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The
Magazine of OLD GLASS, April, 1940
TWO GLASS BANKS
The Magazine of OLD GLASS
April, 1940
TWO
GLASS BANKS
MUCH IS HEARD THESE DAYS OF some of the glass banks blown at
Sandwich. Undeniably, these whimsies are superb examples of the glass
blowers art, but equally certain is it that they are more representative
of the blower than any peculiarly national characteristic. Nor did
Sandwich workmen alone produce these magnificent proofs of
craftsmanship, as the bank was always a popular conceit with the glass
blower.
The two pressed banks illustrated on this page are as American as
Baseball, as typical of their era as the shaving mug. Today they are
desirable additions to a collection of banks, and are equally desirable
in a collection of glass. They are reproduced from a catalog issued in
1887 by McKee and Brothers, Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. The Cabinet Bank at
the right is 3-1/4" high and the Dome Bank is 4-1/4" tall.
No iron bank ever caught more deftly the feeling of a small village
bank than does one designated Cabinet, and no piece ever illustrated by
the glassmakers, who were, at the time, systematically exploiting our
yet young sense of nationalism, ever appealed more directly to the
readily-aroused feeling of patriotism latent in the American heart, than
does the Dome Bank. As though the stars which liberally adorn the dome,
itself reminiscent of many of our public buildings, were insufficient
reminders of the nationalistic character of this bank, the artist has
contrived to show us coins bearing Liberty, the American Eagle and the
phrase, United States of America.
Pieces of this sort capture all the whimsy and nostalgia of a
period forever passed, and serve, today, to remind us bluntly and with
no subtlety, of the heritage which is, and can remain ours.
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