HCIF NL 17-1 - Haviland Collectors International Foundation
Transcription
HCIF NL 17-1 - Haviland Collectors International Foundation
Spring 2012,Volume 21, Number 1 Haviland Quarterly P.O. Box 271383 Fort Collins, CO 80527-1383 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED Remembrance HCIF and its members lost a long time supporter, member and friend in Basil Hunt, who recently passed away after a lengthy illness. Basil and his wife, Pat, who survives him, joined HCIF in 1996. The couple served with Donna Hafer as co-chairs of the St. Louis HCIF Conference. Basil was a career educator, starting as a teacher and advancing to Superintendent of Schools. After his retirement he briefly worked with the Internal Revenue Service. Basil loved his collection of Haviland china, and enjoyed traipsing the countryside near St. Louis in search of exiting finds. He was lots of fun and leaves us with many fond memories. He will be sorely missed by his many friends in HCIF, which would be everyone in the organization who ever met him. Q Bits & Pieces Notice of Next Board of Directors Meeting Classifieds The Board of Directors of HCIF/HCIEF will hold their next meeting at the Embassy Suites Scottsdale Phoenix hotel, located at 4415 E. Paradise Village Parkway South Phoenix, AZ. The meeting will be held on Wednesday, May 30, 2012, at 7:00 pm in the Painted Mountain Ballroom, and will be open to the membership. All members are encouraged to attend these open meetings. FOR SALE SCOTT'S HAVILAND CHINA 100,000 pieces of Haviland. We have Haviland & Co., Theodore Haviland France, Theodore Haviland New York, Charles Field, Robert Haviland & C. Parlon and Johann Haviland. We specialize in all Haviland: antique, discontinued and current. 1911 Leland Ave. Des Moines, IA 50315 Phone: 515-285-2739, Toll Free 800-952-7857 E-mail: [email protected] Web site: www.havilandchina.net, www.bluegarlandchina Address: 1911 Leland Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa 50315 HCIF members may place classified ads in the Quarterly at the rate of 50 cents per word. Non members’ cost is $1.00 per word. Photos are $5.00 each. Contact the editor with the text of your ad. Quarterly Haviland Spring 2012 Volume 21, Number 1 A Publication of the Haviland Collectors International Foundation Barnum & Bailey In this issue Haviland Collectors International Foundation HCIF is a non-profit organization whose purpose is to study and preserve the products made by the early Haviland china companies in France and America. HCIF is incorporated in the State of Missouri. Membership The Allure of Asparagus. . . . . . . . . . 4 Researching and Writing About Haviland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Lucy Hayes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Celebrity Corner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Pudding Bowls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Patterns of the Quarter. . . . . . . . . . 13 The cover y l r e t r a u Q Haviland A Publicati on of the Hav iland Collecto Spring 2012 ber 1 Volume 21, Num rs Internatio nal Foundatio n Membership in HCIF is open to all interested persons. It is a requirement of membership that no member shall engage in misleading communication or other conduct injurious to the best interests of the organization. A single household membership is $50. Membership applications should be accompanied by one-year dues ( July1–June 30). Checks should be made payable to HCIF and mailed to HCIF, P.O. Box 271383, Ft. Collins, CO 80527. Applications received prior to April 1, will be considered to be for the current year and those applications will be mailed all back newsletters for that year. Applications received April 1, and after will be accepted for the next membership year, which begins July 1. Membership does not imply endorsement by HCIF. Officers for 2011-12 President, Carolyn Quinlan First Vice President, Bonnie Kline Second Vice President, Fred Daniels Treasurer, Perry Haviland Corresponding/Membership Secretary, Marguerite Ohland Recording Secretary, Karen Levin Board of Directors The Board of Directors is elected by the membership. Directors serve without compensation. Board members and terms of office are as follows: 2009-2012 2010-2013 2011-2014 Fred Daniels Jackie Doctor Donna Hafer Nancy Hill (1 year term) Perry Haviland Mary Ann Harrigan Bonnie Kline Karen Levin Paul Ohland (1 year) Marguerite Ohland Carolyn Quinlan Alice Pricer Paul Robertson Wallace Tomasini Janice Stockman Directors Emeritus: Grace Graves, Robert Rorex, Wallace J. Tomasini Contact Information ailey Barnum & B By the numbers Carolyn Quinlan, President 1633 Tozer Road Springfield, IL 62707 217-522-4564 [email protected] Perry Haviland, Treasurer 27 Embarcadero Cove Oakland, CA 94606 510-532-6996 [email protected] HCIF Current Assets General Fund Embassy Phoenix Deposit $ 20,531.77 1,000.00 HCIF Total Equity $ 21,531.77 HCIEF Current Assets Archives Fund PayPal General Fund HCIEF Scholarship Fund Memorial Funds 2 $ 82.00 467.08 5,363.91 2,370.00 17,327.85 Total HCIEF Current Assets $ 25,610.84 HCIEF Non Cash Assets Publications Inventory $ 25,159.94 Total Equity $ 50,770.78 Wallace J. Tomasini, Archivist 610 Beldon Avenue Iowa City, IA 52246 319-338-1641 Robert Rorex, Grant Chair 610 Beldon Avenue Iowa City, IA 52246 319-351-0917 Treasurer’s Report Perry Haviland, Treasurer Balances as of March 2, 2012 Marguerite