( 15.9 x 2.5 x 2.2 cm ), engraved: on the underside of the handle: "EEG" in script
Help us present groundbreaking exhibitions and develop educational programs about our nation's history for more than 200,000 schoolchildren annually.
Deep bowl with pointed end. Forks Spoons,
The overall length is approximately 5½ to 6½ inches. Letter in Support of the NEH, IMLS and NHPRC, Bill Graham and the Rock & Roll Revolution, Colonists, Citizens, Constitutions: Creating the American Republic, Dreaming Together: New-York Historical Society and Asia Society Museum, Fourth Floor Exhibition Images and Highlights, Hope Wanted: New York City Under Quarantine, Life Cut Short: Hamilton’s Hair and the Art of Mourning Jewelry, New-York Historical Society Opens Transformed Fourth Floor, The People Count: The Census in the Making of America, So Ready for Laughter: Bob Hope and World War II, Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Holiday Express: Toys and Trains from the Jerni Collection, Examination Days: The New York African Free School Collection, Marion Mahony Griffin's The Magic of America, Religious and Charitable Organization Collections, The Diane and Adam E. Max Conference on Women’s History, Women and the American Story: A Curriculum Guide, Module 1 - Unofficial Politician: Dolley Madison in Early Washington, Resource 7: Paul Jennings's Account of the British Attack, Module 2 - Breaking the Rules: Women Reformers, 1800-1860, Resource 11: Catharine Beecher’s Campaign Against Indian Removal, Resource 15: Women Abolitionists in London, Resource 16: The New York State Married Women’s Property Law, Babara K. Lipman Children's History Library, George Washington's First Inauguration (1789), Barbara K. Lipman Children’s History Library, Housing, Logistics, and Academic Resources, Friday (Members and age 65+ and immunocompromised). A grapefruit spoon makes cleaning out the slimy pulp and seeds from winter squash and melon ridiculously easy and mess-free. Request all images associated with this record.
; Wesley Page Stone (1833-1916) and his wife Alice Patten Cilley (1849-1934) of Dunbarton; and their daughter, schoolteacher and family historian Ethel Cilley Stone (1884-1981) of Dunbarton and Goffstown. A grapefruit spoon is a utensil usually similar in design to a teaspoon that tapers to a sharp edge or teeth, the intent of the front serrated blade|serration being to separate the flesh of a grapefruit from its rind. The offspring of the pummelo, sometimes spelled pomelo and even known as shaddock, the grapefruit may have appeared as a horticultural accident during the 1700s in Jamaica.
A variation of the design has a blunt front edge with serrated sides, enabling the user to dig the spoon into the fruit before using the serrated side edges as a knife to separate the flesh from the rind.
A grapefruit spoon is a spoon which is specially designed for the consumption of grapefruit, although it can be used to eat other citrus fruits as well. Dimensions: H-1 W-1.1 L-5.8 inches Weight-1 oz.
Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881.
Since then, spoons have continued to be a staple of modern tables and come in a wide array of variations – everything from soup to caviar spoons.
170 Central Park West
Grapefruit spoons look like regular spoons, except that they have serrated edges which help to pull the fruit away from the unappetizing pith of the grapefruit. History The grapefruit, not even 300 years old, is just a kid in the world of fruits. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Grapefruit spoon, silver. Help us present groundbreaking exhibitions and develop educational programs about our nation's history for more than 200,000 schoolchildren annually. Moose on the Loose: Social Studies for Granite State Kids. Grooved handle with grape cluster, shell motif, and scrollwork at end. Script "S" engraved on front of handle. Items that require special equipment to be digitized are priced on an individual basis. The design of the spoon changed throughout the Renaissance and Baroque periods before finally receiving its current mostly standard look around the 18 th century. Deep bowl with pointed end. Provenance: Part of the Ethel Cilley Stone Collection, consisting of objects, documents, photographs, and memorabilia related to James Stone (1780-1874) and his wife Mary East Beard Stone (1791-1875) of Dunbarton; their son Captain Andrew J. silver grapefruit spoon with an upturned double-swell handle with an all over repoussé chased floral design; engraved, "EEG" in script on the underside; pear-shaped bowl; stamped "STERLING" on the underside of the stem.
