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    In 1680 a glassworks was built on the grounds of a defunct monastery, of an order by the name of the White Friars, in London, England. In 1834 James Powell (1774-1840) purchased this glassworks and did business under the name of James Powell & Sons. They are recorded as having won a prize for their colored glass and fine crystal at the Crystal Palace Exhibition in London in 1851. H.J. Powell was the director of the company until his death in 1922, during which time it operated as James Powell & Sons (Whitefriars) Ltd. After his death the factory moved to Wealdstone, Middlesex. In 1962 it became known as Whitefriars Glass Ltd. after the death of the last of five generations of Powells. It held this name until the factory closed in September, 1980, at that time the oldest glasshouse in the world. Caithness Glass purchased the rights to use the Whitefriars name and has produced some traditional weights, marketed under that name.
    The period of regularly producing weights at Whitefriars started in 1951. A weight was commissioned by Triplex featuring their name and the date 1951 engraved on a central cane, surrounded by four rows of simple canes. In the 1970s paperweights became a good part of the product line at this glassworks.
    Whitefriars was in business making glass for three hundred years. In their last decade they made a number of exceptional weights, particularly their Christmas weights with mosaic pictures featuring hundreds of tiny canes. Contemporary Whitefriars weights were signed with the silhouette of a robed standing figure (a White Friar) in a cane which usually includes a date.
    Excerpted from The Dictionary of Glass Paperweights, Paul H. Dunlop, Papier Presse 2009.
This magnum sized 1976 Whitefriars weight was made to commemorate the 1976 Olympic games in Montreal, Canada. It features the Olympic rings made with millefiori canes all set on a very dark cobalt ground. A cane reading "19" on the left is matched by one reading "76" on the right. The Olympic torch, made of about 100 tiny canes is toward the top. There is a very is a very tiny scratch on the surface and a couple of very, very,  very  tiny  chips  on  the  edge of a facet, which could be repaired, and this very slight damage is reflected in the lower price.

3 7/16" diameter.

$475.

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