Object Details
maker
International Silver Company
Description
This butter dish, substantially similar to another one from Leviathan in the Smithsonian's collections (1991.0856.37), is decorated with the emblem adopted by the new owners of the United States Lines in 1929.
The ocean liner Leviathan was built as the Vaterland for Germany's Hamburg-American Line in 1914. During World War I the American government seized the ship and operated it as a troopship. After a complete reconditioning at Newport News, Virginia, in 1922-23, the Leviathan became the flagship of the new United States Lines, which operated it for the U.S. Shipping Board until 1929. Subsequently sold into private hands, the ship ran until 1934. Laid up as a result of high operating costs and low Depression-era patronage, the Leviathan was sold to Scottish shipbreakers in 1938 and dismantled.
Location
Currently not on view
Credit Line
Gift of Frank O. Braynard, Sea Cliff, New York
date made
ca 1929
used date
1929-1931
ID Number
1991.0856.38
catalog number
1991.0856.38
accession number
1991.0856
Object Name
Plate, Butter
Measurements
overall: 3 1/2 in; x 8.89 cm
Associated Place
United States: New York
See more items in
Work and Industry: Maritime
America on the Move
Transportation
Data Source
National Museum of American History
Link to Original Record
Record ID
nmah_1102374