新規更新September 01, 2019 at 12:20AM
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Lewis Cary
Daderot: ←Created page with 'File:Egg warmer, Lewis Cary, for Abigail Brooks Adams, Boston, c. 1819, silver - Fowler Museum - University of California, Los Angeles - DSC02628.jpg|thumb|rig...'
[[File:Egg warmer, Lewis Cary, for Abigail Brooks Adams, Boston, c. 1819, silver - Fowler Museum - University of California, Los Angeles - DSC02628.jpg|thumb|right|Egg warmer by Lewis Cary, made for [[Abigail Brooks Adams]], c. 1819]]
'''Lewis Cary''' (March 31, 1798 - November 1834) was an American [[silversmith]] active in [[Boston]].
Cary was born in [[Quincy, Massachusetts]]. He was apparently apprenticed circa 1811-1815 to [[Churchill & Treadwell]] in Boston, and provided additional silver for Boston's West Church to supplement silver made by Churchill. It appears that Cary bought a silversmith business in 1820 from Hazen Morse (1790–1874), his brother-in-law, and worked from 1820 to 1832 as a silversmith, with his shop at 5 Piedmont Street. In 1821 he married Adeline Billings in [[Dorchester, Massachusetts]]. In 1828 he became a member of the [[Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association]]. Today Cary is remembered primarily for the silver he made for churches in Boston and as far away as [[Deerfield, Massachusetts]]. His work is collected in the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], the [[Museum of Fine Arts Boston]], and the [[Museum of Fine Arts, Houston]].
== References ==
* ''Stimpson's Boston Directory'', C. Stimpson, 1832, page 103.
* [https://ift.tt/2zFf8v1 "Lewis Cary"], American Silversmiths.
* [https://ift.tt/2PvHpPr "Creampot"] by Lewis Cary, [[Museum of Fine Arts Boston]].
* ''Early American Silver in The Metropolitan Museum of Art'', Beth Carver Wees, Medill Higgins Harvey, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2013, page 81.
* ''American Silversmiths and Their Marks: The Definitive (1948) Edition'', Stephen Guernsey Cook Ensko, Courier Corporation, 1983, page 35.
[[Category:American silversmiths]]
'''Lewis Cary''' (March 31, 1798 - November 1834) was an American [[silversmith]] active in [[Boston]].
Cary was born in [[Quincy, Massachusetts]]. He was apparently apprenticed circa 1811-1815 to [[Churchill & Treadwell]] in Boston, and provided additional silver for Boston's West Church to supplement silver made by Churchill. It appears that Cary bought a silversmith business in 1820 from Hazen Morse (1790–1874), his brother-in-law, and worked from 1820 to 1832 as a silversmith, with his shop at 5 Piedmont Street. In 1821 he married Adeline Billings in [[Dorchester, Massachusetts]]. In 1828 he became a member of the [[Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association]]. Today Cary is remembered primarily for the silver he made for churches in Boston and as far away as [[Deerfield, Massachusetts]]. His work is collected in the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], the [[Museum of Fine Arts Boston]], and the [[Museum of Fine Arts, Houston]].
== References ==
* ''Stimpson's Boston Directory'', C. Stimpson, 1832, page 103.
* [https://ift.tt/2zFf8v1 "Lewis Cary"], American Silversmiths.
* [https://ift.tt/2PvHpPr "Creampot"] by Lewis Cary, [[Museum of Fine Arts Boston]].
* ''Early American Silver in The Metropolitan Museum of Art'', Beth Carver Wees, Medill Higgins Harvey, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2013, page 81.
* ''American Silversmiths and Their Marks: The Definitive (1948) Edition'', Stephen Guernsey Cook Ensko, Courier Corporation, 1983, page 35.
[[Category:American silversmiths]]
https://ift.tt/2zChxGV