J. & C. Ritchie Lacy Glass Panes, ca. 1833
GUEST:
They came out of the house that my father grew up in, in Wheeling, West Virginia. They were, uh, panels that were in the front door of their home.
APPRAISER:
Well, can you tell me what you are seeing in the cartouches here?
GUEST:
Well, uh, beautiful urns and leaves and flowers and... I thought that these were a picture of a steamboat, because Wheeling, West Virginia, was on the Ohio River, but...
APPRAISER:
Yes, okay, well, this is a steamboat picture. I'm guessing that's their logo. J & C Ritchie, also known as Wheeling Flint Glass Works, operated in Wheeling, West Virginia, where your family home was.
GUEST:
Mm-hmm.
APPRAISER:
These panes were made about 1833.
GUEST:
Wow. That's older than I imagined, too.
APPRAISER:
Did they give you any more information about the pieces or...?
GUEST:
No, they were... My brothers and my sister each have one. So there were four of these that were made.
APPRAISER:
Well, I want to tell you they are some of the rarest of the American lacy glass.
GUEST:
Really? (laughs)
APPRAISER:
And it's a pressed glass made to look like a cut glass.
GUEST:
Oh.
APPRAISER:
Um, it even feels like a cut, but it is a pressed-- it's pressed into a mold. And recently, 2018, one panel came up for auction, and it sold for $3,200.
GUEST:
I am surprised. (laughs) I'm very surprised.
APPRAISER:
One panel.
GUEST:
My goodness.
APPRAISER:
And we're talking about three here.
GUEST:
Wow. That's incredible-- that's wonderful.
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