Ohland, Membership Secretary P.O. Box 271383 Fort Collins, CO 80527 970-223-4124 [email protected] The HCIF Quarterly is published in Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter. Copyright 2012 by Haviland Collectors International Foundation. All rights reserved. Permission to use any material in the Quarterly must be obtained in writing from HCIF. Back issues of the Quarterly are available from HCIF Publications. Volumes 1–4, $2.00 each; Volumes 5–present, $4.00 each plus postage. Editorial Staff Sharon Green, Editor Dannielle Stark, Graphic Designer HCIF Website: www.havilandcollectors.com Articles, Quarterly Correspondence, and Distribution Questions should be directed to: Sharon Green, Quarterly Editor 3004 Beach View Court Las Vegas, NV 89117 [email protected] Address Changes should be addressed to: Marguerite Ohland P.O. Box 271383 Fort Collins, CO 80527 970-223-4124 [email protected] Haviland Quarterly Spring 2012 From the President Carolyn Quinlan The time has flown by and this is my last President’s letter for the Quarterly. It has been a privilege for me to serve as President of this wonderful organization. As I said when I began, I agreed to do this in part to honor the memory of my parents and my grandmother, who instilled the love of Haviland in me. I want to sincerely thank the membership for their friendship and support. It has been such fun to touch base with people I haven’t even met and talk about HCIF and Haviland. I also wish to thank the Board of Directors for their help and support during the past two years. This group of people is tireless in their efforts to further the purposes of our organization and they are to be commended for all they do. We look forward to an active summer. The Hayes Presidential Center in Fremont, Ohio, near Toledo, has opened our exhibit of some of the earliest examples of Haviland China (1865–1895). Entitled The Gilded Age of Haviland China, this exhibit, created in partnership between regional Haviland collectors and the Presidential Center, is set to continue through September 16. Anyone in the area will certainly enjoy visiting this fabulous exhibit. Everyone is looking forward to the HCIF Conference in Phoenix starting on May 31, where we will see our own Richard Burnham’s extensive collection of Hayes Presidential China and hear an exciting report from Robert and Barbara Doares. The future holds many plans for our group and I hope that everyone will attempt to take advantage of the events offered by HCIF. We must continue to expand our membership and enjoy what others have done in the past to make HCIF something of which we can all be proud. Thanks again for a wonderful experience! I From the Editor Fellow collectors and Friends, As much as I have enjoyed editing the HCIF Quarterly, it is time for me to move on. Editing is a bit of a misnomer in relation to the Quarterly; producing it would be a more accurate description. Like all such jobs, it would have been impossible without the help of a lot of other people. I would like to thank first and foremost, Marguerite and Paul Ohland, who have managed the membership records and the mailing functions for HCIF for as long as I can remember. They have always been super cooperative and speedy in responding to any and every request. We all owe them more gratitude that we can ever adequately express. My most frequent contributor, Rich Pryor, is next up on my list of those who are appreciated. I am glad to see that Rich will be serving on the Board, I know he will be a valued contributor. I can’t thank everyone individually, some others who helped me a lot were Janice Stockman, www.havilandcollectors.com Jackie Doctor, and Dale Caldwell. Finally, our graphic artist, Dannielle Stark, was always a pleasure to work with, and always made whatever we sent her look better than anyone could imagine. To all of you, my thanks and best wishes! Sharon Green I 3 TheAllure of Asparagus by Sharon Green Asparagus has a long history going back as far as the first century. There are records of it growing in ancient Greece and Rome. Asparagus was cultivated in gardens in ancient Rome as far back as the first century AD. Some varieties produced such big shoots that they were three to the pound! Egyptians over 2,000 years ago cultivated asparagus for medicinal reasons and legend has it that it was so revered it was offered it up to gods in their rituals. It was surely first discovered growing wild. A wild asparagus has thin shoots — thinner than a pencil and it is much different than the asparagus that you find in the produce department of the local grocery store. Through selective breeding and growing techniques growers have developed a thicker stem with more edible flesh. Haviland asparagus plate from the 1950s, with individual serving tongs, French hallmark Back mark on asparagus plate 4 Haviland Quarterly Spring 2012 The Ancient Greeks and Romans used a Persian word “asparag” which meant shoot to describe it. The term “sperage” became popular for many years and in the 16th century the term “sparagus” was being used in English speaking countries. The peasants would call it “sparrow grass.” During the 19th century the term “asparagus” gained prominence about the same time that cultivation of asparagus started in the United States. Asparagus is planted in the ground three years before it can be harvested for the full season. Farmers only harvest