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SATURDAY EVENING GIRLS CLUB HISTORY SET PLATES BOWL COFFEE CUP, 5 PCS ORIGINAL



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SATURDAY EVENING GIRLS CLUB HISTORY SET PLATES BOWL COFFEE CUP, 5 PCS ORIGINALdinner plateDINNER PLATE 9 3/4"
salad plate 8 1/2"
bread plate 7 1/2"
bowl 2 X 4 1/2"
coffee cup 2 X 4 1/4"
look at the pictures for condition


BECAUSE OF THE HISTORICAL AND FINANCIAL VALUE OF THIS ITEMS, LOCAL PICK UP ONLY, NO RETURNS ON THIS ITEM, PHYSICAL INSPECTION AT PICK UP.


When Sara Galner first joined the Saturday Evening Girls Club, she had no idea she’d end up making pottery that sold for thousands of dollars to the rich and famous.

She was a poor Jewish immigrant, born in 1894 in Austria-Hungary. Her family lived in Boston’s North End, then a filthy tenement slum with high rates of mortality and murder.

As a young girl, Sara Galner began attending the story hour on Saturday evenings, which the members called the Saturday Evening Girls Club. She thus found herself at the intersection of two late 19th-century social movements: Arts and Crafts and social reform.
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    Shop Categories
    Barware,,books, magazine,cardsTea-Coffee sets,creamer,sugarClock, Paperweight,inkwellCollector plates,water globesDolls,sets,toys,advertisingWood items,basket, music boxesGlass bottles,perfum,decanterGlassware,elegant,pressed,cutReligion, Jewish,ChristmasLamps, lighting, candle holderPlates,bowls, tureen, serversPottery,Indian,Planters,CenterPrints, paintings, wall decorFashion,fragrances, cameraSculpture, Carvings, FigurinesSilver,plated,metal,cloisonneStein,Cookie Jar,Jar,CanisterToby, mugs, pitcher,decantersVanity,trinket,tray,ashtrayVases, tablecloth,napkins,



    SATURDAY EVENING GIRLS CLUB HISTORY SET PLATES BOWL COFFEE CUP, 5 PCS ORIGINAL



    Item Description



    SATURDAY EVENING GIRLS CLUB HISTORY SET PLATES BOWL COFFEE CUP, 5 PCS ORIGINALdinner plateDINNER PLATE 9 3/4"
    salad plate 8 1/2"
    bread plate 7 1/2"
    bowl 2 X 4 1/2"
    coffee cup 2 X 4 1/4"
    look at the pictures for condition


    BECAUSE OF THE HISTORICAL AND FINANCIAL VALUE OF THIS ITEMS, LOCAL PICK UP ONLY, NO RETURNS ON THIS ITEM, PHYSICAL INSPECTION AT PICK UP.


    When Sara Galner first joined the Saturday Evening Girls Club, she had no idea she’d end up making pottery that sold for thousands of dollars to the rich and famous.

    She was a poor Jewish immigrant, born in 1894 in Austria-Hungary. Her family lived in Boston’s North End, then a filthy tenement slum with high rates of mortality and murder.

    As a young girl, Sara Galner began attending the story hour on Saturday evenings, which the members called the Saturday Evening Girls Club. She thus found herself at the intersection of two late 19th-century social movements: Arts and Crafts and social reform.
  • About Us
  • About Us
  • Payment
  • Terms
  • Re Style: Antique