I have found today 10Dec21 a different report of the items furnished by Messrs Davenport of Fleet Street.
This was a report in the Birmingham Journal of the 11 November 1837.
Issue no 650, 8 pages
https://www.lastchancetoread.com/docs/1837-11-11-the-birmingham-journal.aspx1) Of note! In the entire supply list including the list specifically for Her Majesty’s table:
- There is
no mention of
topaz-coloured hock glasses anywhere in the report.
- There is one mention of ‘two dozen topaz coloured finger glasses.’
In addition:-
- There is mention for the main entertainment (i.e. not top table) of ‘800 hock ditto, (emerald green)’
This list of the items on Her Majesty's table quoted in the Birmingham Journal reads much more logically than the list I found in the Examiner earlier in this thread. I queried that list then because some things didn't seem to add up - see post:
https://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,70066.msg391958.html#msg3919582) Regarding the mention of ‘two dozen topaz coloured finger glasses.’,
I am sure I’ve read somewhere that finger was a type of design or cutting

In my imagination sort of like a description of panel cut or facet cut or petal cut. I need to try and find where I read that expression.
Basically I was just pondering that a finger glass might not necessarily mean a finger bowl. Could it simply mean a drinking glass cut with panels ?
ok, I've found my reference to finger cutting or fingered in two place:
a) American glass 1760-1930 The Toledo Museum of Art Vol 2, Kenneth M. Wilson 1994 - page 704 and page 799
'...
cut around the base with fingering'
and
'
5 grids of eight pointed stars and one area of fingering , with alternating upright and upside-down small fans in between'
and
'
Wine Coolers, puntied and fingerd 6 dollars /doz'
https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/American_Glass_1760_1930/fATrAAAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=wine+glass+cut+around+the+base+with+fingering&dq=wine+glass+cut+around+the+base+with+fingering&printsec=frontcoverb) In the Lockett and Godden Davenport book page 287
'
As for Glass, it is your own fault if you have no orders from us for Common Cut Goods. - I get button flint wines fluted or fingered weight 3 x at 8/- per doz. 5% discount without any risk of cutting - Best Tumblers 1/2pt fluted or fingered 61/2 at 10/6 - 5% dsict, without any risk. If you liek to get up 5 or 600 dozs of each at these prices we shall sell them ... I believe we want more fingered than fluted.'3) I've directly cut and pasted the relevant info from the Birmingham Journal and shown below for easy reading.
In the LCTR link I gave above, it is necessary to scroll down through the journal to about just over half way and the report then appears:
Birmingham Journal of the 11 November 1837.
Issue no 650, 8 pages
‘The china and cut glass were provided by the Messrs. Davenport, of Fleet- street, and it is hut justice to that es- tablishment to state, that although the order was not given till the 13th ult., owing to their incredible exertions it was completed on Monday last, and forwarded to town from their factory in Staffordshire. The dessert plates for the royal table, are of white china, with vine border in gold, and a wreath of oak leaves and acorns in raised mat gold, around the rim. A medallion at the top contains the crown, and another at the bottom the city arms emblazoned in their proper colours. In the centre are the letters V. R., in a handsome cypher, surrounded by an enamelled wreath of flowers, of the most brilliant tints and exquisite workmanship. There were twenty. four of these plates, which we understand are valued at ten guineas each, and they certainly form a hitherto unrivalled specimen of the perfection to which the manufacture has attained in this country.
The decanters, claret jugs, champagne, hock, and other glasses, are all richly cut, and ornamented with a vine border, varied with the rose, thistle, and shamrock, and the royal arms. The supply for Her Majesty's table, consisted of three dozen wine glasses, three dozen small claret glasses, three dozen large ditto, three dozen champagne ditto, two dozen liquer ditto, two dozen goblets, two dozen curafes and tumblers, two dozen hexagon massive decanters, one dozen claret ditto, eighteen wine glass coolers, two dozen topaz coloured finger glesses, two dozen ice plates, and four earthenware antique jugs, with the royal and city arms in relief. For the entertainment generally there were furnished by the Messrs. Davenport 1,600 wine glasses, 800 claret ditto, 800 champagne ditto, 800 hock ditto, ( emerald green) 800 tumblers, 400 deeatiters, 300 water bottles and tumblers, 350 wine glass coolers, & c. The china was a pure white ground to correspond with that provided for Her Majesty's table, the patterns being extremely chaste and void of all ornament, with the excep- tion of a vine border in raised gold surrounding the rims, handles, & c. There were 1,500 large plates, 750 soup ditto, 1,500 pie ditto, 1,200 dishes, ( various sizes) 100 soup tureens, 200 sauce ditto, 50 dessert centre baskets, 200 compotiers, 500 ditto plates, 750 ice ditto, & c.
There was singing and music of course, and…’