Hack #2: Remove egg shells from egg whites. Once your image request is received, a member of the New Hampshire Historical Society will be in contact to fulfill your request. Enter the E-mail Address that you'd like to send this page to. Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881. What was invented first spoon or fork? Reproduction Fees:*$25/image for items that have previously been digitized$50/image for items that have NOT been previously digitized. From Wikibooks, open books for an open world, https://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/table_setting/place_setting/flatware/spoons.html, https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Cookbook:Grapefruit_Spoon&oldid=3754110. Script "S" engraved on front of handle.
The overall length is approximately 5½ to 6½ inches. Letter in Support of the NEH, IMLS and NHPRC, Bill Graham and the Rock & Roll Revolution, Colonists, Citizens, Constitutions: Creating the American Republic, Dreaming Together: New-York Historical Society and Asia Society Museum, Fourth Floor Exhibition Images and Highlights, Hope Wanted: New York City Under Quarantine, Life Cut Short: Hamilton’s Hair and the Art of Mourning Jewelry, New-York Historical Society Opens Transformed Fourth Floor, The People Count: The Census in the Making of America, So Ready for Laughter: Bob Hope and World War II, Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Holiday Express: Toys and Trains from the Jerni Collection, Examination Days: The New York African Free School Collection, Marion Mahony Griffin's The Magic of America, Religious and Charitable Organization Collections, The Diane and Adam E. Max Conference on Women’s History, Women and the American Story: A Curriculum Guide, Module 1 - Unofficial Politician: Dolley Madison in Early Washington, Resource 7: Paul Jennings's Account of the British Attack, Module 2 - Breaking the Rules: Women Reformers, 1800-1860, Resource 11: Catharine Beecher’s Campaign Against Indian Removal, Resource 15: Women Abolitionists in London, Resource 16: The New York State Married Women’s Property Law, Babara K. Lipman Children's History Library, George Washington's First Inauguration (1789), Barbara K. Lipman Children’s History Library, Housing, Logistics, and Academic Resources, Friday (Members and age 65+ and immunocompromised). A grapefruit spoon makes cleaning out the slimy pulp and seeds from winter squash and melon ridiculously easy and mess-free. Request all images associated with this record.
; Wesley Page Stone (1833-1916) and his wife Alice Patten Cilley (1849-1934) of Dunbarton; and their daughter, schoolteacher and family historian Ethel Cilley Stone (1884-1981) of Dunbarton and Goffstown. A grapefruit spoon is a utensil usually similar in design to a teaspoon that tapers to a sharp edge or teeth, the intent of the front serrated blade|serration being to separate the flesh of a grapefruit from its rind. The offspring of the pummelo, sometimes spelled pomelo and even known as shaddock, the grapefruit may have appeared as a horticultural accident during the 1700s in Jamaica.
A variation of the design has a blunt front edge with serrated sides, enabling the user to dig the spoon into the fruit before using the serrated side edges as a knife to separate the flesh from the rind.
A grapefruit spoon is a spoon which is specially designed for the consumption of grapefruit, although it can be used to eat other citrus fruits as well. Dimensions: H-1 W-1.1 L-5.8 inches Weight-1 oz.
Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881.
Since then, spoons have continued to be a staple of modern tables and come in a wide array of variations – everything from soup to caviar spoons.
170 Central Park West
Grapefruit spoons look like regular spoons, except that they have serrated edges which help to pull the fruit away from the unappetizing pith of the grapefruit. History The grapefruit, not even 300 years old, is just a kid in the world of fruits. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Grapefruit spoon, silver. Help us present groundbreaking exhibitions and develop educational programs about our nation's history for more than 200,000 schoolchildren annually. Moose on the Loose: Social Studies for Granite State Kids. Grooved handle with grape cluster, shell motif, and scrollwork at end. Script "S" engraved on front of handle. Items that require special equipment to be digitized are priced on an individual basis. The design of the spoon changed throughout the Renaissance and Baroque periods before finally receiving its current mostly standard look around the 18 th century. Deep bowl with pointed end. Provenance: Part of the Ethel Cilley Stone Collection, consisting of objects, documents, photographs, and memorabilia related to James Stone (1780-1874) and his wife Mary East Beard Stone (1791-1875) of Dunbarton; their son Captain Andrew J. silver grapefruit spoon with an upturned double-swell handle with an all over repoussé chased floral design; engraved, "EEG" in script on the underside; pear-shaped bowl; stamped "STERLING" on the underside of the stem.
