Re the V&A uranium glass bowl is engraved with a crown and a VR and the arms of the City of London.
The V&A description does not say this was produced for the QV Guildhall banquet in 1837.
That was mentioned from the Whitefriars book on reply #4 by Essi here:
https://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,70066.msg390276.html#msg390276It was also mentioned by Hajdamach in British Glass 1800-1914.
See my information posted much earlier in this thread
Quote
1)
On page 57 of Charles Hajdamach's British Glass 1800-1914 it shows colour plate 4 including this bowl seen in the V&A link I gave earlier. It's photographed against a white background so a little easier to see the 'real' colour and it appears as a yellow colour glass (in my opinion the yellow is quite clear but leaning towards slightly honey coloured yellow rather than citron if you can picture it). Described in the caption as '... the bowl in yellow glass, ...'
On page 54 talking about this colour plate and bowl, and as part of a suggestion that England, France and Bohemia were all experimenting with colour technology at around the same time period rather than England lagging behind, it says:
'Stunning proof which underlines this theory is found in a set of finger bowls in yellow glass comparable to the 'Annagrun' or yellow-green colour, achieved with uranium, which had been discovered by Josef Riedel in Bohemia in the 1830s. The finger bowls and matching plates in clear glass, partly frosted and engraved, were used at a banquet in the Guildhall for Queen Victoria in 1837 to celebrate her first official visit to the City of London.'[/b]
But there is definitely no mention of a maker in the description in CH British Glass pg54. So I'm not sure how this is 'proof' that the English were experimenting with coloured glass at the same time a Bohemia and France really.' unquote.
The V &A description does say it was made by Davenport 1837.
https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O2170/finger-bowl-davenport--co/The Description in The Examiner of the finger bowls being 'topaz glass' and Walter Spiegl's description of what 'Topas-Glas' was, does not appear to match these uranium glass bowls.