Joseph Lownes
Tankard

MakerAmerican, 1758–1820, active c. 1780–1816
CultureAmerican
Titles
  • Tankard
Datec. 1798
Made inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
MediumSilver
Dimensions7 1/2 × 8 × 5 1/2 in. (19.1 × 20.3 × 14 cm)
Credit LineThe Bayou Bend Collection, museum purchase funded by Cheri and Andrew Fossler, Judith S. and J. Michael Baldwin, Sharon Dies, Carol Jean and Michael Moehlman, Toni E. Wallingford, Martha Erwin, and Janet Marshall, in memory of Michael K. Brown
Object numberB.2015.21
Current Location
Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens
Metals Study Room
On view

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Department
Bayou Bend
Object Type
Description

During the late 1790s, the United States Navy was just beginning to emerge from a near-defunct status that resulted from its having been disbanded at the end of the Revolutionary War. American shipping at sea was extremely vulnerable during this time. Attacks by Barbary pirates on American shipping prompted the Naval Act of 1794, which reestablished the Navy, but the newly commissioned ships, which included the frigate USS Constitution, took years to enter service. The years from 1798 to 1800 mark the period of the so-called Quasi-War with France, an undeclared naval war that resulted largely from disagreements over the United States’ repayment of war debts incurred to finance the Revolution.

This tankard by Philadelphia silversmith Joseph Lownes is a record of this moment in French-American relations. As its inscription recounts, Captain J. C. Breevor, commanding the ship Fair American, left Philadelphia for Havana with a cargo of flour, timber, furniture, and other goods, only to be captured on October 7, 1798, by French privateers, who operated quite extensively against American shipping. By what must have been a feat of considerable courage and daring, Captain Breevor and two of his men managed to retake the ship from her captors and return her to Charleston, South Carolina. The tankard was part of a gift of appreciation—a “Tribute of Applause,” according to the inscription—given by the firm that had underwritten the insurance on the ship. Such underwriting was at that time shifting away from private individuals to corporations, as was the case with the Fair American’s ill-fated voyage. The ship’s story did not end with the tankard, however. Captain Breevor felt that his efforts in saving the ship and its cargo were deserving of a greater reward, and the courts agreed, issuing a judgment in his favor.

The tankard is a handsome example of the federal style, clean and simple in its outlines and profiles. Made of seamed sheet silver, this tankard is the first of this form to enter the collection. Such examples are sometimes called “hoop” tankards for the horizontal bands that decorate the body. Although silversmiths in other American cities made hoop tankards, the form is associated more with Philadelphia than with other major centers.


ProvenanceJohn Christian Brevoor; by descent, the Brevoor family; purchased by the Mutual Assurance Company, Philadelphia, late 19th century; The Green Tree Collection, Philadelphia; consigned to [Freeman's, The Pennsylvania Sale, November 10 , 2015, sale 1529, lot 26]; purchased by MFAH, 2015.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
Monogrammed on hinged lid: JCB
Engraved inscription on body: The Underwriters of Philadelphia offer the Tribute of Applause to the Bravery of Captain J.C. Brevoor. The ship Fair American of Philadelphia Commanded by Capt. John C. Brevoor was Captured by a French Privateer October 7th, 1798, who placed his crew on board their Vessel with the Exception of himself and two of his men, and, after remaining a prisoner nine days, Capt. Brevoor and his two men Recaptured his own Vessel from two French officers and Seven of their Crew and brought them a Prize into the Port of Charleston S.C.
Maker's mark stamped on bottom: J. Lownes

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

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