Hack #2: Remove egg shells from egg whites. Once your image request is received, a member of the New Hampshire Historical Society will be in contact to fulfill your request. Enter the E-mail Address that you'd like to send this page to. Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881. What was invented first spoon or fork? Reproduction Fees:*$25/image for items that have previously been digitized$50/image for items that have NOT been previously digitized. From Wikibooks, open books for an open world, https://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/table_setting/place_setting/flatware/spoons.html, https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Cookbook:Grapefruit_Spoon&oldid=3754110. Script "S" engraved on front of handle.
The overall length is approximately 5½ to 6½ inches. Letter in Support of the NEH, IMLS and NHPRC, Bill Graham and the Rock & Roll Revolution, Colonists, Citizens, Constitutions: Creating the American Republic, Dreaming Together: New-York Historical Society and Asia Society Museum, Fourth Floor Exhibition Images and Highlights, Hope Wanted: New York City Under Quarantine, Life Cut Short: Hamilton’s Hair and the Art of Mourning Jewelry, New-York Historical Society Opens Transformed Fourth Floor, The People Count: The Census in the Making of America, So Ready for Laughter: Bob Hope and World War II, Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Holiday Express: Toys and Trains from the Jerni Collection, Examination Days: The New York African Free School Collection, Marion Mahony Griffin's The Magic of America, Religious and Charitable Organization Collections, The Diane and Adam E. Max Conference on Women’s History, Women and the American Story: A Curriculum Guide, Module 1 - Unofficial Politician: Dolley Madison in Early Washington, Resource 7: Paul Jennings's Account of the British Attack, Module 2 - Breaking the Rules: Women Reformers, 1800-1860, Resource 11: Catharine Beecher’s Campaign Against Indian Removal, Resource 15: Women Abolitionists in London, Resource 16: The New York State Married Women’s Property Law, Babara K. Lipman Children's History Library, George Washington's First Inauguration (1789), Barbara K. Lipman Children’s History Library, Housing, Logistics, and Academic Resources, Friday (Members and age 65+ and immunocompromised). A grapefruit spoon makes cleaning out the slimy pulp and seeds from winter squash and melon ridiculously easy and mess-free. Request all images associated with this record.
; Wesley Page Stone (1833-1916) and his wife Alice Patten Cilley (1849-1934) of Dunbarton; and their daughter, schoolteacher and family historian Ethel Cilley Stone (1884-1981) of Dunbarton and Goffstown. A grapefruit spoon is a utensil usually similar in design to a teaspoon that tapers to a sharp edge or teeth, the intent of the front serrated blade|serration being to separate the flesh of a grapefruit from its rind. The offspring of the pummelo, sometimes spelled pomelo and even known as shaddock, the grapefruit may have appeared as a horticultural accident during the 1700s in Jamaica.
A variation of the design has a blunt front edge with serrated sides, enabling the user to dig the spoon into the fruit before using the serrated side edges as a knife to separate the flesh from the rind.
A grapefruit spoon is a spoon which is specially designed for the consumption of grapefruit, although it can be used to eat other citrus fruits as well. Dimensions: H-1 W-1.1 L-5.8 inches Weight-1 oz.
Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881.
Since then, spoons have continued to be a staple of modern tables and come in a wide array of variations – everything from soup to caviar spoons.
