James Smither, Engraver of Philadelphia
The 18 Apr 1768 Pennsylvania Chronicle included this advertisement:
In January 1769, Smither proposed to start a drawing school for “young gentlemen and ladies.”
Meanwhile, he was also doing a wide range of engraving jobs, including:
In the fall of 1777, the British army took Philadelphia.
By May 1778, Smither was engraving the tickets for the Meschianza, Maj. John André’s elaborate ball and theatrical tournament for army officers and wealthy Loyalists.
But that may not have been the only job James Smither did for the royal authorities in Philadelphia. On 11 April, Thomas Paine wrote to Henry Laurens, then president of the Second Continental Congress, about counterfeiters. He made this proposal:
On 18 June, the British army pulled out of Philadelphia, heading across New Jersey back to New York. James Smither probably went with them. In 1778 the Pennsylvania council put him on a long list of people who had “willingly aided and assisted the enemies of this state,” and at the end of the war it seized his property.
TOMORROW: Meeting Maj. Donkin.
James Smither, Engraver,Smither had come from Britain, where he reportedly worked for a while in the Tower of London engraving guns for the government.
At the first house in Third Street, from the Cross Keys, Corner of Chestnut-Street, Philadelphia,
PERFORMS all manner of ENGRAVING in Gold, Silver, Copper, Steel, and all other Metals—Coats of Arms, and Seals, done in the neatest Manner. Likewise cuts Stamps, Brands, and metal Cuts for Printers, and ornamental Tools for Bookbinders. He also ornaments Guns and Pistols, both engraving and inlaying Silver, at the most REASONABLE RATES.
In January 1769, Smither proposed to start a drawing school for “young gentlemen and ladies.”
Meanwhile, he was also doing a wide range of engraving jobs, including:
- book plates, bill heads, and illustrations for the printer Robert Bell.
- a portrait of John Dickinson during his fame as the author of the Farmer’s Letters (shown above).
- a map of “the CITY and LIBERTIES of PHILADELPHIA,” advertised by John Reed in 1773.
- currency for the colony of Pennsylvania in 1772.
- this hot water urn made by silversmith Robert Humphrey in 1774, presented to Charles Thomson in thanks for his services to the First Continental Congress.
In the fall of 1777, the British army took Philadelphia.
By May 1778, Smither was engraving the tickets for the Meschianza, Maj. John André’s elaborate ball and theatrical tournament for army officers and wealthy Loyalists.
But that may not have been the only job James Smither did for the royal authorities in Philadelphia. On 11 April, Thomas Paine wrote to Henry Laurens, then president of the Second Continental Congress, about counterfeiters. He made this proposal:
As Forgery is a Sin against all men alike and reprobated by all Civil Nations. Query, would it not be right to require of General [William] Howe, the Persons of Smithers and others in Philadelphia suspected of this Crime; and if he or any other Commander, continues to conceal or protect them in such practices, that in such case the Congress will Consider the Crime as the Act of the Commander in Chief.The idea that the Congress could ask Gen. Howe to hand over anyone suspected of forging Continental or state notes was ludicrous, but no one ever said Thomas Paine wasn’t visionary.
On 18 June, the British army pulled out of Philadelphia, heading across New Jersey back to New York. James Smither probably went with them. In 1778 the Pennsylvania council put him on a long list of people who had “willingly aided and assisted the enemies of this state,” and at the end of the war it seized his property.
TOMORROW: Meeting Maj. Donkin.
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