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Replacements, Ltd.
Butler's Gourmet by Lenox Flatware
65-Piece Stainless Set
Butler’s Gourmet by Lenox Flatware is a stylish and understated 18/10 stainless steel
pattern (18/10 represents the ratio of chromium and nickel used in the stainless steel, which adds luster and durability to the pieces) that has a
scallop-shaped tip with a fan/plume design, an outlined handle with beveled edge, and glossy finish. For a limited time, we offer this pattern at a
truly spectacular value! The set
includes 12 knives, 12 forks, 12 salad forks, 12 teaspoons, 12 soup spoons, and 5 serving pieces. Also available is the 5-piece place setting.
It includes the knife, fork, salad fork, teaspoon, and soup spoon. Take
advantage of these specials today!
The company that produced our featured flatware is a great American success story.
The Lenox Ceramic Pottery Company, according to company literature, was founded in 1889 by Walter Scott Lenox.
Born in 1859, Lenox was named for the 19th century Scottish writer, Sir Walter Scott, whose novels were extremely
popular both in England and the U.S. Lenox grew up in Trenton, NJ, the “Staffordshire of America” of
its time. With excellent transportation and good sources of fuel and clay, the state
capital of New Jersey became the nation’s leading center for ceramics production.
Lenox first was organized as an art studio, producing one-of-a-kind pieces for a
select market. By 1897 examples of the company’s work were displayed at the
Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. In 1918 President and Mrs. Woodrow
Wilson commissioned a set of 1,700 pieces, making Lenox the very first American
china to grace a president’s table. Subsequently, sets were created for presidents
Franklin Roosevelt (1934), Harry Truman (1951), Ronald Reagan (1981), and Bill
Clinton (2000).
Following the end of World War II, the company continued to produce patterns popular
in American households. Since the 1950s, about half the china set on dinner tables
in this country has borne the Lenox backstamp. Responding to demand by consumers,
Lenox introduced a line of hand-blown crystal to complement its china in 1966. In
1991, again responding to consumers’ requests for a coordinated table, Lenox began
to produce silver flatware. This made it the first company in America to offer the
complete tabletop.
Click here to
see our entire selection in this pattern, and to order online via
our secure form!
You may also call us toll-free at 1-800-REPLACE
(1-800-737-5223) seven days a week, 8:00 am to 10:00 pm ET (our average answer
speed is 8 seconds!). Tell our representative that you are interested in pattern LF BUG. Quantities
are limited and are subject to prior sale, so call today!
Want to know more about Lenox? Click
here for an informative history.
Shipping & Handling
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our Featured Patterns Archive!
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