Posts: 1,978 Location: Nipmuc USA
Mon 10 Jan, 2011 5:55 pm
If I may and just for my dizzy head, I am rotating some of these for other's considerations. While many will likely point to the American market for these, there were occasions where British officers (especially yeoman militia) bought what they wanted. My one mainstay reference for these is E. Andrew Mowbray's The American Eagle Pommel Sword The early Years 1794-1830 First editions still pop up on Ebay for $40 or less, with new crispies a bit more. What was meant to be volume one, volume two was never finished (a real shame) and his son Stuart Mowbray heads that publishing company still and collaborated with Norm Flayderman in presenting the Medicus collection photos with many of the eagle types the elder Mowbray had written about.
www.manatarmsbooks.com/
That as a preface, I do not have a definitive late date for this work and the difficulty there is that Salter sourced parts from both Birmingham and Solingen is producing some pretty mixed up but very nice swords. Some of this sword has a bit of the rococo frippery seen during the French first Empire and could easily place it early but (big but) the blade and a likeness more like the S&K "rebirth" of frippery after the war of 1812 along with the pipe back blade pushing both that and the neo classic hilt as late as the 1830-1840 period. Much of the hilt parts speak Solingen exactness to me as opposed to the aging mercury poisoned gilders of Birmingham and the absolutely overboard decoration of hilts in the first decade of the 19th century. The New York families of Wolfe, Spies and the Upson brothers sourced from Salter along with other English cutlers. There were also other collaborations on both sides of the pond before during and after the !812 exchanges.
What we see here is a very fine sword in terrific condition hilt wise but I suspect the blade may not be quite as pretty over time. i would love to have good point up pictures of the blade decorations, while the hilt and blade will usually present better long wise edge down hilt our left and just hilt shots upright left and right.
I say tentatively 1830. maybe just abit later but as mentioned some of his fine work on chasing the details does go back to 1810ish but with simpler hilts. I could just as easily accept the earlier decade but something smells like S&K (Solingen) to me. The blade as well looks of the later option. It is obviously a fine bit of work with the finest gilding and the counterguard decoration points to artillery. As "yellow" that would fit for American tastes but again, not the only market.
Cheers
GC\\PS
Dmitry Z~G has a pretty good eye and probably a better exposure overall to the entire vein of Eagle Head Pommels. This one is yet another new one for my ever expanding eagle files. I have a couple of more books here to thumb through but artillery says artillery to me.
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