for a short period of time the first few years to allow for further growth. The mature plant is harvested all season which typically stretches up to 90 days. Asparagus will grow sometimes six to seven inches in one day! And it produces from eight to 12 years depending on different factors. White asparagus does come from the same plant as green asparagus. When the spears emerge from the ground, the sunlight turns the stalks green. To get white asparagus, about six inches of dirt is piled on top of the plants so that the stalks can grow underground. They will grow at the same rate as an uncovered stalk. When the tip breaks the soil surface, the worker probes under ground with his special knife to cut the stalk. This stalk is all white. Purple asparagus originated from a region around Albenga, Italy. This cultivar is known as Violetto d’Albenga. Although the spears are deep purple, the ferns are actually green. Purple asparagus is much sweeter and more tender than green asparagus. Purple asparagus retains its color after brief cooking such as quick sauteing. But it loses its purple and changes to green if subjected to prolonged cooking. Asparagus is grown pretty much all over the world. California produces most of the crop for the United States, and it is also grown commercially in Washington and Michigan. The Stockton, California, Asparagus Festival held the last weekend in April is ranked by some culinary critics as one of the best food festivals in the West. That's because Asparagus Alley offers delicious and unique dishes for all tastes. In 2011, over 36,000 pounds of delicious asparagus was enjoyed by all — from deep-fried asparagus (40,000 orders), Asparagus Tritip Sandwiches (9,000 orders), Asparagus Burritos (4,000 orders), to pasta dishes (8,500 orders). The Victorians consumed prodigious amounts of asparagus, but in more formal dishes and circumstances. Springtime menus from that era often featured asparagus as part of the entree course. Cookbooks for the home cook, in keeping with the general practice of cooking vegetables to death, often instruct to cook asparagus for up to one hour. But the book put out by Delmonico’s Restaurant in New York City, The Epicurean by Chef Charles Ranhofer, (1891) instructs to boil the spears quickly, keeping them slightly hard. Those who enforced the rituals of Victorian dining addressed the problem of eating a stalk of asparagus by developing dishes and contrivances for the service and consumption of the vegetable that were particular to asparagus. The Haviland companies produced at least two styles of asparagus plates, the Marseilles blank with an asparagus stalk incorporated into the plate and the Haviland Frugier plate with its two side wells. It has been suggested that the proper use of the two side wells was for melted butter or vinaigrette in one The asparagus platter with liner in Schlieger #73 Raised asparagus stalk decoration at the end of the platter and mayonnaise based sauce in the other or sauce in one and tough stalk ends in the other. A special serving platter was also produced by Haviland & Co. which has a drain or liner. (Haviland acquired the Frugier company in the 1950s so the plate illustrated is quite recent.) Special plates were not the only dining accouterments required to consume asparagus at table, a special hooded server was developed to transfer asparagus from the platter to the diner’s plate. This silver serving piece looked somewhat like a pancake spatula with a cove across the top www.havilandcollectors.com of the blade to keep the spears from falling off when they were scooped up. There was a special tongs, as shown in the photo, for each diner to use in transferring the asparagus from plate to mouth, necessary to avoid the horror of fingers contacting food at table. Which brings us to the question, why was it so important to serve the whole stalk why didn’t they just cut the stalks up before serving the asparagus? I 5 Researching and Writing About Haviland By Richard Pryor I’d like to discuss how each of us can enlarge the body of knowledge about our Haviland hobby and at the same time add to our enjoyment. You can easily write an article for the Quarterly and you don’t need to be a Rhodes scholar to do so. I never thought I’d be writing about Haviland, and it did take some arm-twisting, but it turned out to be fun. So How Does One Get Started? With any research, the topic begins with a simple question. From there you are led to other questions and discovery. My first question, which began my obsession with Haviland, was the same that many of you out there had when you started: What is the name of my pattern? When I inherited a dinner set from my late cousin Gladys Freese in 1972 that was the question I had. And I wanted to know, how old is it? I was introduced to the late Lillian Johnson, and later to the late Lois Montgomery. Both were early pattern matchers in California. Lillian identified the pattern as 52D. She also gave me my 6 first lesson in the Schleiger system of identification. At that time most of what we know now was in its infancy and the best she could do on the age question was “late 19th century.” This did lead to my next question and ultimately to my joining HCIF. My next question was much harder to answer. I had inherited the set from my cousin, Gladys. But who owned it originally? It was probably not my cousin’s, as she was married in 1918, and