Decanters

Name/Title

Decanters

Entry/Object ID

1972.136.1 A-D

Description

Four decanters, part of a matching bar set. The clear bottles are adorned with depictions of floating golden leaves and feature sealed gold stoppers.

Use

These bottles are a part of a bar set. They were used to hold alcohol before it was served.

Context

Reportedly owned by Wade Hampton III (1818-1902), this set of decanters was used to store and serve alcohol. Born at the William Rhett House in Charleston, South Carolina, Wade Hampton III was the eldest son of Wade Hampton II (1791-1858) and Ann Fitzsimons Hampton (1794-1833). Prior to the Civil War, he split his time between the family's plantations Millwood and Woodlands and his own lands in Issaquena and Washington counties, Mississippi. He married twice, first to Margaret Buchanan Preston (1818-1852) and then to Mary Singleton McDuffie (1830-1874). After his father’s death in 1858, Hampton III inherited both substantial property and substantial debt. Although most of Hampton III’s wealth—comprised of or built by the people he enslaved—was lost during and after the Civil War, he remained an influential part of state and national politics until his death. As the main Hampton family homes in Columbia, including Hampton III's Diamond Hill, were burned during the Civil War, it's possible this decanter set came from Wild Woods in Mississippi.

Dimensions

Height

8 in

Diameter

3-1/2 in

Circumference

10 in

Material

Glass

Relationships

Related Person or Organization

Person or Organization

Wade Hampton III