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English Pages 44 Year 1987
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42
The majority of the CooperHewitt's keys from the seventeenth
century are assumed to be personal keys, although a
had
official uses.
for example, a cross
likely
is
within
used in
number clearly One German key,
ornamented with bow and was most
its
a
church or chapel.
on such keys may be highly complex or quite simple. Some of the simpler cuts take on the form of stars, and some keys use a repeated star pattern. Another variation in the form of the bit is the "screw" bit, which resembles a corkscrew.
Bits
This type of key, generally reserved for use with padlocks,
vogue for
remained in
several centuries.
Some keys from
the seventeenth
century display innovative designs,
double key with
such as
a
hollow
bow
that can be
a sliding
moved
from one end of the key
to another
to create a handle for opening the lock. is
The
delicacy of key-making
revealed in the finely cut bits
characteristic
of the period. in the bit
do not interrupt the edge
of the key
24
of French workmanship On some keys the cuts
itself.
The
finely cut
patterns inside the bit proper indicate
elaborately decorated eighteenth-
patterns for wards
the complexity of the locks for
century keys used for a
from La Fidele Ouverture de Van dc Semirier
which
42 Mathurinjousse
these keys
were designed.
functions ranging
dwellings to locking valuables in
(Paris: 1627)
engraving and etching
The
1921.6.324(31)
dramatic increase in the
German 17th- 18th century iron, 18.5
cm
1904. 14.2
number of
more people used them on
A
wide variety
of containers and boxes were also a
fitted
with small locks to protect
daily basis than in earlier periods.
valuable comestibles such as tea
The
and sugar.
stylistic
development of keys
and locks was also stimulated and reached the zenith of aesthetic and ornamental sophistication. The
Museum's 44 French 17th century steel, 14
furniture and chests.
eighteenth century witnessed a
keys; far 43
number of
from securing
cm
1909.2.238
25
collection includes
58
45
German
German locksmiths made some
18th century
highly elaborate keys and locks in
cm
iron, 14.3
the eighteenth century,
1952. 161. 81
many of
them having bows with scrollwork and foliage decoration, and star-cut Ordinary English keys tended to be plain and serviceable, entirely
46 German 18th century steel,
bits.
cm
8.4
functional ancestors of the so-called
1952. 161.35
"skeleton" key with which familiar.
47 English 18th century steel, 12.7
They stand
we are
all
in contrast to a
smaller group of highly ornamental
English keys
cm
that, like their
counterparts, incorporated
1952. 161. 18
French
complex
scrollwork designs into their bows.
Although the major focus of decoration remained the bow, some
48 English 18th century steel, 7
fine English
cm
show
1952. 161.20
the shaft and 49 English 18th century steel,
8
keys of this period also
elaborate ornamentation of bit.
Increasingly, coats of arms initials
cm
and were incorporated into the
design of bows during the
1952. 161.
eighteenth century to indicate the identity 50 English 19th century brass, 15.3
of the owner. Also during
this period, the
number of symbolic
or ceremonial keys increased,
cm
resulting in the production
of a wide
1923. 13.
range of impressive "chamberlain's" keys. 51
English
From
the sixteenth to the
eighteenth century, the keys retained
late 19th
century
brass, 13
cm
by the chamberlain
at
court or in an
had been primarily functional - it was these keys that assured the security of the family and their possessions. From the eighteenth century onward, highly ornamental keys have been carried as a perquisite and symbol of aristocratic residence
1923. 13.6
office rather than for actual use.
26
27
Such keys, beautifully crafted and were generally worn on special occasions. The Museum's collection contains several examples of such ceremonial keys, most with armorial devices, coats of arms, initials, or monograms. Some of often gilded,
the
Museum's keys bear insignia them with
or arms that associate
European
royalty. Since
many
of them show no sign of actual use 52 chamberlain's key Austrian,
Emperor
Ferdinand
or wear, their symbolic purpose is
undeniable.
I
19th century gilt
bronze, 18.2
cm
Other innovations
that arose
during the eighteenth century
1909.27.7
included cleverly designed folding or collapsing keys. Such
keys were convenient for carrying in a pocket,
and many can be
seen as predecessors of nineteenth-
century "patent" keys. 53 chamberlain's key
probably German 19th century gilt
bronze, 16.2
cm
In spite of the refinements that
occurred in lock and key design
from the sixteenth century onward, most locks were highly susceptible
1909.27.6
to easy picking until the eighteenth 54 chamberlain's key
of the Archbishop of Cologne
century.
During the course of that
Initials
late 19th gilt
provide heightened security with
century
bronze, 14.5
century, lockmakers attempted to
cm
1909.27.8
devices that
55 chamberlain's key
bronze, 10.7
certain to foil
were considered essential for houses, and the growing use of lockable
probably German i8th-i9th century gilt
would be
burglars and other crooks. Locks
cm
1967.48.41
28
furniture, the institution
and
a rise in the
of banks,
crime rate
all
contributed to the rapid growth of
mass-produced keys. The increasing importance of functional locks and
occurred, families abandoned rural life
for the cities,
and
as
urban
mushroomed, so too did poverty and crime. A certain amount centers
keys mirrored changes in population
of protection for person and property could be provided by locks
movements. As
and keys -
industrialization
a
development
that,
combined with an increasing reliance on public police protection and banks, serves as a commentary on the nature of progress during
the eighteenth century.
