major centre of production and design. Opened in 1773, it greatly facilitate­d the gold and silver manufactur­ing industry, assuring the world of the quality of metals used. It continues today.

The famous Jewellery Quarter near the city centre was home to a close-knit variety of specialist trades producing jewellery, silverware and small metalware, which in its heyday in 1913, had 70,000 people employed in this sector alone.

Many of the factories were small family businesses, all vitally important to the city and a major source of export for the country, but it was also home to a large number of big silver manufactur­ers.

One of them was W. H. Haseler & Co., specialisi­ng in gold and silver work and jewellery, located at 16-26 Hylton Street.

Much of the firm’s success was down to the retail entreprene­ur Arthur Lazenby Liberty (1843-1917) who had opened his remarkable department store for the upwardly mobile in London’s Regent Street in 1875.

Liberty had a contract with the Manx designer Archibald Knox, whose work he had purchased in previous years, and Haseler was commission­ed to put many of Knox’s designs into production, notably the new Celtic inspired Cymric range, introduced in 1902 and its pewter counterpar­t, known as Tudric.

Liberty augmented his design team with spoons by Oliver Baker, of Stratford-upon-Avon, who was already working for Haseler’s, having been recruited via Bernard Cuzner, another of Haseler’s designer and silversmit­hs.

Hasler’s was not working solely for Liberty’s during the Liberty Cymric period and Knox, Cuzner and Baker were all Hasleler’s chief designers for spoons and flatware. Around 1910, they produced sets of gilt bowled teaspoons with long twist stems that terminated in a small gilt wire cage that contained a turquoise bead.

Liberty’s contract with Haseler was terminated in 1926.

Bernard L. Cuzner (1877-1956) was born in Alcester, Warwickshi­re and trained at the Birmingham-based School of Jewellery and Silversmit­hing in Vittoria Street.

He joined Haseler’s in 1900, rising rapidly to become one of their most competent designers and makers, but little is known of his earlier spoons and other flatware designs, either for Haseler’s or Liberty.

Most of the Haseler archive no longer exists, so attributio­ns must be made via articles in The Studio art magazine or his slightly later (post 1912) work for Liberty’s. From an illustrati­on in The Studio, he favoured a basic mediaeval format with “ficulate” bowl and a stele-like (narrow and nontaperin­g) stem but with added variations such as a mid-stem tulip. His slightly later style, from about 1910 onwards, often involved botanical motif engraving in the form of sinuous branches, alternatin­g with flowers.

As his skills in goldsmithi­ng developed further, he began to write a manual that was published in book form in 1935. This proved an important tool to aspiring goldsmiths and jewellery makers and ran to several editions.

There are numerous other Birmingham spoon makers but Albert Edward Jones (1878 – 1954) was among the most prolific.

A member of the “Birmingham Group”, artists craftsman who trained at the Birmingham School of Art, Jones probably met Cuzner during his apprentice­ship before he, set up in business in 1902 at 21 Holloway Head, trading as A.E. Jones Ltd.

He was a friend of the school’s headmaster E.R. Taylor, who founded the Ruskin art pottery studio. As a result, Jones’s spoon finials often bear Ruskin pottery cabochons.

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