170 Central Park West
Grapefruit spoons look like regular spoons, except that they have serrated edges which help to pull the fruit away from the unappetizing pith of the grapefruit. History The grapefruit, not even 300 years old, is just a kid in the world of fruits. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Grapefruit spoon, silver. Help us present groundbreaking exhibitions and develop educational programs about our nation's history for more than 200,000 schoolchildren annually. Moose on the Loose: Social Studies for Granite State Kids. Grooved handle with grape cluster, shell motif, and scrollwork at end. Script "S" engraved on front of handle. Items that require special equipment to be digitized are priced on an individual basis. The design of the spoon changed throughout the Renaissance and Baroque periods before finally receiving its current mostly standard look around the 18 th century. Deep bowl with pointed end. Provenance: Part of the Ethel Cilley Stone Collection, consisting of objects, documents, photographs, and memorabilia related to James Stone (1780-1874) and his wife Mary East Beard Stone (1791-1875) of Dunbarton; their son Captain Andrew J. silver grapefruit spoon with an upturned double-swell handle with an all over repoussé chased floral design; engraved, "EEG" in script on the underside; pear-shaped bowl; stamped "STERLING" on the underside of the stem.
Hack #2: Remove egg shells from egg whites. Once your image request is received, a member of the New Hampshire Historical Society will be in contact to fulfill your request. Enter the E-mail Address that you'd like to send this page to. Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881. What was invented first spoon or fork? Reproduction Fees:*$25/image for items that have previously been digitized$50/image for items that have NOT been previously digitized. From Wikibooks, open books for an open world, https://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/table_setting/place_setting/flatware/spoons.html, https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Cookbook:Grapefruit_Spoon&oldid=3754110. Script "S" engraved on front of handle.
The overall length is approximately 5½ to 6½ inches. Letter in Support of the NEH, IMLS and NHPRC, Bill Graham and the Rock & Roll Revolution, Colonists, Citizens, Constitutions: Creating the American Republic, Dreaming Together: New-York Historical Society and Asia Society Museum, Fourth Floor Exhibition Images and Highlights, Hope Wanted: New York City Under Quarantine, Life Cut Short: Hamilton’s Hair and the Art of Mourning Jewelry, New-York Historical Society Opens Transformed Fourth Floor, The People Count: The Census in the Making of America, So Ready for Laughter: Bob Hope and World War II, Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Holiday Express: Toys and Trains from the Jerni Collection, Examination Days: The New York African Free School Collection, Marion Mahony Griffin's The Magic of America, Religious and Charitable Organization Collections, The Diane and Adam E. Max Conference on Women’s History, Women and the American Story: A Curriculum Guide, Module 1 - Unofficial Politician: Dolley Madison in Early Washington, Resource 7: Paul Jennings's Account of the British Attack, Module 2 - Breaking the Rules: Women Reformers, 1800-1860, Resource 11: Catharine Beecher’s Campaign Against Indian Removal, Resource 15: Women Abolitionists in London, Resource 16: The New York State Married Women’s Property Law, Babara K. Lipman Children's History Library, George Washington's First Inauguration (1789), Barbara K. Lipman Children’s History Library, Housing, Logistics, and Academic Resources, Friday (Members and age 65+ and immunocompromised). A grapefruit spoon makes cleaning out the slimy pulp and seeds from winter squash and melon ridiculously easy and mess-free. Request all images associated with this record.
; Wesley Page Stone (1833-1916) and his wife Alice Patten Cilley (1849-1934) of Dunbarton; and their daughter, schoolteacher and family historian Ethel Cilley Stone (1884-1981) of Dunbarton and Goffstown. A grapefruit spoon is a utensil usually similar in design to a teaspoon that tapers to a sharp edge or teeth, the intent of the front serrated blade|serration being to separate the flesh of a grapefruit from its rind. The offspring of the pummelo, sometimes spelled pomelo and even known as shaddock, the grapefruit may have appeared as a horticultural accident during the 1700s in Jamaica.
A variation of the design has a blunt front edge with serrated sides, enabling the user to dig the spoon into the fruit before using the serrated side edges as a knife to separate the flesh from the rind.
A grapefruit spoon is a spoon which is specially designed for the consumption of grapefruit, although it can be used to eat other citrus fruits as well. Dimensions: H-1 W-1.1 L-5.8 inches Weight-1 oz.
Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881.
Since then, spoons have continued to be a staple of modern tables and come in a wide array of variations – everything from soup to caviar spoons.
170 Central Park West
Grapefruit spoons look like regular spoons, except that they have serrated edges which help to pull the fruit away from the unappetizing pith of the grapefruit. History The grapefruit, not even 300 years old, is just a kid in the world of fruits. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Grapefruit spoon, silver. Help us present groundbreaking exhibitions and develop educational programs about our nation's history for more than 200,000 schoolchildren annually. Moose on the Loose: Social Studies for Granite State Kids. Grooved handle with grape cluster, shell motif, and scrollwork at end. Script "S" engraved on front of handle. Items that require special equipment to be digitized are priced on an individual basis. The design of the spoon changed throughout the Renaissance and Baroque periods before finally receiving its current mostly standard look around the 18 th century. Deep bowl with pointed end. Provenance: Part of the Ethel Cilley Stone Collection, consisting of objects, documents, photographs, and memorabilia related to James Stone (1780-1874) and his wife Mary East Beard Stone (1791-1875) of Dunbarton; their son Captain Andrew J. silver grapefruit spoon with an upturned double-swell handle with an all over repoussé chased floral design; engraved, "EEG" in script on the underside; pear-shaped bowl; stamped "STERLING" on the underside of the stem.
Hack #2: Remove egg shells from egg whites. Once your image request is received, a member of the New Hampshire Historical Society will be in contact to fulfill your request. Enter the E-mail Address that you'd like to send this page to. Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881. What was invented first spoon or fork? Reproduction Fees:*$25/image for items that have previously been digitized$50/image for items that have NOT been previously digitized. From Wikibooks, open books for an open world, https://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/table_setting/place_setting/flatware/spoons.html, https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Cookbook:Grapefruit_Spoon&oldid=3754110. Script "S" engraved on front of handle.
The overall length is approximately 5½ to 6½ inches. Letter in Support of the NEH, IMLS and NHPRC, Bill Graham and the Rock & Roll Revolution, Colonists, Citizens, Constitutions: Creating the American Republic, Dreaming Together: New-York Historical Society and Asia Society Museum, Fourth Floor Exhibition Images and Highlights, Hope Wanted: New York City Under Quarantine, Life Cut Short: Hamilton’s Hair and the Art of Mourning Jewelry, New-York Historical Society Opens Transformed Fourth Floor, The People Count: The Census in the Making of America, So Ready for Laughter: Bob Hope and World War II, Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Holiday Express: Toys and Trains from the Jerni Collection, Examination Days: The New York African Free School Collection, Marion Mahony Griffin's The Magic of America, Religious and Charitable Organization Collections, The Diane and Adam E. Max Conference on Women’s History, Women and the American Story: A Curriculum Guide, Module 1 - Unofficial Politician: Dolley Madison in Early Washington, Resource 7: Paul Jennings's Account of the British Attack, Module 2 - Breaking the Rules: Women Reformers, 1800-1860, Resource 11: Catharine Beecher’s Campaign Against Indian Removal, Resource 15: Women Abolitionists in London, Resource 16: The New York State Married Women’s Property Law, Babara K. Lipman Children's History Library, George Washington's First Inauguration (1789), Barbara K. Lipman Children’s History Library, Housing, Logistics, and Academic Resources, Friday (Members and age 65+ and immunocompromised). A grapefruit spoon makes cleaning out the slimy pulp and seeds from winter squash and melon ridiculously easy and mess-free. Request all images associated with this record.
; Wesley Page Stone (1833-1916) and his wife Alice Patten Cilley (1849-1934) of Dunbarton; and their daughter, schoolteacher and family historian Ethel Cilley Stone (1884-1981) of Dunbarton and Goffstown. A grapefruit spoon is a utensil usually similar in design to a teaspoon that tapers to a sharp edge or teeth, the intent of the front serrated blade|serration being to separate the flesh of a grapefruit from its rind. The offspring of the pummelo, sometimes spelled pomelo and even known as shaddock, the grapefruit may have appeared as a horticultural accident during the 1700s in Jamaica.
