Coffee Pot thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Silver, Room 65, The Whiteley Galleries

Coffee Pot

1799-1800 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This silver coffee pot in the neo-classical style bears the mark of one of the Bateman partnerships. The family run firm were a large London based silversmith's which made good quality standardised tableware for middleclass consumers. The lid is adorned by a pineapple carved from stained ivory. The pineapple, which originated in the Americas and the West Indies, was a common symbol of hospitality. The use of the pineapple as a decorative feature shows how fashionable the exotic New World was and hints at how close Britain's ties to this region were.

Widely drunk throughout the Middle East, coffee was introduced to Europe by Turkish traders in the early 17th century. Britain was at first dependant upon imports from the Middle East but slowly began to develop its own coffee industry through introducing the crop to plantations in Jamaica and other West Indian colonies. These plantations relied on the labour of Africans who were sold to British traders on the west coast of Africa as slaves and transported across the Atlantic.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Engraved silver, wood and stained ivory
Brief description
Silver, London hallmarks for 1799-1800, mark of Peter and Ann Batemen.
Physical description
Coffee pot, silver with engraved borders, wooden handle (a replacement). Vase shaped body with engraved floral border around the top; oval foot, curved spout, hinged lid with pineapple knop of green stained ivory. Reeded edges; ebonised handle and a frame for a strainer inside.
Dimensions
  • Height: 30cm
  • Width: 30.5cm
  • Depth: 12.5cm
  • Weight: 948.3g
  • Weight: 30.49troy
Marks and inscriptions
  • Mark of Peter and Ann Bateman
  • London hallmarks for 1799-1800.
Gallery label
Text written about this object for 'Uncomfortable Truths / Traces of the Trade' gallery trails (Trail 1: 'Consuming the Black Atlantic'), 20 February - 31 December 2007. Helen Mears & Janet Browne. 'COFFEE POT / Until overtaken by tea in 1720, coffee was Britain's most popular 'tropical' drink. Initially imported from the Middle East in the early 1720s, it later became a staple crop of the plantations in Jamaica and other West Indian colonies. In the latter half of the 17th century 'coffee houses' sprang up all over London and other large towns and cities. They soon assumed a central position in the social, political and economic life of Britain. Apart from being places to meet friends, exchange news and read newspapers, they were important in the transatlantic trade. Merchants, bankers, insurers and ship owners would gather in the coffee houses and sometimes use them as a venue for slave auctions. The 'hue-and-cry' advertisements that publicised runaway slaves circulated in the coffee houses.'(20/02/2007)
Credit line
Bequeathed by Miss M. B. Hudson
Object history
An internal, subsequent alteration bears the mark of Rebecca Emes and Edward Barnard.
Subject depicted
Summary
This silver coffee pot in the neo-classical style bears the mark of one of the Bateman partnerships. The family run firm were a large London based silversmith's which made good quality standardised tableware for middleclass consumers. The lid is adorned by a pineapple carved from stained ivory. The pineapple, which originated in the Americas and the West Indies, was a common symbol of hospitality. The use of the pineapple as a decorative feature shows how fashionable the exotic New World was and hints at how close Britain's ties to this region were.

Widely drunk throughout the Middle East, coffee was introduced to Europe by Turkish traders in the early 17th century. Britain was at first dependant upon imports from the Middle East but slowly began to develop its own coffee industry through introducing the crop to plantations in Jamaica and other West Indian colonies. These plantations relied on the labour of Africans who were sold to British traders on the west coast of Africa as slaves and transported across the Atlantic.
Collection
Accession number
M.396-1922

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Record createdSeptember 10, 2004
Record URL
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