'Big Surprise' Hidden Inside 150-Year-Old Irish Silver 'Spoon Warmer' | Antiques Roadshow
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 30 ก.ย. 2024
- All valuations were correct at the time of broadcast. This lady's father was in the Royal Scots Fusiliers, and brought in this intriguing piece of Officers' Mess silver which on first glance looks like a spoon warmer. On closer inspection, the expert reveals that the item, made in 1866, actually served another purpose entirely. Hugh Scully and the experts from Antiques Roadshow take a look at some fantastic antiques and the history and stories surrounding them. This clip was filmed in Mellerstain House in 2001.
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I've lived my whole uncivilized life eating food that was served with room-temperature spoons. Always held me back.
I blame my parents for never warming my spoons 😢
God, how did you make it through?!
A fellow sufferer, I salute you
I say! The barbarity! I trust the children’s services had you relocated.
Peasant.
Man rich people are born with *warm* silver spoons in their mouth. Had no idea.
Please don't claim there's a 'big surprise in'...anything. unless there IS one!
Your telling me you weren't flabbergasted when you found out it was not a spoon warmer but a swear box?!?
I didn’t even know spoon warmers were a thing!😂
Imagine not being surprised that it was a swear box, I could honestly say I was flabbergasted as such a possibility 😂
@@DH-.😂
@@camnsprencheria3225me neither never heard of it until this video
Spoon warmer, that's what my uncle used to call his lighter. By god, do I miss him
😂😅😅
Underrated
Damm. Thats a real stichy comment
.
You wonder if this was a cheeky gift from an Irish regiment after spending time with a Scottish regiment and the amount of swearing that occured.
I tell you what that actually adds alot of character an id bet you are correct on that!
Spoon Warmers were filled with boiling water and left on the table. All serving spoons were placed in it until needed, enabling them to remain warm before scooping into some rich dish. Food served with a cold spoon may cool down too quickly for some tastes.
That couldn't possibly be accomplished by simply leaving the spoon in the serving dish or using wooden spoons... I'm SO glad I've never had to do all the ridiculous shit rich folks do, haha!
@@The_sinner_Jim_Whitney im not rich at all but no, letting the spoon on the dish will make it a bit colder in some cases and depending on how hot it is you might wait too much and it will cool down, and well i have no argument against the wooden spoon, at least i dont like them much tho, they get too get and need some good cleaning if you dont want extra flavours aside from the wood flavour itself
@@christhopervargas2275 I'm talking about just putting the serving dish on the table with the serving spoon already sunk into whatever's in the dish. That's how we do it. Then again, you could literally use a chunk of dry ice for a spoon and I don't think it'd make much of a difference if you ate it as soon as it was served, haha!
This country formed a globe-spanning empire but was frightened of spoons cooling down their food?!?
The wealthy elite being detatched from reality as usual...
Well I'm surprised! I've never heard of a spoon warmer. I had to look it up. Briefly popular in the Victorian era. The nautilus shape was most common. There was also one American manufacturer. Having superfluous tableware was a status symbol.
Also, silver was an easily transportable form of wealth which could be turned into cash without many questions being asked, (unlike gold or jewellery).
Then there's knife rests...
I always wondered why I had a sterling silver asparagus server, such a specific tool I have always wanted to use but never made asparagus so never used it yet.
😮@@geigertec5921
@@garryferrington811 So you don't soil the linens and it doesn't get in the way being left on a plate.
That is a wonderful reminder of her father. It's beautiful.
I hate to think of what she sold. I hope she didn't get ripped off.
I guess it reminds her that her father swore like a parrot.
To the Brits, it's a HUGE surprise that an article with a thistle on it turns out to be IRISH rather than Scottish and moreover, was originally made as a swearbox! I'm sure that had them gossiping for ages!
It wouldn't take long for that to fill up in my house... :)
She’d get that £5000 back in one night if she took around to Gordon Ramsay’s house😊
Pretty much within the first hour @ work...
I filled it during the video telling myself how stupid the whole concept is.
@@bobsmith6544 L🤣L
Made in Ireland? That's not just a swear box. You would have to call that the "moneymaker"
The big surprise is there’s no surprise!
It's not a swear box but a silver savings bank... but it's sweet Daddy used it as a swear box and she can't see it any other way.
Turns out it’s full of click bait
Yes....surprise fell to the floor as would a lead balloon.