the pattern was much earlier according to the matchers. It could have been the wedding china of Mathilda Ricketts nee Kober, or the good china that had belonged to her mother-in-law, Edith Freese. The first clue of course came from the back mark. The mark is that of S. Sternheim and Son. They were a San Francisco retailer and their history reads like a history of San Francisco. Where Do I Look? The first place is the Internet. Google and Wikipedia will offer many suggestions, Haviland Quarterly Spring 2012 and the information they can provide will trigger ideas for further research. But the best source, and the most fun to delve into, will be your local museum or historical society. The people there spend their time pouring over the material they have in their collection regarding their own town. If you have a question, they may have an answer. They are also more than willing to assist you in your research. And they may also know where to direct you to find other resources they know about. Start taking notes. Add to your information. Remember, nothing is insignificant. You may think it has no relevance, but possibly it will in the near future. Write everything down. Starting with the names on your backmark, for example, look up the company history. Look in old business directories, you may even want to drive by the address and see if the building is still there. What has happened to the business over time? Are there any pictures, or any advertisements in newspapers of the era? Once you have your extremely rough outline then you can start on the draft of your article. Print out what you have and look at it on paper. (Forty-seven errors that were not there before you printed it will magically appear.) Add to the article as you can and at one point you will have a complete rough draft ready to be edited. This is what I found out about my inherited dinnerware. In 1849 San Francisco was nothing more than a small shipping village called Yerba Buena. It was and is situated on seven prominent, sand and flea-infested hills. An early account of San Francisco in the 1850s had travelers leaving their saddles on the bed of the hotel room and sleeping on the floor. Their bedrolls were cleaner and had fewer fleas. Then gold was discovered in Coloma, which at that time was a two-day journey to the northeast of San Francisco. The village of Yerba Buena (now San Francisco after the Franciscan mission) was swelling rapidly with those who had gold fever. Abandoned ships clogged the harbor. Sailors had jumped ship to seek their fortune in the gold fields. Many of these ships eventually became the foundations and basements of buildings that were erected on top of them. Several such basements still exist today. The reality of the gold rush was that most prospectors found nothing. Few made fortunes. Corporations took over, etc. Those who really cashed in were the merchants who came to service and supply the miners. Those who made money mined the miners. There is an old poem, if somewhat irreverent: The miners came in ’49 The whores in ’51. And when they got together, T’was born the native son. By 1863 the Civil War (or the War Between the States) was raging. California was now a state, and San Francisco an incorporated city. Amiel Wangenheim, Samuel Sternheim, A. L. (Albert Levi) Wangenheim, and David Stern (son-in-law of Levi Strauss) founded Wangenheim and Sternheim. This group of young entrepreneurs was in the business of importing crockery, glass, restaurant and bar supplies. They had a small two-story shop on Market Street, which at that time was the central retail district of San Francisco. In the 1870s a second mineral rush hit the west coast, this time in the search for silver. A massive deposit was found near Virginia City, Nevada. The Comstock Load brought more fortune seekers from the East and more wealth for the West. About this time (1875) Wangenheim and Sternheim had relocated to the corner of Sansome and California Streets. By 1884 Wangenheim and Sternheim occupied a large four-story building at the corner of Sansome and California, later moving to Pine and Sansome. San Francisco was fast becoming a wealthy city. Wangenheim and Sternheim were located near two of the most prestigious hotels in San Francisco: William Ralston's Grand Hotel, and his Palace Hotel, still in exhistence. The business continued to grow and by 1899, it occupied a larger building in the heart of the retail district at the corner of Sutter and Market. Wangenheim had passed away but the store still bore his name. They still imported goods but also exported merchandise to Hawaii, the South Seas and Asiatic ports. Sternheim along with Levi Strauss and many other businessmen belonged to the “Traffic Association of California.” Sternheim was also a Mason. In 1900 the store changed its name when Sternheim’s son Benjamin became a partner. The business was now S. Sternheim and Son. As you can see this is now giving me a clearer picture of the age of my set. It is also a part of San Francisco history. It doesn't stop here. S. Sternheim and Son closed its doors in 1906. Actually, they had no choice. California is crisscrossed with dozens of fault lines and on April 18th of 1906, the San Andreas Fault moved — in some places — as much as 12 feet in a matter of 45 seconds. The damage was widespread, but three fires broke out due to broken gas lines. With no water pressure due to ruptured