Do it online
|
Report :
|
Report it |
|
Pay :
|
Pay for it |
|
Apply :
|
Apply for it |
|
Book :
|
Book it |
|
Comment :
|
Comment on it |
|
View :
|
View it |
Contact
|
Mail :
|
Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery Plymouth City Council Plymouth PL1 2AA |
| 01752 304774 | |
| museum@plymouth.gov.uk | |
|
Fax :
|
01752 304775 |
LOCATION
- Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery
Drake Circus
Plymouth
PL4 8AJ
Plymouth museum and historic locations Google Map
Related pages
Links
- Art Fund
- V&A/MLA Purchase Grant Fund
- Crafts Council
- Devon Guild of Craftsmen
- We are not responsible for the content of linked websites. Visit our disclaimer page for more information.
Silver
The silver collection comprises of local, civic silver from the 18th to the 20th century, including the presentation ‘freedom boxes’ given to Lady and Viscount Astor in 1959 and 1936 respectively.
Two key pieces of silver in the collection are the Eddystone lighthouse salt and the Drake cup.
The Eddystone lighthouse salt is on display in the Plymouth, Port and Place gallery. It was made by Plymouth silversmith, Peter Rowe in 1698. It was commissioned to commemorate the building of Smeaton’s first lighthouse on the Eddystone reef and is thought to be the only representation of the very first lighthouse before changes were made to the lantern in 1699.
The Drake cup is on display at Buckland Abbey, home of Sir Francis Drake. The cup was thought to have been given to Drake by Queen Elizabeth I. It depicts a globe to celebrate his circumnavigation and was made by a Zurich silversmith in around 1571.
The south west had a thriving silversmith community in the 18th century and an assay office was set up in Exeter in 1700. The museum’s collection is representative of many of these silversmiths and holds examples from makers such as Pentecost Symons, Samuel Blatchford and Zacchariah Williams.
The museum also holds on loan a number of items of church plate from local churches. This includes some of the earliest existing pieces of ecclesiastical silver in the south west by John Jones of Exeter in 1575 who was commissioned to make communion cups after the Reformation in England.