A variation of the design has a blunt front edge with serrated sides, enabling the user to dig the spoon into the fruit before using the serrated side edges as a knife to separate the flesh from the rind.
A grapefruit spoon is a spoon which is specially designed for the consumption of grapefruit, although it can be used to eat other citrus fruits as well. Dimensions: H-1 W-1.1 L-5.8 inches Weight-1 oz.
Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881.
Since then, spoons have continued to be a staple of modern tables and come in a wide array of variations – everything from soup to caviar spoons.
170 Central Park West
Grapefruit spoons look like regular spoons, except that they have serrated edges which help to pull the fruit away from the unappetizing pith of the grapefruit. History The grapefruit, not even 300 years old, is just a kid in the world of fruits. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Grapefruit spoon, silver. Help us present groundbreaking exhibitions and develop educational programs about our nation's history for more than 200,000 schoolchildren annually. Moose on the Loose: Social Studies for Granite State Kids. Grooved handle with grape cluster, shell motif, and scrollwork at end. Script "S" engraved on front of handle. Items that require special equipment to be digitized are priced on an individual basis. The design of the spoon changed throughout the Renaissance and Baroque periods before finally receiving its current mostly standard look around the 18 th century. Deep bowl with pointed end. Provenance: Part of the Ethel Cilley Stone Collection, consisting of objects, documents, photographs, and memorabilia related to James Stone (1780-1874) and his wife Mary East Beard Stone (1791-1875) of Dunbarton; their son Captain Andrew J. silver grapefruit spoon with an upturned double-swell handle with an all over repoussé chased floral design; engraved, "EEG" in script on the underside; pear-shaped bowl; stamped "STERLING" on the underside of the stem.
Hack #2: Remove egg shells from egg whites. Once your image request is received, a member of the New Hampshire Historical Society will be in contact to fulfill your request. Enter the E-mail Address that you'd like to send this page to. Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881. What was invented first spoon or fork? Reproduction Fees:*$25/image for items that have previously been digitized$50/image for items that have NOT been previously digitized. From Wikibooks, open books for an open world, https://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/table_setting/place_setting/flatware/spoons.html, https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Cookbook:Grapefruit_Spoon&oldid=3754110. Script "S" engraved on front of handle.
The overall length is approximately 5½ to 6½ inches. Letter in Support of the NEH, IMLS and NHPRC, Bill Graham and the Rock & Roll Revolution, Colonists, Citizens, Constitutions: Creating the American Republic, Dreaming Together: New-York Historical Society and Asia Society Museum, Fourth Floor Exhibition Images and Highlights, Hope Wanted: New York City Under Quarantine, Life Cut Short: Hamilton’s Hair and the Art of Mourning Jewelry, New-York Historical Society Opens Transformed Fourth Floor, The People Count: The Census in the Making of America, So Ready for Laughter: Bob Hope and World War II, Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Holiday Express: Toys and Trains from the Jerni Collection, Examination Days: The New York African Free School Collection, Marion Mahony Griffin's The Magic of America, Religious and Charitable Organization Collections, The Diane and Adam E. Max Conference on Women’s History, Women and the American Story: A Curriculum Guide, Module 1 - Unofficial Politician: Dolley Madison in Early Washington, Resource 7: Paul Jennings's Account of the British Attack, Module 2 - Breaking the Rules: Women Reformers, 1800-1860, Resource 11: Catharine Beecher’s Campaign Against Indian Removal, Resource 15: Women Abolitionists in London, Resource 16: The New York State Married Women’s Property Law, Babara K. Lipman Children's History Library, George Washington's First Inauguration (1789), Barbara K. Lipman Children’s History Library, Housing, Logistics, and Academic Resources, Friday (Members and age 65+ and immunocompromised). A grapefruit spoon makes cleaning out the slimy pulp and seeds from winter squash and melon ridiculously easy and mess-free. Request all images associated with this record.
