Shoe buckle
Dateca. 1775
OriginAmerica (probably)
MediumSilver, Iron/Steel
DimensionsH: 1 3/4"; W: 1 15/16".
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1952-294
DescriptionShoe buckle. Arched, rectangular, silver frame with serpentine sides; steel chape; U shaped prong.Label TextThe most common way to fasten shoes throughout the 18th century was with a buckle. Shoe buckles ranged in material, shape, and changed in size depending on the fashion. The buckles attach to shoes by using chapes. One side; known as a fluke and in the shape of a whales tail, has two tines that attached to the latchet of the shoe. The other side of the chape; known as the tongue, pierces the leather to hold the shoe closed. The squared serpentine edge of the buckle was very fashionable in the 1750s.Mark(s)"WP" with a pellet between. Believed to be the mark of William Peavey (? - 1774), a London small worker. Peavey’s mark was registered on 13 February 1773.
See:
Arthur G. Grimwade, London Goldsmiths 2697 - 1937, Their Marks and Lives from the Original Registers at Goldsmiths' Hall and Other Sources (London, Faber and Faber, 1976) 230, 618.ProvenanceDuplicate from Mabel Brady Garman Collection, Yale University Art Gallery.Vendor: Yale University Art Gallery
1770-1790
1770-1790
1760-1775
3rd quarter 18 c.
1775-1800
18th century
ca. 1760
Last half of 18th c.
ca. 1745
ca. 1745
18th c.
