Item 11558
Coming to you from Doc's Crocks is this wonderful Matchsafe made by the Whites of Utica, N.Y. Pottery.
Dating between 1890 and 1907, this piece is a wonderful example of the skill that the Whites Pottery had gained in molded stoneware during those years. A similar one is featured in Christopher Bensch, The Blue and the Gray: Oneida County Stoneware, p. 54.
This is the large size for use on top of bar counters and other public places. The matches went inside the top and the embossed background provided the striking surface. Because these were used for advertising in public places, few survived the heavy use.
It was made for the "Martin, Perrin Co., Wholesale Liquors, Kansas City, Mo."
This beauty features a Raised Diamond Background with Embossed Top and Bottom Borders with Cobalt Stripes that Frame the Incised Fancy Script Lettering with Cobalt Fill. Measures 4 3/4" tall and 6 1/2" wide across the base.
Very Good Condition. Two 1/2" chips on the underside of the footer, a 1 1/2" hairline on the inside underside that shows 1" outside, and some scattered staining. No top chips, cracks, or restoration.
Ships double-boxed, insured, and FREE
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$750.00Price
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