"big surprise" ? you must get excited seeing a loaf of bread
The biggest surprise to me was, they used to warm their spoons 😂
Did they have spoonwwarmers warmer for colder climates as well?
One doesn't want one serving hot food with a cool spoon. I've never heard anything so pretentious.
Is there an epidemic of cold spoons in England?
Just have the spoon put on a sweater and make it a cup of tea. With energy prices up we can't afford to crank the heat.
It was made in Ireland and for a Scottish Regiment of the British Army. Where does England come into it?
They didnt have great heating in the Victorian age.
@@dw3403Ok well as long as the spoons were cozy, who cares if a few thousand street urchins don't make it to march am I right?
@@diggitus
Right! What would they have to do with them when the Victorian age was all about showing off their wealth?
1:14 *Her flicker of disgust at discovering it's **_Irish_** silver is priceless **_("REALLY?_** I wouldn't **_KNOW!")._** Also, they should've cast her as Dolores Umbridge in "Harry Potter."* 😂
Well, I thought it was a surprise because I believe the swear box was usually a separate item , mainly associated with men only dinners where the language deteriorated as the wine flowed. Why anyone would want to warm a spoon at the table also surprised me!
Sadly;
If that we're a swear box, I'd need a MUCH BIGGER one than that!
I keep one in the car - It'll make me rich!
Thank you for this comment as I was wondering what a ‘square box’ was and now understand it is ‘swear box’! 🤔Now I’m wondering what words were used back then that they considered swearing…but that’s ok I don’t really need to know. 😆
It's Mrs bucket 😂
It’s Bouquet!! 😂
@@stopyulin3226 BUCKET 🤣🤣
But .........anyway, I absolutely LOVE IT‼️Been watching Antiques Roadshow for over 30 years!! Attended once when they came to Charleston 2002(?)❤️
Clickbait gets voted down and on the way out "don't show me any more by this creator".
What was the surprise? Did I blink and missed it?
The surprise is that it's not a spoon warmer..
THAT’S IT, now I want one!!! Never knew they existed (I just love the British and their formalities). All this time I’ve just been using a mason jar on the counter. I’m immediately going to be searching the internet for one of my own - I hope I can land one just like it. Well done!!
You warm your spoons in this day and age?
Respectfully, I don't get it, unless you live in the far, far north with very little heating!
@@favouritemoon4133she wants a fancy swear box, not a spoon warmer. Did you watch the video? It’s not a spoon warmer.
It's Irish not British and was most likely stolen by the Brits like everything else when they invaded Ireland.
Do you have 5000 pounds handy?
I had to look it up:
Spoon warmers were popular in Victorian houses as a way of keeping serving spoons warm. In large Victorian houses kitchens were often well away from dining rooms to keep unpleasant cooking smells away, so spoon warmers were used to help keep food warm. @@favouritemoon4133
So the big surprise was the “swear box” is a “swear box”?
That could be on Willie Wonka.
“The swear box is a swear box.” 😂
Love the beautiful milk thistle flower on the lid.
Why the hell would you need a spoon warmer?
Apparently they were used in some Victorian-era houses of a certain class/wealth to prevent cold spoons from infecting hot food with...the cold present in high-ceilinged draughty houses. I had never heard of them before.
My Nana made us kids warm our spoons before we added honey to our cup of tea.
To keep your spoons warm, obviously.
Sheesh, cavemen.
Off course being irish and where it ended up it gives room for thought
It was made in Ireland for a Scottish Regiment. It ended up with the daughter of one of the senior officers of that regiment. That's a pretty short trail to follow.
I don't think she was overjoyed it was Irish.
Ireland in the 1800's was part of Great Britain, so it's not really a stretch.
@@k.e.becquer4681 Well, it was part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, it wasn't part of Britain as such. I think the surprise was because geographically based regiments tend to have strong loyalty to that region and for table silverware for a Scottish regiment to be made elsewhere is almost unthinkable. Hence the surprise and doubt when the owner heard this news.
@@Crusty_Camper The Royal Scots Fusiliers 1st Battalion spent the inter-war period in Ireland. They had been garrisoned in Dublin for long periods throughout their history. They put down a rebellion in Dublin in 1803, garrisoned for two or three years 1820s, 1830s, 1840s 1880s, then 1918 - 1921
Now I know that people had to have something special to warm their spoons.
But their servants never told them how they kept the spoons so consistently accurately well-temperatured.
