Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Zouave Sword of Col. Rush Hawkins, c. 1863

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Tiffany & Co., New York
Silver, gilt, and steel metalwork
Brown University, Annmary Brown Memorial


Jeweler Charles L. Tiffany and his partners devoted the capital and facilities at Tiffany & Co. to support the Union government as a military supply depot. Their efforts continued after the war with orders for hundreds of richly mounted testimonial swords honoring battlefield heroes. These swords cost between $500 and $10,000 at the time, with the most lavish example going to General Ulysses S. Grant. His sword was equipped with a gold scabbard studded with rubies, diamonds, and sapphires (national colors), valued at nearly $100,000 in 1864. Another notable example lauded in the early annals of Tiffany & Co. was this ceremonial sword presented to Col. Rush Hawkins by his fellow citizens of New York in May of 1863. Hawkins led the 9th New York Volunteers (“Hawkins’ Zouaves”) during the first two years of the Civil War. The sword includes a relief of a Zouave soldier on the hilt and a list of Hawkins’ battles inscribed along the blade.