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Sam Weller salt shaker - Ebeling and Reuss circa 1930

Sam Weller salt shaker produced in Czechoslovakia for Ebeling and Reuss of Devon, Pennsylvania, circa 1930 using its Erphila tradename. The son of the coachman, Tony Weller, and faithful manservant of Mr. Pickwick, Sam Weller is one of the most popular and best-conceived of Dickens' characters. With his native charm and endless stream of anecdotes and witticisms, he is the most quoted and copied character in "The Pickwick Papers". Sam is found by Mr. Pickwick as a boot cleaner at the White Hart and employed as a "gen'l'm'n's gen'l'm'n." Quick-witted and good humored, he is the archetypal cockney. Per Mr. Pickwick, Sam has "a considerable knowledge of the world and a good deal of sharpness." Always at the ready to look after his master in every vicissitude, Sam's resourcefulness and experience prove invaluable in helping extricate Mr. Pickwick from the scrapes in which he regularly becomes innocently involved. Note the gold foil Erphila sticker on Weller's left leg.

Maker:

Ebeling and Reuss

United States

circa 1930

Model #:

Derivative

Charles Dickens Series

salt shaker

Size:

medium

Height:

3"

Sam Weller salt shaker - Ebeling and Reuss circa 1930
Sam Weller salt shaker - Ebeling and Reuss circa 1930
Sam Weller salt shaker - Ebeling and Reuss circa 1930
Sam Weller salt shaker - Ebeling and Reuss circa 1930
Sam Weller salt shaker - Ebeling and Reuss circa 1930
Sam Weller salt shaker - Ebeling and Reuss circa 1930
Sam Weller salt shaker - Ebeling and Reuss circa 1930
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