Peter L. Krider (1821-1895)

GENERAL DESCRIPTION
According to a trade journal obituary, Peter Krider (1821-1895) was born in Philadelphia and worked on a farm until he was fourteen. During the next six years he served an apprenticeship with John Curry, a local silversmith. For a period following, he worked at the factory of R. & W Wilson until he was able to establish his own business in 1851. Besides producing large amounts of solid silver flatware and hollowware, Krider was also an important manufacturer of society and exposition medals which were struck in various metals, including gold, silver, and bronze. That this was a fair-sized firm is indicated by the Federal Industrial Censuses of 1860, 1870, and 1880 and a short description of the premises in Philadelphia's Leading Industries (1866). According to these sources, the business was well capitalized and employed as many as thirty-five skilled workmen. Its products were distributed over a wide geographical area, a large trade being conducted with Kentucky and the southern states at one time. Krider's reputation as a decent and upstanding businessman was so high that he was known in the trade as "Honest Peter."

Excerpt from
Charles L. Venable, Silver in America, 1840-1940: A Century of Splendor (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art; New York, New York; Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1994), 155-320. 

NOTES
Updated format, added tags, and wrote rule, JBA - 8/15/17
added more tags - JBA 9/25/17

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TEACHING IDEAS 

RULES
apply to objects where constituent_id equals 918

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General Description
According to a trade journal obituary, Peter Krider (1821-1895) was born in Philadelphia and worked on a farm until he was fourteen. During the next six years he served an apprenticeship with John Curry, a local silversmith. For a period following, he worked at the factory of R. & W Wilson until he was able to establish his own business in 1851. Besides producing large amounts of solid silver flatware and hollowware, Krider was also an important manufacturer of society and exposition medals which were struck in various metals, including gold, silver, and bronze. That this was a fair-sized firm is indicated by the Federal Industrial Censuses of 1860, 1870, and 1880 and a short description of the premises in Philadelphia's Leading Industries (1866). According to these sources, the business was well capitalized and employed as many as thirty-five skilled workmen. Its products were distributed over a wide geographical area, a large trade being conducted with Kentucky and the southern states at one time. Krider's reputation as a decent and upstanding businessman was so high that he was known in the trade as "Honest Peter."

Excerpt from
Charles L. Venable, Silver in America, 1840-1940: A Century of Splendor (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art; New York, New York; Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1994), 155-320. 

Fun Facts
 

Archival Resources
 

Web Resources
 

Notes
Updated format, added tags, and wrote rule, JBA - 8/15/17
added more tags - JBA 9/25/17

tags
#draft
#completed
United States (nation): TGN: 7012149
*Decorative Arts and Design
decorative arts: AAT: 300054168
Philadelphia (Pennsylvania/United States): TGN: 7014406
gold (metal): AAT: 300011021
silver (metal): AAT: 300011029
bronze: AAT: 300010957
@Robinson
silversmiths: AAT: 300025323
silverware (visual works): AAT: 300234016
hollowware: AAT: 300194731
flatware: AAT: 300199800
Krider_Peter L.: DMA
source file
artists_and_designers-0172.xml.nores