; Wesley Page Stone (1833-1916) and his wife Alice Patten Cilley (1849-1934) of Dunbarton; and their daughter, schoolteacher and family historian Ethel Cilley Stone (1884-1981) of Dunbarton and Goffstown. A grapefruit spoon is a utensil usually similar in design to a teaspoon that tapers to a sharp edge or teeth, the intent of the front serrated blade|serration being to separate the flesh of a grapefruit from its rind. The offspring of the pummelo, sometimes spelled pomelo and even known as shaddock, the grapefruit may have appeared as a horticultural accident during the 1700s in Jamaica.
A variation of the design has a blunt front edge with serrated sides, enabling the user to dig the spoon into the fruit before using the serrated side edges as a knife to separate the flesh from the rind.
A grapefruit spoon is a spoon which is specially designed for the consumption of grapefruit, although it can be used to eat other citrus fruits as well. Dimensions: H-1 W-1.1 L-5.8 inches Weight-1 oz.
Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881.
Since then, spoons have continued to be a staple of modern tables and come in a wide array of variations – everything from soup to caviar spoons.
170 Central Park West
Grapefruit spoons look like regular spoons, except that they have serrated edges which help to pull the fruit away from the unappetizing pith of the grapefruit. History The grapefruit, not even 300 years old, is just a kid in the world of fruits. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Grapefruit spoon, silver. Help us present groundbreaking exhibitions and develop educational programs about our nation's history for more than 200,000 schoolchildren annually. Moose on the Loose: Social Studies for Granite State Kids. Grooved handle with grape cluster, shell motif, and scrollwork at end. Script "S" engraved on front of handle. Items that require special equipment to be digitized are priced on an individual basis. The design of the spoon changed throughout the Renaissance and Baroque periods before finally receiving its current mostly standard look around the 18 th century. Deep bowl with pointed end. Provenance: Part of the Ethel Cilley Stone Collection, consisting of objects, documents, photographs, and memorabilia related to James Stone (1780-1874) and his wife Mary East Beard Stone (1791-1875) of Dunbarton; their son Captain Andrew J. silver grapefruit spoon with an upturned double-swell handle with an all over repoussé chased floral design; engraved, "EEG" in script on the underside; pear-shaped bowl; stamped "STERLING" on the underside of the stem.
Hack #2: Remove egg shells from egg whites. Once your image request is received, a member of the New Hampshire Historical Society will be in contact to fulfill your request. Enter the E-mail Address that you'd like to send this page to. Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881. What was invented first spoon or fork? Reproduction Fees:*$25/image for items that have previously been digitized$50/image for items that have NOT been previously digitized. From Wikibooks, open books for an open world, https://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/table_setting/place_setting/flatware/spoons.html, https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Cookbook:Grapefruit_Spoon&oldid=3754110. Script "S" engraved on front of handle.
Dessert spoon - created in a medium size, somewhere between teaspoon and dining spoon. The citrus spoon, also known as a grapefruit spoon, orange spoon, and fruit spoon features an elongated bowl and a pointed tip, a shape used to eat segmented fruit, such as a grapefruit or an orange. See each listing for international shipping options and costs.
Coffee spoon - smaller than a teaspoon. Part of the Ethel Cilley Stone Collection, consisting of objects, documents, photographs, and memorabilia related to James Stone (1780-1874) and his wife Mary East Beard Stone (1791-1875) of Dunbarton; their son Captain Andrew J.
DONATE TODAY collections > Luce Center > Grapefruit spoon
( 15.9 x 2.5 x 2.2 cm ), engraved: on the underside of the handle: "EEG" in script
Help us present groundbreaking exhibitions and develop educational programs about our nation's history for more than 200,000 schoolchildren annually.