water mains, and a misguided attempt to create firebreaks by the Army, San Francisco burned. S. Sternheim and Son reopened in 1907 at the corner of Van Ness and Sutter but by 1908 the firm vanished from the records. www.havilandcollectors.com Did I get my question answered? Well, I think so. The Ricketts family lived in San Luis Obispo and moved to San Francisco after 1906. They came to this area too late to have been the first purchasers. The Freese family lived on Army Street at the time of the earthquake and fire. They had moved from Minneapolis in the 1890s so I concluded that they probably purchased the set new for their new house in San Francisco after they moved to California. Edith Freese probably purchased it sometime after 1900. How Do You Create An Article? You do what I just did. You start with your question and begin fleshing out a picture. Begin with what you know and go from there. With modern computers, this can be done quite easily. Every time you find something new, insert it and move on. Never fear editing. A second set of eyes often helps in the flow of the article as well as the basics. Also, the final editor may reduce the size for space reasons or possibly add information that you did not find, such as a date or a photo. It’s all part of creating an article, but in the end it is you who have added to the knowledge of our hobby. In the process, you have made your own collection something very special and meaningful for you, and you have been published! And you never know, sometimes a reader will contact you with additional information that you never would have found on your own! I 7 Lucy Hayes and the Presidential China of the Rutherford B. Hayes Administration by Sharon Green This year the focus of the HCIF Annual Conference is the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential service, the Haviland china selected by Lucy Webb Hayes during her husband’s administration (1877–1881). This very unusual set of china is also the focus this summer of an exhibit at the Hayes Presidential Home and Library in Fremont, Ohio. Organized by HCIF members Janice Stockman, Bonnie and Jim Kline and Jackie Doctor, with the assistance of others in our organization, the exhibit runs from May 15, 2013 to September 20, 2012. In addition to the display of Hayes china the exhibit illustrates how the china was made and how it was used. This is the description of the Hayes White House China from Party Politics: Entertaining at the White House published by the First Ladies Organization: “The Hayes State Dinner service is the most unusual of all the presidential china services. The china’s creation came about by a chance meeting in 1879 in the White House conservatory between First Lady Lucy Hayes and artist Theodore R. Davis. Mrs. Hayes was in the process of choosing fern clippings to send to Haviland and Company for a new State Dinner service. As the two talked, Mr. Davis brought up the idea of using the flora and fauna of North America as décor for the new china. Lucy readily agreed and asked Davis to oversee its direction. Theodore Davis went into seclusion at his studio in Asbury Park, New Jersey where he eventually produced 130 different designs of American plants, animals and scenic views. He also created several unique shapes for the fine china itself. The total cost of the new china was $3,120.00, and it was first used at an intimate dinner in November 1880, in honor of the newly-elected President and 8 Mrs. James Garfield. Though art critics were severe in their reviews, the service was well-liked by the general public and reproductions were extremely popular.” Theodore Davis was widely known at the time as a Civil War correspondent artist, whose battlefield sketches were widely published in the Northern newspapers during the war. There were two types of reproductions of the Hayes service. The pattern was reproduced as an exact copy of the Presidential pattern, using the shapes and images of the Hayes set itself. These sets were extremely expensive costing $25,000 per set, (to convert to today’s dollars multiply by 20) and they were only purchased by the millionaires of the Gilded Age such as James Dooley, a partner of Jay Gould. A complete set can be seen at Dooley’s home, Maymount Mansion on the James River in Virginia. The home is a museum owned by the City of Richmond, VA. In addition to the replica sets, Haviland also produced a much less expensive reproduction that was made by photocopying the images and printing the sepia and white photos in the center of dinnerware decorated with standard Haviland borders. Game sets decorated with images of birds, and fish sets were made. The photo reproduction process caused the images to be reversed — if the fish on a original Hayes platter faced left, on the photo reproduction platter it faces right. The Hayes Presidential set of dinnerware is so unique that one is compelled to ask, who was this Mrs. Hayes, that she would select such a radical pattern. Often referred to in history books as Lemonade Lucy because she did not serve alcohol in the White House, in fact she was not given this nickname until after Haviland Quarterly Spring 2012 her death and the ban on alcohol was instituted by her husband, who supported the Temperance Movement (and got their votes). Lucy was the first president’s wife with a college degree, having graduated from Wesleyan Female College in