People throughout time have wanted to flash their stupidity around like a badge of honor. Nowadays, Prada is selling purses that look like paper bags and money clips that look like a paper clips. Crying out loud, people still buy modern art! 😂
Proof that people are the same, no matter what era.
LOL - how vague! You must have elaborated in what way the are the same. People like you are so perplexing they CAUSE swearing.
@@vigouroso It's a 150 year old swear jar!
Interesting, but who sells their father's silver, just because you can't afford the insurance? I find that odd.
That's called tighter times and saving face.
Spoon warmers are not usually as massive as this one!
Although I see now they make sense at the time, I had never heard of a spoon warmer. It's lovely.
@@Luna.3.3.3 The Victorians were very good at inventing novelty items!
@@DavidHarperAntiques Absolutely! So many inventions were borne from the industrial revolution
0:51 ‘…that would soon add up…’ cheeky feller!
Sovereigns are a very valuable coin, if you had to but more than 1 in, it would soon add up to a small fortune.
Good god a cold spoon, how atrocious!
She kinda looks and speaks like Mrs Bucket, not a bad thing really
Where is the 'big surprise' hidden inside?
Her father was coloniser thief probably
Not much of a suprise😂😂
BIG SURPRISE? What was that…was expecting a freshly nipped turd in there
Put a tuppence in the turd jar, you naughty thing!
I love that. A swear box! Great idea.
Stolen by British soldiers occupancy of Ireland 😢
Any proof?
And they still couldn't be civilized.
Given that it has a Scottish Thistle on the top as the handle and her father bought it from the Scottish Regiment he was in, I'd have said it was commissioned.
Of course if you lived somewhere where the police actually solved and prosecuted burglaries, you wouldn't have to insure it at all.
So what was the big suprise indie? The key?
I think they used that "inner seal" as clickbait.
I KNOW WE DIPD THE ICECREAM SCOOPER IN WARM WATER TO GET THE CREAM OUT EASILY OR MAKE MORE UNIFORMD BALLS ..LOL ..NEVER KNEW I NEEDED MY SPOONS WARMD...I HAVE SO MANY QUESTIONS...FIRST BEING...WHAT IS THE PERFECT WARMD SPOON TEMP ..WHY IS THE FOOD NOT WARM ENUFF. IM TODAY YEARS OLD🤭🥴🤔😁
A spoon warmer? Did I hear this right?
Holy crap is that a nautilus shell
Edit: I think I owe this thing like a few hundred quid
'minds me summat of an American presidential campaign song from 1840 put about by the supporters of the Whig William Henry Harrison contrasting his supposedly humble beginnings with the alleged wealth and refinement of the Democratic incumbent, Martin van Buren: "Let van from his coolers of silver drink wine / And recline on his cushioned settee . . . ." The joke was that Harrison (a genuine war hero) was much wealthier than van Buren, but "Little van" got clobbered nonetheless. However, nothing in Harrison's biography indicates that he had a silver spoon warmer, which, had there been one and its existence becoming known, might have turned the tide in van Buren's favor! (Thus endeth the lesson for the day.)
Love it! Love it! That is just too funny. Back then, who would get the money? The lady of the house?
What kind of ad is that 🤔 get over the spoon 🥄 conspiracy, 😭 I was sexually abused by an uncle involving a spoon so traumatic I still haven't pulled up the complete memory of it only how I felt when my mother placed the spoon beside my bowl 🥣 at the table I couldn't touch it or eat off it. The trauma at that moment at that kitchen table is all I can recall and him making me kiss him he also molested my brother that same time he babysat for us. He can remember more. PLEASE STOP with the Spoon ads everywhere. 😞
SURPRISE! There was no surprise, total click bait. Shame on you Antiques Roadshow, I should unsubscribe.
Always find it amusing how those with upper class accents pronounce their words with elongated intonations, for instance when saying the inflection makes it come over as 'ears', which sounds commical and somewhat ridiculous. Ho-ho, jolly hocky sticks and what a splendid and rather ridiculous way those posh folk speak, but what a spiffing way for the idle rich to spend their days!
Well, 150 years ago, the whole home might have been cold as a well digger's posterior and metal objects in the home might not help enjoy a bowl of soup or cup of tea or coffee as much as a warm spoon. I warm up my coffee cup before I pour the hot coffee in it. Works for me.
