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- Inkwell, 1890-1920 -

- 1890-1920
- Collections - Artifact
Inkwell, 1890-1920
- Inkwell, 1904-1917 - Cadman Robertson joined Hampshire Pottery in 1904 and began developing decorative household items covered with an attractive thick brown, red, blue, or green glaze. The Keene, New Hampshire, company continued to produce similar wares for a few years after Robertson's sudden death in 1914. The company was sold in 1917 and focused on making commercial China for restaurants and hotels. The factory closed in 1923.

- 1904-1917
- Collections - Artifact
Inkwell, 1904-1917
Cadman Robertson joined Hampshire Pottery in 1904 and began developing decorative household items covered with an attractive thick brown, red, blue, or green glaze. The Keene, New Hampshire, company continued to produce similar wares for a few years after Robertson's sudden death in 1914. The company was sold in 1917 and focused on making commercial China for restaurants and hotels. The factory closed in 1923.
- Inkwell, 1790-1820 -

- 1790-1820
- Collections - Artifact
Inkwell, 1790-1820
- Inkwell, 1890-1920 - Art Glass is ornamental and decorative glass dating from the mid-to-late 19th century through the early 20th century. Makers of Art Glass employed newly developed technologies for producing vibrant colors and surface textures. This is most famously seen in the iridescent surfaces of Louis Comfort Tiffany and his contemporaries, although Art Glass took many shapes and forms.

- 1890-1920
- Collections - Artifact
Inkwell, 1890-1920
Art Glass is ornamental and decorative glass dating from the mid-to-late 19th century through the early 20th century. Makers of Art Glass employed newly developed technologies for producing vibrant colors and surface textures. This is most famously seen in the iridescent surfaces of Louis Comfort Tiffany and his contemporaries, although Art Glass took many shapes and forms.
- Inkwell, 1790-1830 - America glass factories produced a variety of inexpensive glass products for the early-nineteenth-century consumer. Glass manufacturers turned out bottles, flasks, tableware and other household items such as this inkwell. This small decorative item adorned writing tables or desks and held ink used to sign documents, tally ledger columns or pen letters to family and friends.

- 1790-1830
- Collections - Artifact
Inkwell, 1790-1830
America glass factories produced a variety of inexpensive glass products for the early-nineteenth-century consumer. Glass manufacturers turned out bottles, flasks, tableware and other household items such as this inkwell. This small decorative item adorned writing tables or desks and held ink used to sign documents, tally ledger columns or pen letters to family and friends.
- Inkwell, 1815-1835 - America glass factories produced a variety of inexpensive glass products for the early-nineteenth-century consumer. Glass manufacturers turned out bottles, flasks, tableware and other household items such as this inkwell. This small decorative item adorned writing tables or desks and held ink used to sign documents, tally ledger columns or pen letters to family and friends.

- 1815-1835
- Collections - Artifact
Inkwell, 1815-1835
America glass factories produced a variety of inexpensive glass products for the early-nineteenth-century consumer. Glass manufacturers turned out bottles, flasks, tableware and other household items such as this inkwell. This small decorative item adorned writing tables or desks and held ink used to sign documents, tally ledger columns or pen letters to family and friends.
- Inkwell, 1815-1850 - America glass factories produced a variety of inexpensive glass products for the early-nineteenth-century consumer. Glass manufacturers turned out bottles, flasks, tableware and other household items such as this inkwell. This small decorative item adorned writing tables or desks and held ink used to sign documents, tally ledger columns or pen letters to family and friends.

- 1815-1850
- Collections - Artifact
Inkwell, 1815-1850
America glass factories produced a variety of inexpensive glass products for the early-nineteenth-century consumer. Glass manufacturers turned out bottles, flasks, tableware and other household items such as this inkwell. This small decorative item adorned writing tables or desks and held ink used to sign documents, tally ledger columns or pen letters to family and friends.
- Pair of Inkwells -

- Collections - Artifact
Pair of Inkwells
- Inkwell, 1880-1920 -

- 1880-1920
- Collections - Artifact
Inkwell, 1880-1920