Cincinnati, Ohio, at age18. She was exceptionally well educated for her time. She married Hayes when she was 21, after he had begun his law practice. She was a strong anti slavery advocate, yet she opposed giving women the right to vote, probably in support of her husband’s views. Religion permeated her life, and she held Sunday evening group hymn sings with the cabinet and congressmen at the White House, something that is unimaginable today. Lucy was very popular even before her arrival in Washington DC. One of the first political wives to become a public figure before she became First Lady (a term first used to refer to her), she had become known to the public during visits to the Civil War camps of her husband’s company, the 23rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Later, when he served as Governor of Ohio she went with him on his tours to state reform schools, prisons and asylums. Her experience in these semipublic roles positioned her as a confident and capable hostess when she entered the White House. There was no Inaugural Ball when Hayes was elected. Hayes lost the popular vote to Samuel Tilden, but many of the election returns were contested so the results were turned over to an Election Commission and the commission favored Hayes by one vote. The result was not settled until three days before Hayes took the oath of office. One of Lucy’s most elaborate parties was a celebration of the Hayes’ silver wedding anniversary that same year. The couple repeated their wedding vows at a White House ceremony before many of the same guests who had attended the wedding in Cincinnati twenty-five years before. Dinners during the Grant Administration which immediately preceded that of Hayes, were multi-course affairs. When the Grants held a dinner for 36 guests to celebrate and honor Hayes, the incoming president, the dining room was garlanded with ropes of roses from the ceiling to the table. A blooming pink azalea ten feet high stood behind Lucy’s chair and a twenty course dinner was served. It included “Consomme, Bisque, Woodcock Patties, Salmon, Roman Punch (an alcoholic sorbet palate cleanser), Filet of Beef, Crawfish Pudding, Breast of Pheasant, Goose Livers, Artichokes, Turkey, Canvasback Duck and Warm Sweet Dish.”1 What the Hayes’ table lacked in liquor (water flowed like champagne at their dinners according to one diplomat) they made up for in fine cuisine, and Lucy became one of the best loved hostesses to preside over the White House. She brought her own cook, Winnie Monroe, to Lucy Webb Hayes 1831-1889, wife of Rutherford B. Hayes, 19th President of the United States. Portrate by C.T. Webber in 1873. the White House, who must have been very skilled, as one guest said the White House table “groaned with delicacies which called forth admiration.”2 But at 10:00 p.m. the Marine Band played “Home Sweet Home” and everyone departed immediately. Lucy instituted the annual Easter egg roll on the White House lawn, possibly inspired by her religious convictions as the practice was originally thought to memorialize rolling the stones from Christ’s tomb. But there were no card parties, dances or balls at the White House during the Hayes’ tenure. Widely praised for her family virtues, more than one historian has suggested that she was the dominant figure in the Hayes’ household. Only five of her eight children lived to adulthood. Her second child, James Webb Cook Hayes, known as Webb, was born before the Civil War and died during the depression. He served as his father’s secretary when Hayes was Reception gown worn by Lucy Webb Hayes, at the White House ion New year’s day 1878. On display at the Hayes Museum, Fremont, Ohio. www.havilandcollectors.com governor of Ohio, and again when Hayes became President. This son was a true over achiever, he co-founded the company which ultimately became Union Carbide, and he was awarded the Medal of Honor for valor during the Spanish American War. Webb was the moving force behind formation of the Hayes Presidential Library, which was the first of its kind. Visiting the home and library, Spiegal Grove in Fremont, Ohio, one gets the impression that no one in the family ever threw anything out. All to our benefit, the family artifacts on display create an immediate feel for the time in which they lived. Hayes retired after the end of his term in 1881. They moved to Speigel Grove and Lucy happily remained there until her death from a stroke in 1889 at the age of 57. Large mahogany sideboard from the private dining room of the White House, exhibiting the Haviland state china of the Hayes Administration. 9 Recipes dish was Lime an Orange Baskets: d Orange Sherbe Soak ½ package t in gelatin in a little Add 2 pounds su water to soften. gar to 2 quarts bo iling water. Stir and add the gelatin vigorously . Allow to cool. Cut 6 oranges in out the insides w half, scoop ith a completely. Squee sharp knife, taking care to clean them out ze the juice from the orange pulp. orange juice, alon Add the g with the juice fr om 5 limes to th mixture. Beat 4 e ge egg whites fo a fr oth and add them latin gradually. Freeze to the gelatin . At serving time, serve in the oran How lovely they ge halves. must have looked on Lucy’s dessert plates.3 Punch President Grant’s Roman 4 Lemons 6 Oranges 1 Gallon water champagne) 1 Quart whiskey (or 1 bottle 8 Egg whites Sugar to taste juice and 6 oranges. Squeeze the Grate the rinds