36 items have been found that match your search request.
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Butter Knife
post 1834
1983.01
This elegant mother-of-pearl butter knife went on the market in 1834, just two years after the Russel Cutlery Company was founded. |
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Carving Fork
c. 1905
1983.03a.14
This carving fork was made by Lamson & Goodnow Company of Shelburne Falls, the largest cutlery producer in the U.S. in 1860. |
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Knife Sharpener
c. 1905
1983.03a.17
This knife sharpener was made by Lamson & Goodnow Company of Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts, the largest cutlery producer in the U.S. in 1860. |
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Table Knife
1987.20.02d
Thanks to skilled German immigrant workers and a growing U.S. steel industry, knife and fork sets like these were made entirely on location in Shelburne Falls. |
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Table Knife
1987.20.04
The design of this Lamson & Goodnow knife is both decorative and functional. |
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Knife
1851-1858
1988.26
This knife was made by South River Cutlery during the company's short tenure in Conway center. |
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Knife
1992.08.08
This knife was made at the John Russell Company's early home on the Green River in Greenfield, MAssachusetts. |
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"Mark's China Putty, For Cementing Glass And China Ware"
c. 1870
L03.011
George Washington Mark (1795-1879) was a longtime Greenfield, Massachusetts, resident and artist. |
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Elm Burl Bowl
1600-1700
IR.F.104
Native Americans made and used this wooden bowl between 1000 and 300 years ago. |
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Birch bark bowl
c. 1790
1985.0985
A Penobscot artisan made this small birch bark bowl in the late 18th century. |