Deep bowl with pointed end. Forks Spoons,
The overall length is approximately 5½ to 6½ inches. Letter in Support of the NEH, IMLS and NHPRC, Bill Graham and the Rock & Roll Revolution, Colonists, Citizens, Constitutions: Creating the American Republic, Dreaming Together: New-York Historical Society and Asia Society Museum, Fourth Floor Exhibition Images and Highlights, Hope Wanted: New York City Under Quarantine, Life Cut Short: Hamilton’s Hair and the Art of Mourning Jewelry, New-York Historical Society Opens Transformed Fourth Floor, The People Count: The Census in the Making of America, So Ready for Laughter: Bob Hope and World War II, Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Holiday Express: Toys and Trains from the Jerni Collection, Examination Days: The New York African Free School Collection, Marion Mahony Griffin's The Magic of America, Religious and Charitable Organization Collections, The Diane and Adam E. Max Conference on Women’s History, Women and the American Story: A Curriculum Guide, Module 1 - Unofficial Politician: Dolley Madison in Early Washington, Resource 7: Paul Jennings's Account of the British Attack, Module 2 - Breaking the Rules: Women Reformers, 1800-1860, Resource 11: Catharine Beecher’s Campaign Against Indian Removal, Resource 15: Women Abolitionists in London, Resource 16: The New York State Married Women’s Property Law, Babara K. Lipman Children's History Library, George Washington's First Inauguration (1789), Barbara K. Lipman Children’s History Library, Housing, Logistics, and Academic Resources, Friday (Members and age 65+ and immunocompromised). A grapefruit spoon makes cleaning out the slimy pulp and seeds from winter squash and melon ridiculously easy and mess-free. Request all images associated with this record.
; Wesley Page Stone (1833-1916) and his wife Alice Patten Cilley (1849-1934) of Dunbarton; and their daughter, schoolteacher and family historian Ethel Cilley Stone (1884-1981) of Dunbarton and Goffstown. A grapefruit spoon is a utensil usually similar in design to a teaspoon that tapers to a sharp edge or teeth, the intent of the front serrated blade|serration being to separate the flesh of a grapefruit from its rind. The offspring of the pummelo, sometimes spelled pomelo and even known as shaddock, the grapefruit may have appeared as a horticultural accident during the 1700s in Jamaica.
A variation of the design has a blunt front edge with serrated sides, enabling the user to dig the spoon into the fruit before using the serrated side edges as a knife to separate the flesh from the rind.
A grapefruit spoon is a spoon which is specially designed for the consumption of grapefruit, although it can be used to eat other citrus fruits as well. Dimensions: H-1 W-1.1 L-5.8 inches Weight-1 oz.
Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881.
Since then, spoons have continued to be a staple of modern tables and come in a wide array of variations – everything from soup to caviar spoons.
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Grapefruit spoons look like regular spoons, except that they have serrated edges which help to pull the fruit away from the unappetizing pith of the grapefruit. History The grapefruit, not even 300 years old, is just a kid in the world of fruits. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Grapefruit spoon, silver. Help us present groundbreaking exhibitions and develop educational programs about our nation's history for more than 200,000 schoolchildren annually. Moose on the Loose: Social Studies for Granite State Kids. Grooved handle with grape cluster, shell motif, and scrollwork at end. Script "S" engraved on front of handle. Items that require special equipment to be digitized are priced on an individual basis. The design of the spoon changed throughout the Renaissance and Baroque periods before finally receiving its current mostly standard look around the 18 th century. Deep bowl with pointed end. Provenance: Part of the Ethel Cilley Stone Collection, consisting of objects, documents, photographs, and memorabilia related to James Stone (1780-1874) and his wife Mary East Beard Stone (1791-1875) of Dunbarton; their son Captain Andrew J. silver grapefruit spoon with an upturned double-swell handle with an all over repoussé chased floral design; engraved, "EEG" in script on the underside; pear-shaped bowl; stamped "STERLING" on the underside of the stem.
Hack #2: Remove egg shells from egg whites. Once your image request is received, a member of the New Hampshire Historical Society will be in contact to fulfill your request. Enter the E-mail Address that you'd like to send this page to. Owned by Alice Cilley Stone (1849-1934) of Dunbarton, NH, around the time of her marriage in 1881. What was invented first spoon or fork? Reproduction Fees:*$25/image for items that have previously been digitized$50/image for items that have NOT been previously digitized. From Wikibooks, open books for an open world, https://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/table_setting/place_setting/flatware/spoons.html, https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Cookbook:Grapefruit_Spoon&oldid=3754110. Script "S" engraved on front of handle.