April / 2002
Days of Silver


As settlers ventured into Kentucky in the early 1800s, silversmiths helped civilize places like Frankfort, Covington, and Paris. People brought in the only silver available, Spanish and English coins, for the silversmiths to melt into useful cups and spoons that also showed off their creativity. As the ones who weighed the coins, silversmiths came to be considered bankers, entrusted with the valuables of the townspeople.
"They were the most honorable people in town," says Georgetown silver collector Lucien Royse. "The first real artists in Kentucky were silversmiths."
An exhibit honoring silversmiths from 18 Kentucky towns runs from April 29 to May 18 at the Georgetown & Scott County Museum in Georgetown.
"This pays tribute to an important part of the culture and heritage of our state," says Royse, who chairs the museum's coin silver committee.
The coin silver exhibit features more than 400 objects, from ladles to grandfather clocks with gears hammered out by silversmiths. "Making the works for a clock by hand back then would be like making a computer in 1970," says Royse.
At one time more than 100 silversmiths worked in the towns represented in the show. With the Civil War their skills turned to the war effort, and not long after that the Industrial Revolution dried up the demand for such hand-crafting.
Admission for the coin silver exhibit: $6 adults; $4 seniors; $2 students; $1 a student for school groups; $3 a person for groups of 10 or more; children under 6 free.
Museum hours: 9-4 Monday-Friday; 10-4 Saturday; 1-4 Sunday. For information contact the Georgetown & Scott County Museum, 229 East Main Street, Georgetown, KY 40324, (502) 863-6201. -Paul Wesslund