of 4 lemons ttle and 1 quart whiskey or 1 bo and add it to 1 gallon water to a ted rinds. Beat 8 egg whites champagne, along with the gra serve. taste. Freeze until ready to froth and add. Add sugar to a palate g finale for a dinner party or Makes a delicious, refreshin 4 cleanser between courses. Roman Punch No. 1 The White House Cookbook has this recip e for Roman Punch No. 1: Grate the yellow rind of four lemons and two oranges upon two pounds of loaf sugar. Squeeze the juice of the lemons and oranges; cover the juice and let it stand unti l the next day. Strain it through a sieve, mix with the sugar; add a bottle of champagne and the whites of eight eggs beaten to the stiff froth. It may be frozen or not, as desired. For winter use snow instead of ice.5 1. The President’s Cookbook, (1968) at p.294 2. Id. at p. 296 3. Id. at p. 301 4. Id. at p. 291 5. The White House Cookbook, (1887) at p. 415 10 # Celebrity Orange Sherbe t in Orange Bas kets A favored Hayes Haviland Quarterly Spring 2012 Meadow Visitors Go Events consipired to form the first circus in the United States, it wasn’t planned. In approximately 1808, Hachaliah (pronounced heck-a-LIE-uh) Bailey, a farmer in Somers, New York, bought an elephant at a tavern in New York City for $1,000 to work on his farm. He named the elephant Old Bet (for Betsy). Soon nearby townspeople started coming to see the animal. Their visits were so disruptive of work on the farm that Hachaliah began to charge them to view the elephant. He soon learned that he could make more profit by charging people to view the elephant than he could make from the elephant’s labors on the farm. Shortly thereafter he began touring the neighboring counties with the elephant. He had a wagon full of hay, a horse, and the elephant. He traveled at night so people would not get a free look at the elephant. He charged 25 cents to see her. Before long he was touring as far away as Georgia. Meanwhile his neighbors back home in Somers were acquiring exotic animals of their own and developing menageries. Old Bet is believed to have been only the second elephant to have entered the United States. Mr. Bailey sold shares in Old Bet which enabled the shareholders to display her too. Finally, in 1816, an irate farmer shot and killed Old Bet because he felt poor people should not be spending their money to see her. Bailey promptly bought another elephant. He also built a hotel in Somers and named it the Elephant Hotel. It is now the Town Hall and a museum dedicated to the Early American Circus. Hachaliah became wealthy and in about 1837 he sold the Elephant Hotel and moved to Fairfax County, Virginia. He bought a tract of land in a place which became known as Bailey’s Crossroads. His son Corner by Sharon Green to the Circus with the Baileys (Barnum & Bailey Circus) and daughter-in-law operated an inn there for many years in the house that Hacaliah built, known as the Moray Mansion. After ten years in Virgina, Hachaliah returned to Somers, while he was there he was kicked by a horse and died. Being located on the Dinner plate Close up of Meadow Visitors Leesburg Pike, Bailey’s Crossroads was the site of much turmoil during the Civil War. Hachaliah’s circus work was carried on by a nephew, Fred Harrison Bailey, whose adopted son, James A. Bailey, succeeded him, and later merged the Bailey circus with P.T. Barnum’s Circus. Hacaliah’s third wife, Mary Purdy, with whom he had eight children, died in New York City in 1871. The Meadow Visitors set was in her estate, and remained in the Bailey family until 2011. I Relish Dish Butter Basket www.havilandcollectors.com 11 Pudding Bowls Blank 2 Pudding Bowl and liner by Sharon Green Here we have a Theodore Haviland pudding bowl, and examples of Ranson, Marseilles and Blank No. 2 pudding bowls. The inner bowl has an unglazed bottom and is usually undecorated. When we find decorated baking bowls they are usually Theodore Haviland examples or those painted by amateur china painters. The inner bowl was used for baking, its unglazed bottom permitted expansion in the heat of the cook’s oven. When the dish was ready to be served, the baking bowl was inserted into the serving bowl, placed on the underplate and the server sallied forth to the dining table. We find them in almost all of the Haviland blanks. Did our grandparents really eat that much pudding? The answer is yes, but the term pudding covered a much broader range of foods at the turn of the century than it does in common usage today. Puddings included meat puddings which we would call casserole dishes. The term also included both savory and sweet souffles. Rice pudding and bread pudding, all of which are baked, have retained their popularity. I Ranson Pudding Bowl and liner Theodore Haviland Pudding Bowl & liner Marseilles Pudding Bowl, Liner & Underplate 12 Marseilles Pudding Bowl, Liner & Underplate Haviland Quarterly Spring 2012 Patterns of the Quarter Wonderful Things From the time I started editing the Quarterly I have photographed pieces of Haviland that might be used for future articles. These inspiring and unusual pieces are so worthy of publication that I wish to present them here as the Patterns of the Quarter. I hope you enjoy them. I Hair Receiver on Blank 2 Ash tray and match box holder. This was an advertising specialty given out by the Haviland Company. Banana dish Smoking set Tiffany cup and saucer www.havilandcollectors.com 13 Publications Haviland NEW ITEMS I 1879 Haviland Catalog. Newly reformatted copy, easy to read and use. A classic! 