She is so terribly British: "I suggest you insure it for 5,000 (pounds)." "Yes, right." No emotion. No surprise. Just carry on.
Happy memories of warm spoons from the warmer as a child. Being a younger born of the family I had to settle with an inheritance of a "plated" warmer. Works as well but I'll always have to settle with less-than sterling.
My commiserations. You must have been the Spare😢
But where’s the huge surprise? Maybe that’s why this video has more dislikes than likes
How can you eat your pudding if you don't have warm spoons!!!
Okay ….so what was the surprise inside ? (Click bait scammed again)
Why did a scottish regiment have irish silver? Because it was a swear box, duh lol
When told the insurance value of her swear box I really wanted her to say “well F me!”
How ridiculous is that, lol a spoon warmer.
My f#ck!ng spoon is cold!
Antiques road show is click baiting now? Come on!!
Antiques Roadshow CLICKBAIT!
another falsely named clickbait video. Why?
Very cool
RALLY? IRISH SILVER? RALLY? LOVE THIS LADY SHE IS SO FABULOUS!
Spoon warmer???? Why??? Do they make toilet seat warmers over there too? Crazy
Imma have to move here I love anything that I can use heated
Wait till you see the toast racks.. guaranteed to make toast ice cold in mere minutes.
????????
Spoon man, come together with your hands, save me, I'm together with your plan. Save me. Yeah, oh
All my friends are indians
All my friends are brown and red
Spoonman
All my friends are skeletons
Beat the rhythm with their bones
Soundgarden
@Aeenrbieit there's a key hole but no key. He said that it would be easy enough to find one.
the Spoon Man referenced in the tune (and playing on the track) is a friend of mine. he’s an amazing musician and, in addition to Soundgarden, Frank Zappa, and other _huge_ acts, he played on a track in my band, Snake Suspenderz, first CD, *Preliminary Slither*.
I haven’t seen him in years and was happy to look him up and find he’s still alive and kicking at age 75 (10 years older than me).
I warm my spoons organically. In my mouth.
Allen partridge's brother, ah ha....
Haha, I was hoping once he told her the value that she would let a few expletives fly in shock, and then dropped some coins in the box.
You should be a producer for the show, that would have been a great opportunity.
And how does one get the coins out when the box gets full??🧐
It has a lock and key. He said a key could easily be found.
Great clickbait.
Good old BBC.
Those tiles are great!
no surprise inside? shoo oo ooot.
That seriously annoyed me...and I thought I was immune to 'being annoyed on the internet'. No 'like' from me as a result.
Possibly the worst reason I've ever heard for getting rid of a piece of antique silver with family history- "the insurance was too much".
man: "i suggest you insure this swear box for 5000 pound"
Woman: drops a coin in the slot "f..."
She's not from the estate then...
Why do you need to warm a spoon?
False claims.....blasphemy!
Disappointed that we never found out what the 'Big Surprise' was that was hidden inside ??
We couldn't afford to warm the one spoon my family had.. finally had to sell it.
I was hoping it was full of little bones. But that's cool, I guess. Actually, just watched it for real, swear jars are the oppposite of cool. Silver stuff is cool tho
Ah the utter disappointment moment of valuation...priceless!
What is a spoon warmer??
I'd never heard of a spoon warmer either, so I googled and found this which I've extracted the main points from:
'Spoon warmers were created in the days before central heating when breakfast consisted of hot porridge and the dinners needed to remain warm. Ceilings were high and rooms drafty. Grasping a warm spoon must have seemed comforting. So little is known about spoon warmers today and not many people care, but it was an essential of its time. How could a proper house function if a warm dish suffered the affront of a cold stuffing spoon?
Most spoon warmers are made from silver plate. They were filled with boiling water and left on the table. All serving spoons were placed in it until needed, enabling them to remain warm before scooping into some rich dish.'
Wild, eh?
@@favouritemoon4133 So interesting! Thanks!
Spoon warmer???? Why??? Do they make toilet seat warmers over there too? Crazy
I wonder what the most common swear words were back in those days...
GOING TO INDIAH!!!!!!
I have several spoonwarmers like this but they are plated silver.
They were simply to show your wealth. Yea, they warmed spoons too.
Beautiful piece❤
Mrs bucket 😂
Click bait.
The old potato in my kitchen has better acting skills than these people.
What was the big surprise hidden in this thing?
That swear box is far too small for my local!