Henry George Murphy Explained

Henry George Murphy
Birth Date:1884
Birth Place:Birchington, Kent
Death Date:1939
Nationality:English
Occupation:Art-deco silversmith

Henry George Murphy, aka H. G. Murphy (1884 in Birchington, Kent – 1939) was an English art-deco silversmith.

Career

Murphy was apprenticed to Henry Wilson in 1899. At age 14 he entered the Central School of Arts and Crafts in London.

In July 1912 he was employed by Emil Lettre in Berlin. He found the work unfulfilling and left after six weeks. The same year he opened his own workshop in London.During World War I he enlisted in the Royal Navy Air Service. In 1928 he started the Falcon Studio, comprising a workshop and retail outlet in Weymouth Street, London.[1]

He returned to the Central School and remained there, teaching goldsmithing and enamelling, and became the first head of silversmithing, and later principal of the school in 1936.[2] [3] He was a member of the Red Rose Guild.[4]

Arms

Motto:Fortis Et Hospitalis [5]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.silvercollection.it/englishsilvermarksxhdue.html Hallmarks of English Silver Makers
  2. http://www.styles-silver.co.uk/acatalog/H_G_MURPHY.html H. G. Murphy
  3. Atterbury, Paul and Benjamin, John The Jewellery & Silver of H. G. Murphy: Arts and Crafts to Art Deco, Antique Collectors' Club (2005). . Retrieved 20 May 2013
  4. Book: Atterbury, Paul J . 2005 . Arts and Crafts to Art Deco . Antique Collectors Club . London . 30 . 9781851494880.
  5. Web site: Goldsmiths Hall, 45 Murphy HG . 13 July 2009 . Baz Manning . 18 December 2020.