29
56 folding key
European 18th century iron, 20.8
cm
These developments not only stimulated the craft of lockmaking; they also engendered a climate of competition among inventors and designers to produce less easily
An
picked locks. cycle
was
all
too familiar
From
that date, the history of lock and key manufacturing changed
more and more
radically as
competitors entered the inventions to
foil thieves
field
with
and
lockpickers.
whereby every lock was made, thieves
established
time a better
In England,
where many of the
rose to the challenge and figured out
nineteenth-century advances in lock
how to
and key design were developed, the
pick
invented
a
it.
Robert Barron
1778, considered first
by many
to be the
major technological advance
lock-making. However,
Bramah
Chubb
twin- tumbler lock in
(1749-1814)
international
it
in
was Joseph
who won
fame with
his 1784
"Bramah Cylindrical 181 1 he went on to found
brothers, Charles and
Jeremiah, achieved wealth and success
with their lock.
1818 patented
their specialized field
by
"Detector"
The fame of the Chubbs
in
was heightened
their participation in the 1851
patent for the
Crystal Palace Exhibition; at this
Lock." In
landmark international trade fair, the Chubbs were commissioned to make the locked gold case in which Queen Victoria's famous "Koh-i-
the
first
utilize
lock and key manufactory to
mechanical duplication
of standardized separate
parts.
noor" diamond was exhibited. Embarrassingly,
it
was
at this
same
exhibition that an enterprising
American locksmith and inventor
named Alfred C. Hobbs publicly picked both a Bramah and a wellknown Chubb lock, the latter of which was
said to
Hobbs earned
be unpickable.
a large
cash prize for
his efforts.
Hobbs's success was eventually
overshadowed by the Yale family of Middletown, Connecticut. Linus Yale, Sr. (born in 1797), established
himself as
a
lockmaker around 1840.
His son Linus (1821-1868) turned the family business into one of the
most
successful nineteenth-century
firms specializing in bank locks.
30
57 Oriental 19th century iron, 17.5
cm
1952. 161. 180c
Seeking both improved security and a
reduction in the size of locks and
iron, 17.5
cm
1952. 161. 173c
now
keys, the Yales revolutionized the
key to
history of mass-produced keys
a
and 58 Oriental 19th century
are
locks.
often provided with an
electronically-coded card or plastic
rooms, rather than with
their
cumbersome tagged key intended to remind them to return it when
they leave; the locking code
These innovations in design, the industrialization of the craft, and the large demand for locks and keys
programmed
into such computerized
keys requires only
reprogramming
a
necessarily led to a decline in their
new security code essentially, a new key. Security
individual design characteristics.
systems have also been developed
Today
difficult to distinguish
that
in different countries or
voice pattern recognition,
keys
by
it is
made
different firms
on
the basis of
to provide a
need no passkey whatever -
fingerprint security systems, and
design. Stylistic issues continued to
push-button codes are
play a part even in industrially
among
manufactured keys in the 1920s and 30s, however. Some keys, for
traditional locks
example, were designed with bows
more immediate
that
and,
now
counted
the descendants of the
the Egyptians,
and keys used by Romans, and our ancestors.
echo the stepped profile of
skyscrapers. Nonetheless, fewer
Although
craftsman-designed and -fabricated
may change
keys have been made in the
will
From the unique and carefully handcrafted creations that had been produced for over two
of our daily
thousand years, keys and locks have
of their craftsmanship and design, in
twentieth century.
become
internationally standardized
and plainly designed
tools.
their
form and appearance
radically, locks
and keys
remain an indispensable part lives as
long
as
human
beings require security for themselves
and
their possessions.
The
history
partnership with technology and innovation,
is
clearly recorded for
posterity in the key and lock
Despite the decline of stylistic
collections
innovation, the history of locks and
Museum.
of the Cooper- Hewitt
keys in the past few decades has been
even more dramatically altered by the introduction of new technologies
and materials.
Many
security devices
and monitored and do not require a metal key at all. Hotel guests are electronically controlled
3i
Dr. Bert Spilker
Bibliography
Almgren,
Bertil
Och Djuronnamentik Uppsala: Appelbergs Boktryrckeri AB, 1955
Bronsnycklar
Canz, Sigrid Schliissel, Schlosser und Beschlage Wuppertal: Dr. Wolfgang Schwarze Verlag, 1977
Curtil-Boyer, Charles L'Histoire de la clefde I'epoque romaine au
XVIII siecle
Paris: Editions Vilo, 1969
DAllemagne, Henri Rene Decorative Antique Ironwork Paris: 1924. Reprint.
Eras,
J.
New York:
Dover, 1968
M. Vincent
Locks and Keys Throughout the Ages
Dordrecht, Holland: Lips Lock Factory, 1957 Frank, Edgar
Old French Ironwork: The Craftsman and His Art Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1950 Hopkins, Albert A. The Lure of the Lock
New York: Lecoq,
General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen, 1928
Raymond
Serrurerie ancienne
Paris
:
-
techniques et oeuvres
Librairie Gedalge, 1973
Pankofer, Heinrich
und Schloss
Schliissel
Munich Georg Callwey, :
1979
Prochnow, Dieter Schonheit von Schloss Schliissel Beschlag
Ratingen, West Germany: A.
Henn
Zara, Louis
Locks and Keys
New York: 32
Walker and Co., 1969
Verlag, 1966
A* i
3L-
Cooper- Hewitt Museum 2 East 91 Street
New York NY 10128
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