
Roy Ekstrum
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| Above: A group of pieces in SP's PMWF
pattern. Click for larger image. Photos courtesy Tom and Meg
Coughlin. Below: Backstamp from a PMWF plate. Photo
courtesy John Fowler. |
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Above: A 9.5 inch Divided Lunch Plate
in the Syracuse Morwel pattern. Photo courtesy of Wendy
Munson. Below: A small, 9.5 oz teapot in the Syracuse
Flordia pattern .
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Above: The back of the teapot. Note
the lack of a railroad backstamp. Below: A small,
unhandled #2 creamer in the Syracuse Tremont pattern. Photo
courtesy of Fran Boyajan.
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Of
the many china patterns used by America's railroads, Southern
Pacific's "Prairie Mountain Wildflowers" pattern or
"PMWF" is one of the most popular among collectors.
The pattern features a white base color with multicolored flowers
in shades of red, yellow, green, and blue. It has many variations,
perhaps over a hundred different pieces, not including the known
special or trial pieces made for Southern Pacific.
Since
most collectors like the idea that a given piece of china was
actually used in railroad dining car service, they should be aware
that one variation in PMWF was not used by the Southern Pacific
but rather by a large department store in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Specifically, this china looks like PMWF but lacks a railroad
backstamp, lacks the black strike (stripe), and has a date code
after 10/63 and through at least midyear 1970 (maybe even later).
The china was part of an order placed through Dohrmann Hotel Supply.
This was the same company as Dohrmann Commissary Co. which supplied
PMWF to the Southern Pacific Railroad. The first order was placed
10/10/63 and included:
3
Plate, Essex pattern, 5-1/2"
4 Plate, Essex pattern, 6-1/2"
6 Plate, Essex pattern, 8-1/4"
7 Plate, Essex pattern, 9-1/4"
8 Plate, Essex pattern, 10"
#3 Divided Lunch Plate, Morwel pattern, 9-5/8"
#6 Grapefruit bowl, Winthrop pattern, 6-1/2"
Unhandled Boullion Cup, Essex pattern, 7-1/2 Oz.
#3-1/2 Fruit bowl, Winthrop pattern, 4-3/4"
Tea Saucer, Winthrop pattern, 5-5/8"
Tea Cup, Kent pattern, 7-1/4 Oz.
#2 Unhandled Cream, Tremont pattern, 1 Oz.
#2 Unhandled Cream, Ohio pattern, 1 Oz.
Small Tea Pot Body W/cover, Florida pattern, 9-1/2
Oz.
8 Dish (Oval Platter), Winthrop pattern, 11-3/4"
(see
notes below)
These
are plate sizes, catalog item numbers, and pattern types. The
order sheet is marked as order "#21889 S2795 10/10/63".
Also on the order sheet is
the name given by Syracuse to this pattern, "ZION
C.M.I. TEA ROOM". I think that this china should be referred
to by this name, although a good shorter name would be"ZCMI
Tea Room". Over
time there were 15 different pieces ordered in this variation,
and all are different from the standard Southern Pacific Railroad
pieces.
This
china was ordered for the Zion's Cooperative Mercantile Institution
(A.K.A., "ZCMI"), a large Mormon company in Salt Lake
City, Utah. The company had a large department store with a dining
room and tea room. At this point I do not know if this china was
sold or just used in their dining room and tea room. It does look
like PMWF, since it used the #85701 wildflower decal as did the
railroad versions of PMWF. Incidentally, ZCMI still exists as
a major retail concern in Salt Lake City, although it now operates
as Meier & Frank, one of the May Department Store companies.
To
summarize the telltale signs: (1) no railroad backstamp (2) no
black stripe on the front or body, and (3) a datecode after 10/63
through at least midyear 1970. This is still an attractive china
pattern to collect, but collectors should be advised about its
non-railroad origins.
Notes
Information was obtained directly from the Syracuse
archives. The only other information on Z.C.M.I. that came on
the order sheet is the decal placement on each item, and at this
point I do not have enough china to determine the number-to-flower
decal relationship.
I have also seen an Econorim butter chip with no
strike (line or stripe). However, this was manufactured by Shenango,
and I have not obtained the records from their archives, so I
do not know if this was just a fluke, a special order by Southern
Pacific, or some other order.
Web Editor's Note: Photos are by the author
unless otherwise noted. Roy is currently writing a book on the
Prairie Mountain Wildflowers pattern and welcomes information
on odd or unusual PMWF variations. He can be contacted by email
at ekstrura@yahoo.com.
We thank him for supplying the information for this web page and
for the permission to display it on our website. Thanks also to
Tom and Meg Coughlin, John Fowler, Fran Boyajan and Wendy Munson
for photos.
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Design Copyright
2007 Railroad Collectors Association Incorporated
All Copyrights Apply
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