
Another one of the city’s
former manufacturing enterprises that is preserved by the Gardner Museum is
silversmithing. In 1887 Frank W. Smith began manufacturing silverware in Gardner
and within a few years the Frank W. Smith Silver Company had one of the finest
equipped factories in the country for the manufacture of high grade sterling
silverware, both by machine and by hand. The company continued operations
until 1958. However, during the course of its history the company’s silver
services became the possession of notable individuals such as Princess Grace
of Monaco and Queen Elizabeth of England. Also, Smith silver groupings were
purchased, on occasion, for United States naval vessels, gifts from the states
or communities for which they were named.
One of
the superintendents and designers for the Smith Silver Company was Arthur
J. Stone who was hired in 1887. In 1901 Stone started his own silver shop
in Gardner which at one point would employ twelve apprentices and craftsmen.
That same year he joined the Arts and Crafts Society of Boston. At a time
when manufactured silver was reflecting the ornate designs of the Victorian
Age, this organization advocated a return to simpler forms.
Arthur
Stone remained in business for thirty-six years, during which time he became
known as “The Dean of American Silversmiths.” His works included hand wrought
silver products such as toys, bowls, trophies, tankards, tea sets, table silver
in all forms, altar sets for churches and often ecclesiastical pieces. A gold
monstrance for the Church of the Advent in Boston is a fine example of this
craftsmanship. Today, beyond private ownership, Arthur Stone’s workmanship
can be found in New York City’s Metropolitan Museum and the Worcester Museum
of Fine Arts among many public institutions.
After
36 years the shop was purchased by Henry E. Heywood who called the company
Stone Associates and continued with the same craftsmen until 1957 when the
shop closed.
After Arthur Stone’s retirement several
Gardner silversmiths continued their craftsmanship. However, at the present
time the only practicing silversmith is a grandson of one of Arthur Stone’s
master craftsman. Even though the age of silversmithing has essentially ended
in Gardner, the Museum works diligently to keep its memory alive. For instance,
in the Spring of 1991, the Museum held an exhibit titled “A Century of Gardner
Sterling Silver.” The exhibit provided for a four week display of manufactured
and hand wrought silver by eleven of Gardner’s master craftsmen. In conjunction
with the exhibit the Museum published a twenty-one page brochure about the
craftsmen whose works were on display. Now in its second printing, the brochure
is sold to the public at a modest price.
The other
income related to the exhibit comes from the sale of a book titled Arthur
J. Stone Designer and Silversmith. This book was authored by Elenita Chickering,
a relative by marriage of Arthur Stone, and was published by the Library of
the Boston Athenaeum. Not only has Mrs. Chickering donated the book’s remainder
to the Museum but also she has designated the Museum as a repository for her
research files, which will become a significant addition to the organization’s
archives.
Another
step that the Museum has taken to preserve the memory of Gardner’s silversmithing
tradition took place in the fall of 2000 when Dr. Paul Harasimowicz replicated
a working silver shop on the building’s ground floor. The shop’s tools were
donated to the Museum by Emery Prior, a relative of Elenita Chickering. It
was the shop of Ernest Lehtonen, a master craftsman who worked for Stone Associates,
successors to Arthur Stone. Within the shop (pictured above) visitors can
see an annual crafting demonstration of a silver spoon. Now, this demonstration
is done by Peter Erickson, the grandson of one of Arthur Stone’s master craftsmen,
George Erickson, and the last to ply silversmithing in the city. George Erickson
ran his own shop on Green Street for many years and it was inherited by his
grandson, Peter Erickson. Visitors can also view a video interview of Peter
Erickson and his grandfather taken from Boston’s Channel 7 “Our Times.”
Another
video that is available for viewing was made by the Museum of Fine Arts in
Boston from a silent movie produced in 1920 by Harvard University. This film
is of Arthur Stone and his workers. Further, the silver shop also has a collection
of silver that was made in Gardner.