58 pages. Spiral-bound hard copy. ....................................................................................................................................$10.00 On CD. ............................................................................................................................................................... $10.00 RECENT ITEMS I The Art of Haviland Pottery. A 32-page color exhibition catalog w/ over 160 images. Excellent text and artist identification.......... $15.00 I The French Connection, Impressionism in French and America Pottery, 1872-1900. A 32-page color exhibition catalog showing the connection between Haviland and American Art Pottery. ........ $15.00 I The Ranson Blank. An Identification Guide, Revised Edition, 2005. B/W photos; 32 pages; now 164 pieces shown; history of Ranson Blank. .............................................. $12.00 I 1891 Haviland Catalog. A new and greatly improved copy of this important Haviland & Co. catalog. 95 pages. Not for pattern identification.............................................................. $10.00 I 1891 Haviland Catalog. Same as above on CD-ROM. ............................................................................ $10.00 I 1970 Haviland Catalog. CD-ROM over 90 pages in color of china from this era. Interesting pictures of manufacturing process. History of company. ........................................................ $10.00 I 1912 Theodore Haviland 50 page Picture Book (photos of factory and workers), plus 1924 and 1926 Pilgrim Blank Catalogs. CD-ROM. .......................................................................... $10.00 I The Marseille Blank. An Identification Guide. 32 pages, over 244 photos, 47 in color, identifies over 200 items................................................................ $15.00 I Haviland Pottery. B/W catalog, copy and photos of 221 pottery items, 58 terra cotta, 163 Chaplet. 32 pages.. ............................................................................................................ $10.00 I Frank Haviland Catalog. A photocopy of an 1886 retail catalog from Frank Haviland’s New York store. Photos and prices. 28 pages... .............................................................. $10.00 BASIC HAVILAND PUBLICATIONS I Celebrating 150 Years of Haviland, 1842-1992. The basic Haviland book. Beautiful photos, history, backmarks, artists, 84 pages. ............................................................................... $19.95 I Dining with Flowers: Haviland 1860-1910. A celebration of the flowers used in Haviland patterns. Color photos. 47 pages. ..................................................................................... $15.00 I Charles Field Haviland Identification Guide by Margaret Head. B/W photos of 175 CFH patterns. 129 pages.............................................................................................. $10.00 Quantity Total __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ SPECIALTY ITEMS I Haviland Patents 1875-1938. B/W copies of photos and drawings of 212 patents from the U. S. Patent Office. Soft cover. .................................................................................. $15.00 I Haviland Patents 1875-1938 on CD-ROM. Some in color. ................................................................... $10.00 I Haviland Patent Specifications. Copies of the descriptions of the original patents above. ................ $10.00 I Haviland Patent Specifications on CD-ROM........................................................................................... $10.00 I CD-ROM Collection of Catalogs. Contains 1891, 1905, 1927 catalogs, Burley catalog 1907, store brochures, history, backmarks............................................................................ $20.00 I 1860 Haviland Catalog. Photocopy of original, 46 pages. This catalog is not for pattern identification. Blanks only. ............................................................................ $5.00 I Haviland China Inventory Software. Keep a record of your Haviland and other collectibles. Manual included. Not Mac compatible. ........ $20.00 I Haviland Note Cards. 10 lovely cards, 5 different designs. ........................................................................ $6.00 __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ __________ Shipping charges: 1 item $3.50; 2-3 items $4.60; 4 or more $6.70 ............................................................Shipping: __________ __________ ..................................................................................................................................................................................Total: __________ __________ Name __________________________________________________________________________ Address _________________________________________________________________________ City _________________________________________ State ___________ ZIP _____________ Phone __________________________________ E-mail _________________________________ Checks payable to HCIF. These items can also be ordered online and paid via PayPal to [email protected] at www.havilandcollectors.com Mail form with remittance to: Haviland Publications c/o Arthur R Stees 1803 W. Church St. Freeport, IL 61032