Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts [serial] 5, 1 (1978)

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Brigham, Paul Revere' s Engravings (New York: Atheneum, 1969), pp. 4 and 6. See also Henry J. Kauffman, American Copper & Brass (Camden: Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1968), p. 175, and Martha Gandy Fales, Early American Silver (New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., 1973), pp. 225 and 226.
17. Montgomery, op. cit., pp. 53 and 54.
18. This pair has an unusual horizontal member on the rear of the billet bar which may be a later addition.
19. The pair in 8a are yellow in color and not the orange of other ex
...amples in Group III, indicating a higher percentage of zinc than normal. The Research Laboratory of the Henry Francis duPont Winterthur Museum kindly examined the andirons in Figures 8a, 9, 10, and 11. An element analysis was determined by X-ray fluorescence in the laboratory of each of the four pairs. The results were not conclusive to say that on the basis of composition they were from a single source. As is known, scrap brass, cop- per, bronze, and other metal were used for foundry melts. Perhaps one day, when enough tests are performed on American brass products, a pat- tern will emerge, especially in the very early period of foundry develop- ment in the colonies.

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