Curling Tongs
Date1750 - 1800
MediumSteel
DimensionsA: OL 10 ¾ in.; Width across handles 2 5/8 in.
B: OL 9 ¾ in.; Width across handles 2 3/8 in.
B: OL 9 ¾ in.; Width across handles 2 3/8 in.
Credit LineGift of The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA
Object number2024-165,A&B
DescriptionTwo pairs of steel curling tongs consisting of two hinged sections with square upper shafts ending in curled handles. One handle is longer than the other. Below the hinge, the curling iron shafts are elongated and slightly tapered.Label TextBy the mid-18th century, wigs were widely worn by both men and women in England and its American colonies. Tongs like these, generally imported to the colonies from England, were used to curl both natural hair and wigs. In Virginia, they were just as likely to be wielded by an enslaved valet than a paid hairdresser.ProvenancePrior to 1968, Elizabeth Daniel (Richmond, VA); 1968, given to the Valentine Museum (Richmond, VA); 2024-present, given to The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation (Williamsburg, VA)1740-1780
1744
Ca. 1800
ca.1800-1850
ca. 1760
ca. 1815
1750-1800
1750-1850
